Fiddler On The Green Lyrics
I've heard this has a deeper meaning than just being about Death.
I heard that Hansi wrote it when he saw 2 car accidents in one week. The first taking the life of a young boy and the second the life of a young girl. Basically it's how death took the life of the boy by mistake and to make up for it he took the life of who his soulmate would have been in life (the young girl).
The album cover helps this theory a lot.
The album cover helps this theory a lot.
Also helping this theory, And I'm surprised no one has thought of this is on the lines: "A trick of light Turned red into green She saw the light"
Also helping this theory, And I'm surprised no one has thought of this is on the lines: "A trick of light Turned red into green She saw the light"
This is a bit literal but could it be talking about traffic/crossing lights, meaning she thought it was a green light when it was red, saw it and crossed. leading to her accident described in the next lines of the song?
This is a bit literal but could it be talking about traffic/crossing lights, meaning she thought it was a green light when it was red, saw it and crossed. leading to her accident described in the next lines of the song?
This song has got it all! Just the music can make you cry, and then, when you dig into the lyrics.... It's deep, it's sad, and it's the most amazing music experience I can have!
I mostly agree with Titon, but I don't believe that the Fiddler just found her and wondered if she would join the boy. I think he wanted to take her, because she and the boy were meant to be together in life, and he had to make up for his mistake, by not keeping them apart for a lifetime.
Poor Hansi to witness such tragic accidents! The best piece of music ever written!
The album cover is a drawing about this song, I think. At least, looks pretty much like the theories you guys put here. The Reaper, the boy, the girl, a graveyard...
Straight out of a Demons and Wizards interview:
"Together, the imaginative magic between these two uncommon individuals confidently exhibits itself on no better place than "Fiddler on the Green" and "Winter of Souls". "I just wrote that music [for "Fiddler on the Green"] and sent it over to Hansi. The whole concept is his and it's based on a true story", Jon elaborates. "[Hansi] was out walking his dog and he saw a little boy get killed on a bicycle -- hit by a car. Well, it happened again, like a week later -- same spot, same place in his neighborhood in a place where something like that would never happen. Over in Germany, the Fiddler is like what we call the Reaper." Sounds like the Demons & Wizards album cover, wouldn't you agree? In summary, the Fiddler makes a mistake and takes this little boy's life too soon. Thusly, he promised the boy he'll create this paradise for him. The girl in this scenario would have been this little boy's future wife, so the deal is that the Fiddle makes a heaven for this pair as part of the bargain. In case you were wondering, this is Jon Schaffer's favorite track."
http://www.chroniclesofchaos.com/articles/chats/1-294_demons_amp_wizards.aspx
This song is quite a lovely song about the enigmatic figure of Death. If you don't know of him, he's the taker of souls, he who waits for the end of life and takes the souls home. One of the best ballads I've ever heard.
This is one of my favorite songs of all time, really brilliant.
a true masterpiece.
Mainly, in this song, the Fiddler (figure of Death, Reaper, whatever you wanna call it) took the life of the boy by accident, and now he wants to make it up for him by getting him a companion. Most of the song is written on the girl's point of view, at the moment of the car crash that takes her life away. First, she hears mundane voices calling, and recalls the dream she had last night about a fiddler with a sad boy. The fiddler told her that the boy was taken too early, and asks her if she is willing to be taken too. The accident is then described (where I have two theories: one, she is old enough to drive and crossed a red light, or she is a young girl and crossed the street on a red pedestrian light). The reaper then comes to take her, saying the poor old boy is still waiting for her. He once again pities his misdoing, and then he tells her to hold his hand so she be taken away from her pain. Only sentence I have yet not been able to break down: What does that "It would be nice" before the drums kick in mean? I also like it that the fiddler, while a frightening figure (confirmed by the album cover, which has a skeleton playing a violin in front of a boy and a girl), is not necessarily evil in this song.
Where I come from, we have old legends about a fiddler that reveals himself to actually be the Devil. He wasn't exactly evil or anything, just a fiddler. But if you weren't offering him hospitality in exchange for a song, he would take your soul.
The Fiddler here is the grim one. He isn't evil either. He want to correct a mistake by getting the boy company, for eternity...
(The "it would be nice" I think is a small plea. It would be nice if you would take my hand so he could get company...)
well i think this song has four different point of views, the girl the fiddler/reaper, the boy, and an omnicient point of view. the first verse i think is an omnescient point of view, describing how the girl went out on her own, and her parents calling for her. the second verse has 2 different point of views, the lines '
Wasn't there a dream last night Like a spring never ending Still the water runs clear Through my mind On the field I can see a fiddler The fiddler on the green and the sad boy'
that is the little girls point of view, and the lines, I took him too early Would you mind Would you mind Would you mind If I take you
is the fiddlers aka reapers point of view, and when it repeats 'to be with you' over and over, i think that is the little boys point of view. and the lines,
The sun seemed bright The air was clear The air was clear A trick of light Turned red into green She saw the light Her face was pale Her body smashed Her beauty's gone Isn't it a shame The reaper said He is quite alone here And still waiting for you Oh I really did fail for the first time Spoke the fiddler, poor old fiddler The fiddler on the green The fiddler on the green
is the omnicient again, and the final lines
It would be nice:
Take my hand
Just hold my hand I'll take you there Your pain will go away
i think the reason he said it would be nice, is because the girl is in immense pain, but not dead, and it would be nice if she joined the boy, and i think shes crossing the street, because, i dont think that she would be old enough to drive because of the very first lines with her parents and what not, and...yeah, i think everybody interpreted very well :) i just thought i would point out the point of views cus it was kinda confusing :)