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Black Honey Lyrics
I keep swinging my hand through a swarm of bees cause I
I want honey on my table
I keep swinging my hand through a swarm of bees cause I
I want honey on my table
But I never get it right
No, I never get it right
I keep swinging my hand through a swarm of bees;
I can't understand why they're stinging' me
But I'll do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I'll rip and smash through the hornet's nest
Do you understand I deserve the best?
'Til you do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I try to stick this pin through a butterfly cause I
I like all the pretty colors
It just fell apart, so I flung it in the fire
To burn with all the others
Cause I never get it right
No, I never get it right
I keep swinging my hand through a swarm of bees
I can't understand why they're stinging me
But I'll do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I'll rip and smash through the hornet's nest
Do you understand I deserve the best?
'Til you do what I want
I'll do what I please;
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
This time, I'll get it right
This time, I'll get it right
It's gonna be this time
I'll get it right
God, let it be this time
I get it right
So I'm cutting' that branch off the cherry tree
Singing this will be my victory
Then I
See them coming after me
And they're following me across the sea
And now they're stinging my friends and my family
And I
Don't know why this is happening
But I'll do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I keep swingin my hand through a swarm of bees cause I
I want honey on my table
I want honey on my table
I keep swinging my hand through a swarm of bees cause I
I want honey on my table
No, I never get it right
I can't understand why they're stinging' me
But I'll do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I'll rip and smash through the hornet's nest
Do you understand I deserve the best?
'Til you do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I like all the pretty colors
It just fell apart, so I flung it in the fire
To burn with all the others
No, I never get it right
I can't understand why they're stinging me
But I'll do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I'll rip and smash through the hornet's nest
Do you understand I deserve the best?
'Til you do what I want
I'll do what I please;
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
This time, I'll get it right
It's gonna be this time
I'll get it right
God, let it be this time
I get it right
Singing this will be my victory
Then I
See them coming after me
And they're following me across the sea
And now they're stinging my friends and my family
And I
Don't know why this is happening
But I'll do what I want
I'll do what I please
I'll do it again 'til I've got what I need
I want honey on my table
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This is not hard to figure out, but that doesn't subtract from the painful truth the song carries. He's talking about the United States going to war in the Middle East for personal gain (oil is black honey) and the effects that it has on us. We keep getting stung each time we go to someone else's country and destroy people's homes and lives while our government pretends to be waging war for our safety. If you don't want to get stung, don't swing your hand through the swarm of bees. It also references the greed and selfishness of American culture "do what I want, do what please, I'll do it again till I got what I need", and "do you understand I deserve the best". The swarm following us home across the sea is a reference to sleeper cells and domestic terrorism in western countries: San Bernardino, Paris, Brussels, etc. ISIS is just the newest swarm we have created ourselves and are following us home to "sting" our friends and family. The butterfly part is interesting in that it seems to be reflecting on our wastefulness and carelessness in destroying things over and over and not learning the result of our actions (threw it in the fire to burn with all the others). The part he repeats "but I never get it right" and then "this time I'll get it right" parallels this. We keep going to war, to reap death and destruction, while a select few profit, and then blame the "bees" for stinging us. We are doomed to do this over and over until we realize the result of our actions.
@Fr1dge Absolutely just shared this comment on Facebook. This is the most beautiful description of what this song is about I could ever imagine. It's so simple, but extremely powerful.
@Fr1dge Absolutely just shared this comment on Facebook. This is the most beautiful description of what this song is about I could ever imagine. It's so simple, but extremely powerful.
@Fr1dge I shared your meaning as well. Thanks for your incite! I am an idealist. The only way we would ever face the future of mankind, and into the space race is to swallow our pride and live as one people!!! I'm speaking globally. Great interpretation!!!
@Fr1dge I shared your meaning as well. Thanks for your incite! I am an idealist. The only way we would ever face the future of mankind, and into the space race is to swallow our pride and live as one people!!! I'm speaking globally. Great interpretation!!!
@Fr1dge Very interesting interpretation. Just goes to show how a song can lyrically mold itself depending on the listener. I have to disagree considering Thrice and Dustin's Christian background. I'm always looking for a biblical reference in most Thrice songs considering that they are in fact a Christian band (lots and lots of biblical verses hidden in Thrice songs). To me the song is talking about chasing sinful pleasure and continually getting stung by its consequences. However I can understand your perspective and in all honesty the song does fit your interpretation lyrically. It could most definitely be a hidden undertone...
