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Modern Man Lyrics
So I wait my turn, I'm a modern man
And the people behind me, they can't understand
Makes me feel like
Makes me feel like
So I wait in line, I'm a modern man
And the people behind me, they can't understand
Makes me feel like
Something don't feel right
Like a record that's skipping
I'm a modern man
And the clock keeps ticking
I'm a modern man
Makes me feel like
Makes me feel like
In my dream I was almost there
Then they pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere
They say we are the chosen few
But we waste it
And that's why we're still waiting
On a number from the modern man
Maybe when you're older you will understand
Why you don't feel right
Why you can't sleep at night now
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
Oh I had a dream I was dreaming
And I feel I'm losing the feeling
Makes me feel like
Like something don't feel right
I erase the number of the modern man
Want to break the mirror of the modern man
Makes me feel like
Makes me feel like
In my dream I was almost there
Then they pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere
I know we are the chosen few
But we waste it
And that's why we're still waiting
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
If it's alright
Then how come you can't sleep at night?
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
I'm a modern man
I'm a modern man
I'm a modern man
I'm a modern man
And the people behind me, they can't understand
Makes me feel like
Makes me feel like
And the people behind me, they can't understand
Makes me feel like
Something don't feel right
I'm a modern man
And the clock keeps ticking
I'm a modern man
Makes me feel like
Makes me feel like
Then they pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere
They say we are the chosen few
But we waste it
And that's why we're still waiting
On a number from the modern man
Maybe when you're older you will understand
Why you don't feel right
Why you can't sleep at night now
Like a modern man
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
And I feel I'm losing the feeling
Makes me feel like
Like something don't feel right
I erase the number of the modern man
Want to break the mirror of the modern man
Makes me feel like
Makes me feel like
Then they pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere
I know we are the chosen few
But we waste it
And that's why we're still waiting
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
Then how come you can't sleep at night?
In line for a number but you don't understand
Like a modern man
I'm a modern man
I'm a modern man
I'm a modern man
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It seems to me that this song is addressing the modern state we live in and what it means to be a product of this culture. Modernity has promoted the idea of relativism and with that has come a lack of purpose or understanding. We have no truth or objectivity and because of this "something don't feel right." Relativity provides no truth or understanding of reality.
We cannot get anywhere with relativity and it pulls us to "nowhere." We "wait in line" for an answer but we never get one, so as a result we are "wasted." We're like a record because we always end up in the same state of waiting for something to reveal itself to us and just make sense because for many of us modernity has left us without any answers and no motivation toward discovering purpose because purpose cannot be defined.
Also, "In line for a number but you don't understand" seems to express the wait for death. We wait for our number, or our time to die, to turn up, and in the mean time we "don't understand," which is a result of relativism. I liked that line so I thought I would elaborate on it.
In short, this is song seems to be about the existential crisis of the modern man.
Modernity is widely held to be the promotion of an objective search for truth. Postmodernity, on the other hand, is the rejection of this and the positing of a relativistic or consensus stance on truth.
Modernity is widely held to be the promotion of an objective search for truth. Postmodernity, on the other hand, is the rejection of this and the positing of a relativistic or consensus stance on truth.
^Let’s go downtown and talk to the modern kids
^Let’s go downtown and talk to the modern kids
The Suburbs has two core themes feeding on one another which drive the album's unique emotional tension. First you have the very common and universal human pain of losing the purity of vision and experience that comes with childhood and youth. The album is just saturated with both a wistful and desperate nostalgia, the bittersweet limbo of fondly, yet futilely looking back for something which exists as nothing more than a ghost of memory, something with fading colors and a vital feeling in danger of extinction.
But what makes this album truly great is its expression of this sense of loss in the context of a world undergoing an unprecedented rate of change, as it is bulldozed forward by technological advances and an underlying structure of corporate promoted materialism deeply entrenched in nearly every facet of our existence. This has pushed the psychological stakes for reclaiming the simple, honest, untainted mind-space of childhood to such heights that the need for it takes on an almost frantic hue.
