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Sunday Morning Lyrics
sunday morning
praise the dawning
it's just a restless feeling
by my side
early dawning
sunday morning
it's all the wasted years
so close behind
watch out the world's behind you
there's always someone around you
who will call
it's nothing at all
sunday morning
and I'm falling
I've got {a} feeling
I don't want to know
early dawning
sunday morning
it's all the streets you've crossed
not so long ago
watch out the world's behind you
there's always someone around you
who will call
it's nothing at all
watch out the world's behind you
there's always someone around you
who will call
it's nothing at all
sunday morning...
praise the dawning
it's just a restless feeling
by my side
sunday morning
it's all the wasted years
so close behind
there's always someone around you
who will call
it's nothing at all
and I'm falling
I've got {a} feeling
I don't want to know
sunday morning
it's all the streets you've crossed
not so long ago
there's always someone around you
who will call
it's nothing at all
there's always someone around you
who will call
it's nothing at all
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"Watch out, the world's behind you", man that is such an amazing lyric. Sometimes you're just sitting there and you feel the weight of everything, from all the years that have flown by too fast too make sense of anything, like life is just too incomprehensible. It's as if "the world" is sneaking up on you, like you can't escape time and you will never get a chance to figure it out, what any of it means or who you really are. I think thats how Lou was feeling when he wrote this, like this great big world was gonna get the better of him.
@zepkid5678 posted in 2007, yes, but it's a timeless topic....wtv:)) ok, so coming down from a drug-induced party night (Saturday), one has a restless feeling and one is a bit paranoid, irascible, but it's really nothing at all, don't worry about the thoughts, it's illusion, it'll pass, your friends are there for you, the world's behind you, someone will call, supporting you, they're 'behind you' in that sense... so, i don't agree with the 2007 interpretation and the upvoters.
@zepkid5678 posted in 2007, yes, but it's a timeless topic....wtv:)) ok, so coming down from a drug-induced party night (Saturday), one has a restless feeling and one is a bit paranoid, irascible, but it's really nothing at all, don't worry about the thoughts, it's illusion, it'll pass, your friends are there for you, the world's behind you, someone will call, supporting you, they're 'behind you' in that sense... so, i don't agree with the 2007 interpretation and the upvoters.
from songfactsdotcom (online, 2b verified) "Lou Reed wrote this on a Sunday morning around 6 a.m. Andy Warhol ... suggested he...
from songfactsdotcom (online, 2b verified) "Lou Reed wrote this on a Sunday morning around 6 a.m. Andy Warhol ... suggested he write a song about the paranoia associated with the effects of a drug wearing off." it's uplifting/reassuring
@zepkid5678 Hanna is correct.
People seem unaware of the fact that Reed does offer an explanation of this songs meaning in the live album Max’s Kansas City. “This song is about when you wake up on Sunday and you’ve done something oh so bad and you remember it.” In other words Reed would engage in lamentable activity on Saturday night (drugs and sex for certain) and both praise the fact it was over and lament his behavior on Sunday morning thus:
@zepkid5678 Hanna is correct.
People seem unaware of the fact that Reed does offer an explanation of this songs meaning in the live album Max’s Kansas City. “This song is about when you wake up on Sunday and you’ve done something oh so bad and you remember it.” In other words Reed would engage in lamentable activity on Saturday night (drugs and sex for certain) and both praise the fact it was over and lament his behavior on Sunday morning thus:
sunday morning praise the dawning it's just a restless feeling by my side
sunday morning praise the dawning it's just a restless feeling by my side
And
And
sunday morning and I'm...
sunday morning and I'm falling I've got {a} feeling I don't want to know
As for the chorus:
watch out the world's behind you (This is the fear of gossip from the act done the night before).
And
there's always someone around you who will call it's nothing at all (This is the optimistic resolution to his mind’s worries. A friend will call and tell him it was nothing which helps put the incident into its proper perspective. Shame resolution was a common theme of Reed’s songs
it kind of reminds me of depression. when you feel like youre just slipping from the world and you feel no one is there for you. then you have all the people who are there for you.