@Fr1dge Very interesting interpretation. Just goes to show how a song can lyrically mold itself depending on the listener. I have to disagree considering Thrice and Dustin's Christian background. I'm always looking for a biblical reference in most Thrice songs considering that they are in fact a Christian band (lots and lots of biblical verses hidden in Thrice songs). To me the song is talking about chasing sinful pleasure and continually getting stung by its consequences. However I can understand your perspective and in all honesty the song does fit your interpretation lyrically. It could most definitely be a hidden undertone but considering the band's background, it definitely isn't what the song says to me. Either way, the beauty of music is that it speaks to each of us individually. God bless!
@Fr1dge I agree with you. Especially towards the end when the lyrics say they come after the friends and family. I envisioned terrorist attacks.
@Fr1dge I agree with you. Especially towards the end when the lyrics say they come after the friends and family. I envisioned terrorist attacks.
@Fr1dge I think it's a bit of a stretch to say this song is about America's oil grab in the middle east. But great that you can interpret it as such. But I believe the song is pretty blunt that it's about heroin addiction considering the huge heroin crisis here in the U.S. And that a lot of users shoot up through their hands and after a while their hands looks like they have been swarmed by bees or yellow jackets. I have seen this first hand and the song accurately portrays addict mentality and how it destroys peoples...
@Fr1dge I think it's a bit of a stretch to say this song is about America's oil grab in the middle east. But great that you can interpret it as such. But I believe the song is pretty blunt that it's about heroin addiction considering the huge heroin crisis here in the U.S. And that a lot of users shoot up through their hands and after a while their hands looks like they have been swarmed by bees or yellow jackets. I have seen this first hand and the song accurately portrays addict mentality and how it destroys peoples lives. And just how hard it is to get away from it and start a new, but yeah anyways this song is about heroin abuse.
I don't see a compelling reason from the lyrics to equate it with oil in the Mid-East. That certainly may be the meaning, but I think it's reading into it a little bit.
Instead, I think it's just a general metaphor for sin and pride. Our fallen hearts want what they want and they are willing to sin to get it.
Instead of seeing all good things as a gift from God, we think we are owed a life of luxury or a life free of pain. When we pursue that life at all costs, we shouldn't be surprised when it actually comes with a cost. But our sinful hearts are so blind that we don't see why we're being stung.
In reference to "cutting the branch off the cherry tree" I think that just means in our pursuit of luxury we keep going bigger and bigger. Going for the honey hasn't satisfied, so we must not be going after it enough.
And of course when we live that type of lifestyle and have that mentality, the consequences are impossible to run away from "following me across the sea" and they affect even our loved ones "stinging my friends and family."
If this is the case, then the "black" doesn't refer to oil, but simply the darkness that comes with vainly pursuing idols. Such a person doesn't live in and for the light, but for darkness. They may get honey, but it's honey tainted by blackness.
@onliberty
@onliberty
I get really tired of the easy avenue that songs are always about 9/11, War on Terror, War on Drugs etc. So believe me when I say, I initially wanted to agree with you, especially because Thrice does tend to take a god-perspective on a lot of their music.
I get really tired of the easy avenue that songs are always about 9/11, War on Terror, War on Drugs etc. So believe me when I say, I initially wanted to agree with you, especially because Thrice does tend to take a god-perspective on a lot of their music.
However, I think in this instance there is quite a bit of tidbits that actually lean that way.
However, I think in this instance there is quite a bit of tidbits that actually lean that way.
The smashing through things while stinging back is the overarching idea, and while that isn't very strong on it's own (and can obviously apply in broad strokes to most struggles in life). There's...
The smashing through things while stinging back is the overarching idea, and while that isn't very strong on it's own (and can obviously apply in broad strokes to most struggles in life). There's two line's that seem to allude to the Middle East conflicts. First that you brought up, "So I'm cutting' that branch off the cherry tree. Singing this will be my victory" which I understood as what we originally came for wasn't going the way we wanted, so we ended up taking more than we needed (which again is vagueish). But the second example, "Then I See them coming after me And they're following me across the sea And now they're stinging my friends and my family And I Don't know why this is happening" would pretty closely illustrate that this conflict is taking place over seas, and that it's coming back and hurting us and our friends (whether thats allied countries, or specific people we know that are victims of attacks) and would be a pretty ideal example of what the song could be aiming for.
@onliberty Firstly, part of the beauty of art and Thrice's lyrics in particular is they can mean a lot of things to a lot of different things to different people, and that doesn't mean that anyone is wrong. I have a Thrice lyric tattoo and what it means to me is not what the song is about at all. With that said though, I really don't think that it is reading too much into it at all to realize that he was talking about the Middle East and that "black honey" is clearly a metaphor for oil. The explanation you've provided...
@onliberty Firstly, part of the beauty of art and Thrice's lyrics in particular is they can mean a lot of things to a lot of different things to different people, and that doesn't mean that anyone is wrong. I have a Thrice lyric tattoo and what it means to me is not what the song is about at all. With that said though, I really don't think that it is reading too much into it at all to realize that he was talking about the Middle East and that "black honey" is clearly a metaphor for oil. The explanation you've provided is a great way to look at it, and I'm sure Thrice would support that sentiment as well, but I do believe that this one of the less ambiguous songs in their catalog.