This is where we find Modern Man. He exists right on the fault line of the past and the future and is having a hard time coping and finding a sense of hope watching the onrush of an alien landscape erode so much of what he loved under the unforgiving crunch of accelerated time and cold tectonics. Adding to this is the societal push to "become something" to "get somewhere". Yet, how can anyone go anywhere when all the points on the map are in constant flux? Under these circumstances a person cannot help but to be nowhere...all the time.
The Suburbs is so brilliant at capturing these ideas. 1000 years from now I imagine it being studied as an important psycho-textural analysis of what it meant to be alive in 2010. Modern Man is right where I am, where so many of us fear we are, on the verge of losing everything pure, spontaneous, and vital to an incomprehensible future descending upon us like a rushing flood and in whose wake we see so much of the new world forming around such rank and polluted waters.
Progress was once the darling of futurism. But now this optimism can, at best, only exist saddled under weary apprehension. The direction is highly uncertain so there is still hope, but all the signs point to an existential strain so great it will rip us to shreds.
Very well said
Very well said
I have been checking sonmeanings.net for years but didn't get an account until this cd. It's absouletly monumental. An essential album for us wandering post-collegiate 20-somethings.
And youre right kaveman this song echoes with existential angst.
"Want to break the mirror of the modern man"- perhaps an allusion to black mirror? Neon Bible was critical about external influences- religion, government, etc... This album seems to be more self-reflective and searching for personal/band identity in light of the times.
"Maybe when you're older you will understand Why you don't feel right Why you can't sleep at night now"
The gnawing we have all felt alone in our beds or out in a busy street- this "modern" world can be isolating. We're all running this rat race to acquire wealth, possessions, status- who made these fucking rules and why are we still buying into this propaganda to live happily?
Also does anyone else hear the guitar riff to Jesse's Girl by Rick Springfield in this song?
I'm replying to casmirpulaski because he seems to be the closest so far. But I think this song has a more targeted meaning, the pursuit of happiness (american dream) and the rat race (corporate ladder) and corporate culture
I'm replying to casmirpulaski because he seems to be the closest so far. But I think this song has a more targeted meaning, the pursuit of happiness (american dream) and the rat race (corporate ladder) and corporate culture
Right from the beginning: So I wait my turn, I'm a modern man (business man, corporate man, followin rules to get to the top eventually)
Right from the beginning: So I wait my turn, I'm a modern man (business man, corporate man, followin rules to get to the top eventually)
In my dream I was almost there (dreaming of being at the top of the ladder and living the american DREAM) And you pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere (in reality the machine just chews everyone, for most,...
In my dream I was almost there (dreaming of being at the top of the ladder and living the american DREAM) And you pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere (in reality the machine just chews everyone, for most, the best to hope for is a modest sum to live frugally through old age, if you save wisely, but the point is that you've spent your whole life devoted to this pursuit and in reality you're not going to have much to show for it so you've not really "gone anywhere") They say we are the chosen few (promises of promotion?) But we're wasted (almost all people feel like they're underutilized in their current position) And that's why we're still waiting (waiting till we've made it?) On a number from the modern man
Maybe when you're older you will understand Why you don't feel right Why you can't sleep at night now
This song just really resonates with me right now. I've been working after college for about 4 years now and I am making decent money but I'm still way in debt and i just bought a house and now i'm in super debt. It will take like 20 years to get a positive net worth and that's if i stay frugal and dont buy nice things. 4 years I've been working and I've hardly even dented my school loans. All this to say that I've come to realize that I will never be super rich no matter what. And I have a really good job. But say you're making 75k (that's good right). In reality you might save 20k a yr, that makes you a millionaire in 50 years...(less if you count interest)....but there's people out there making millions all day, there's people out there with trillions, that's a million millions...and you just have one...after spending your whole life to get it...it's just not worth it...
The answer? the answer is to go out and do something you love, that you enjoy, and not worry about ever having money...try to make a decent living at it if you can but otherwise you're only going to sleep at night if you're actively involved in things that mean something to you.
Me? I'm in a cubicle running the rat race and I can't sleep at night because I'm not doing anything that motivates me or makes me feel alive. I just work sleep eat watch the zombietube.