I think this song represents a tranquile feeling or state of mind, with a disturbing reminiscent undertone. This song is about a peaceful day with lots of time to think. In using this time to comtemplate one's life, the artist has discovered a sense of regret for their past. This brings on a sense of paranioa which describes the lyrics "watch out the world's behind you". The lyrics "praise the dawning" can also symbolize regrets that belong to the night before. The end lyrics can symbolize a traumatized state of mind because it seems they can't tell if someone is calling their name, or if they just imagined it. Their are conflicting elements in this song, which make it so interesting because the mood and melody of the song is one of tranquility, but there are hidden feelings of the opposite.
I dont think the lyrics reflects anything that has happened before the "Sunday Morning" - Sunday to me is a day of nothing-that-has-to-be-done. You go up whenever you want, you dont have do do anything, just sit in your robe and drink coffee by your self.
There is something very rare about such moments, when you're in a mood when nothing really bothers you and it feels like time has stopped and you have absolutely nothing to do because you dont want to have anything to do. At least that is what I think this song so perfectly describes.
I'm pretty convinced that this is the greatest song of all time
Which is interesting considering it was only included as an "afterthought" for the album when the producer, Tom Wilson, decided they needed another song for Nico to sing, so they wrote this and just threw it at the start.
Which is interesting considering it was only included as an "afterthought" for the album when the producer, Tom Wilson, decided they needed another song for Nico to sing, so they wrote this and just threw it at the start.
After Nico sang it live several times, Lou declared he would sing lead vocals on the recording.
After Nico sang it live several times, Lou declared he would sing lead vocals on the recording.
The use of the celesta was suggested by John Cale when he noticed the instrument lying around the studio.
The use of the celesta was suggested by John Cale when he noticed the instrument lying around the studio.
This song was basically unplanned, but my god it turned out well.
This song was basically unplanned, but my god it turned out well.
The lyrics are great and the meaning is clear.
I think one of the crowning achievements of the original recording is the way the bells were recorded. Its almost as if after waking up before noon on one of the rare weekends of peace, one walks by the windows to see the sun shining brightly through the glass. A warm, nostalgic feeling characterized perfectly in the gentle clipping of the bells on the tape.
...i've lived this song so many times after those saturday nights out getting warped out of your mind...the buzz slowly wears off and you're getting this splitting headache from too many drinks...watching your parents go to church while you slowly sneak your way to the room to pass out...lou reed described it as feeling like dracula...but schizophrenia is another piece to the puzzle...wdc
this song is so nostalgic that i almost cry everytime I listen to this song. I think that author is not in the state described in the lyrics, but he just remembers all yesterday parties which were wild but which are gone now and currently he's stuck in much worse situation and he tells himself about this restlesness he felt then. i have the same feelings very often and this song reminds me of all "the wasted years so close behind"
I first heard this song last summer, driving back from Portland Head (UK) as the sun was going down. It came on the radio and instantly captivated me. I was in love.
Later that summer, driving to Cornwall this time, I played over and over again on the 6 hour journey, managing to zone out from the inane radio babble everyone else was listening to. I can remember coming over the hill and seeing St Michaels Mount in the fading light, as the lines 'It's just the wasted years so close behind' played in my ears. Somehow, it was the most perfect moment I have ever experienced.
I have never tried drugs (I'm 15 for goodness sake) but this song still means more to me than any other song has ever managed to. I think the 788 plays on iTunes (in under a year) expresses that better than I can.
Peace guys...
This is one of the best songs ever written about waking up after a night of hard partying and feeling the damage. The restlessness, the paranoia, the way not only the night before, but your entire life is scrutinized.... It relates the self-doubt, the guilt, and the people who try to reassure you "It's nothing at all." Lou Reed was a lyrical genius, and the way he was able to capture those subtle feelings that people have but aren't necessarily proud of is one of his greatest accomplishments.