@tyler10153 For what it's worth, I couldn't agree more.
@tyler10153 For what it's worth, I couldn't agree more.
I think the song in my eye view to what pops to mind, is addiction to Herion, My uncle Pat is a recovering heroin survivor, I can take a part each lyrical point, he was making, it is not only a rare type of syrup nectar from japan, it is also in my eyes a cookable versuion of getting heroin in your body, it is very dark to imagine the preperation and need to liquidate the opiate syrum, Now that shows what a fucked up childhood I had growing up being raised around drug addicts... my mom is a major abusive psychopath narcasisitic addict... the sound layout for this song is very grungier and dark... it has a very strong Alice in Chains vibe in my opinion...
I am fairly sure this is about heroin. Black honey (black tar?) I think it is mostly about the need to be high, how it is an insatiable habit, and how it negatively effects the friends and family. Every time they try to quit, they go right back at it. Which is true with most heroin addicts, or most addicts of any sort. "This time, I'll get it right." There is an urge to stop, and they are trying. They do not understand why this addiction happened to them, and why they can't stop hurting their friends and family. Maybe I'm wrong, but that was my take.
I like to relate it to addiction, the bee's are the everyday stuggle to get money, steal, rob ect to get your honey but you get stung with the sadness, withdraw, pain and suffering, jail ect. Just like an old Chris Cornell line 'The Sky was your Playground but now the cold earth is your Bed' and even the part where the bee's follow me across the sea and now theyre stinging my family is the suffering you put on your family from addiction.
So Dustin tends to get political in a few of his songs (Blood on the Sand most certainly is, and Broken Lungs he's stated is about September 11th). This song is about oil in the Middle East (thus the Black Honey) and the repercussions we've felt by going after it under the guise of war.
I'm not saying he's right or wrong, just what I believe he's saying through the song. Cheers, all.
The great part about this song is how sardonic it is about the narrator's lack of understanding of cause of effect. "I DON"T GET IT! WHY DO I KEEP GETTING STUNG?"
My first reaction was to the addiction to heroin. He says "I try to stick this pin through a butterfly cause I I like all the pretty colors". This sounds like shooting up to me? Black honey? Heroin.
Let's start at the beginning. "I keep swinging my hand through a swarm of bees ‘cause I ... I want honey on my table" a heroin addict keeps going through difficult times to get high.
"But I never get it right no I never get it right" It's never enough.
"I’ll do it again till I got what I need" I'll keep trying to chase that dragon.
This was just my own personal reaction to the song. Though the middle East oil theory sounds legitimate as well. I'd like to hear what the artist's thoughts are.
Hmmm... difficult to say what it is about. Lyrically the middle-east-oil-thing makes the most sense to me, but when I watch the music video, I see absolutely no reference to it.
Why do artists hardly ever give explainations or at least comments to their lyrics??? Sometimes it really makes me angry, when I love the sound of a song and want to know what it´s about, but the writer is not willing to give a even a hint.
@Louk777
@Louk777
At the end, you can see the reference to oil because it's dripping all over the trees. It's subtle, but it's a clear reference.
At the end, you can see the reference to oil because it's dripping all over the trees. It's subtle, but it's a clear reference.
@Louk777 Yeah, I was also thinking of that, but isn´t that a little too less as a reference... I mean there isn´t even a clear hint that this is oil. Could also just be black honey! ;-) .... Aaaaah! What ever...
@Louk777 Yeah, I was also thinking of that, but isn´t that a little too less as a reference... I mean there isn´t even a clear hint that this is oil. Could also just be black honey! ;-) .... Aaaaah! What ever...
@Louk777 A song has special meaning to its writer but, in general, the song means whatever you want it to mean. I think this song is about people who go where they aren't welcome and act surprised when the "hornets" retaliate. We humans really aren't all that smart!!!
@Louk777 A song has special meaning to its writer but, in general, the song means whatever you want it to mean. I think this song is about people who go where they aren't welcome and act surprised when the "hornets" retaliate. We humans really aren't all that smart!!!
@Louk777 Edit: ...people who go where they aren't welcome and stirring up trouble...
@Louk777 Edit: ...people who go where they aren't welcome and stirring up trouble...
Here all, I hope this helps. Many fans have interpreted the lyrics in different ways to Dustin Kensrue's original meaning. He said in a Reddit AMA: "It was written with the US's narcissistic approach to foreign policy but can easily be seen as applying to any situation where we act in a like manner (and we all do.)" Source: www.songfacts.com (This is a really great resource for song meanings)