I'm being too hard on myself but you get the point. On another note what an effing awesome beat in the verse! this is driving me insane. the verse actually sounds like a record that is skipping, they're doing either a 9 step beat or a 3/3 but if they're doing a 3, they still play a 4, 4 and then a 1 beat hiccup = 9, instead of 3 3 3 like a waltz. CRAZY AWESOME
Sorry just reiterating what I feel is the main crucial point is. The record skipping I feel is the main point of this song, that's why the music "skips" with the 9 step beat. I feel like I'm just doing the same thing over and over. I have the same feelings same anxieties, same habits. I promise I'm going to start playing music, work out every day, meditate; but in reality I just work and not work. If I'm not working I don't want to do any work (self improvement), so my whole life is...
Sorry just reiterating what I feel is the main crucial point is. The record skipping I feel is the main point of this song, that's why the music "skips" with the 9 step beat. I feel like I'm just doing the same thing over and over. I have the same feelings same anxieties, same habits. I promise I'm going to start playing music, work out every day, meditate; but in reality I just work and not work. If I'm not working I don't want to do any work (self improvement), so my whole life is cyclical in nature like the skipping record.
As a wandering post-collegiate 20-something, I couldn't agree more. I feel like this song is about having grown up- having that 9-5 job and having done all the right things, but realizing that you're unsatisfied with what your life is. This line especially-
As a wandering post-collegiate 20-something, I couldn't agree more. I feel like this song is about having grown up- having that 9-5 job and having done all the right things, but realizing that you're unsatisfied with what your life is. This line especially-
In my dream I was almost there And you pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere
In my dream I was almost there And you pulled me aside and said you're going nowhere
I think that's you almost being content having accomplished what you set out to do when you were young- you've become an adult, you're a man now. But you aren't satisfied, you've seen the monotony of life and you ask...
I think that's you almost being content having accomplished what you set out to do when you were young- you've become an adult, you're a man now. But you aren't satisfied, you've seen the monotony of life and you ask yourself- is this it? Yes I have a job and am a stable adult now, but is this really all life has to offer?
"Like a record that's skipping, and the clock keeps ticking"- to me that line sums up best what this song is about. Realizing that life is monotonous, that you're running out of time- and your dissatisfaction with that fact.
dont become a "modern man" meaning don't become one who waits for something special to happen to them. stop day dreaming and go out and catch your own dream.
finally someone who thinks like me
finally someone who thinks like me
Buy a ticket and you might win the lottery. That's what the modern man's role is in society. Just play the game, join the system, take part in the rat race. The modern world as a result of industrialisation and capitalism saw modern man standing in line in a factory adding a cog to each good produced, you just waited till the conveyor belt brought the good to you and repeated the action ad infinitum. A good illustration of this is Chaplin's Modern Times. But as capitalism's reach has grown the modern man has been trapped in this action that preserves the overall status quo. People can only dream of escape - they can only worry about the small stuff, join the line at the bank, in the airports, at the supermarket, keep coming to work and hope for that lottery - the promise of escape that will never come.
Reminds me a bit of the Dan Mangan song robots. "Modern Man" = Robot
It's like they took the main guy in Neon Bible and medicated him to oblivion. Arcade Fire has never written this mellow before, but I actually really like it.
I cried the first time I heard this song
Believe it has to do with the loss of innocence ..like the whole album reflects back to a more predictable, simple way of life..Now that we live in Mc World of globalized, instant access to eveerything ..the dangers of the 'web' and the end of the innocence and the way that an older generation experienced the world
This is a totally different twist on on the meaning of this song. It is entirely personal and from someone who is probably quite a bit older than the others who have commented.
I think the "Modern Man" is the modern "male". One who "In my dream I was almost there" to his goals and ambitions. But was pulled aside by another (wife/girlfriend/family/responsibilities) and as one of the "the chosen few" gave up his traditional role as a man to support them, embracing a more modern concept of social roles. So he "wait[s] in line" for "his turn", but "the clock keeps ticking". Eventually, he starts losing the "dream I was dreaming/And I feel I'm losing the feeling". He feels "wasted" and knows "something don't feel right". And regular people don't understand. He wants to "break" his image because it all, "Makes me feel like [nothing]/ Makes me feel like [nothing]."
Just thoughts and feelings from a middle-aged man.