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Calling All Angels Lyrics
Santa Maria, Santa Teresa, Santa Anna, Santa Susannah
Santa Cecilia, Santa Copelia, Santa Dominica, Mary Angelica
Frater Achad, Frater Pietro, Julianus, Petronella
Santa, Santos, Miroslaw, Vladimir
and all the rest
a man is placed upon the steps, a baby cries
and high above the church bells start to ring
and as the heaviness the body
oh the heaviness settles in
somewhere you can hear a mother sing
then it's one foot then the other
as you step out onto the road
how much weight? how much weight?
then it's how long? and how far?
and how many times before it's too late?
calling all angels
calling all angels
walk me through this one
don't leave me alone
calling all angels
calling all angels
we're cryin' and we're hurtin'
and we're not sure why...
and every day you gaze upon the sunset
with such love and intensity
why it's...it's almost as if
if you could only crack the code
then you'd finally understand what this all means
but if you could...do you think you would
trade it in
all the pain and suffering?
ah, but then you'd miss
the beauty of the light upon this earth
and the sweetness of the leaving
calling all angels
calling all angels
walk me through this one
don't leave me alone
callin' all angels
callin' all angels
we're tryin'
we're hopin'
we're hurtin'
we're lovin'
we're cryin'
we're callin'
'cause we're not sure how this goes
Santa Cecilia, Santa Copelia, Santa Dominica, Mary Angelica
Frater Achad, Frater Pietro, Julianus, Petronella
Santa, Santos, Miroslaw, Vladimir
and all the rest
and high above the church bells start to ring
and as the heaviness the body
oh the heaviness settles in
somewhere you can hear a mother sing
as you step out onto the road
how much weight? how much weight?
then it's how long? and how far?
and how many times before it's too late?
calling all angels
walk me through this one
don't leave me alone
calling all angels
calling all angels
we're cryin' and we're hurtin'
and we're not sure why...
with such love and intensity
why it's...it's almost as if
if you could only crack the code
then you'd finally understand what this all means
trade it in
all the pain and suffering?
ah, but then you'd miss
the beauty of the light upon this earth
and the sweetness of the leaving
calling all angels
walk me through this one
don't leave me alone
callin' all angels
callin' all angels
we're tryin'
we're hopin'
we're hurtin'
we're lovin'
we're cryin'
we're callin'
'cause we're not sure how this goes
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The accumulated burden and sorrow of losing someone we love deeply, and dearly, ads to the weight of this life we live. If you have been taught to count on the Angels then you should feel less of the loss, less sorrow for one who is now where Peace is beyond all understanding. Whether you believe it or you at Least intellectualize it, this should lift some of the weight off of you. But it does not, with every passing, every funeral, feeling the sorrow in yourself, and seeing it and knowing how people around you are feeling it, some are truly broken when their mother dies, or a child, or just the slow one after the other procession of the inevitable in a family that becomes smaller and heart break after heart break leaves the remaining bereft. And the heaviness settles in, The next paragraph us how we soldier on one foot in front if the other, then how much more his many more the sadness, sorrow is almost to much. But we learn we know eventually this life is worth every ounce of the pain . you don't want to go through all this and have to do it again, because your sorrow made you break up the contract. Some people do everyday, if you stay strong you will know how it feels to be set free if this vehicle our body, A meat sack, once you have shed it "the sweetness in the leaving" is the experience you can only get by accepting the challenge of this life. How it feels to be here with doubt and anxiety and always not being sure if you can believe that we are on purpose that Gods love is everything in everything. Naysayers will point how god could love us and let all the pain and evil. And injustice and horrifying eons of suffering happen and the simple reason is if you stayed in heaven you would know all the love and never know otherwise. But when you venture out down here where uncertainty and awful things happen even if you are isolated and protected for a life time the very fact you are going to die can be burdensome, if you are a true believer it still creeps in on you. So when we go and all this is gone , the fact of the wonderment is gods love can only be experienced in the"sweetness in the leaving." This place the feeling is mind blowing according to most people who could tell the tale of a NDE.
My ex told me to get this song. He say that it reminded him of me but he wasn't sure why lol
Definetly an overwhelming song, if you hear it in the right mood. It was one of the few times I almost cried in a movie, when this was played in pay it forward.
This is one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard. Yes, I cried when it was played at the enf of Pay it Forward. It's about how there is pain and suffering in this world, and we're all bleeding and broken, but it's the pain and the sorrow that allows us to see the beauty in the good times. One day we'll leave this imperfect world for one where there is pain, but for now the angels will help us through this one.
PolexiaAphrodesia! I enjoyed reading your comment so much. You are so right, one of these days we are going to trade this imperfect world of pain and suffering for a better world not made by hands where there will be no more tears, no more pain or suffering. What a day that will be. Just one moment in God's kingdom will pay for it all.
PolexiaAphrodesia! I enjoyed reading your comment so much. You are so right, one of these days we are going to trade this imperfect world of pain and suffering for a better world not made by hands where there will be no more tears, no more pain or suffering. What a day that will be. Just one moment in God's kingdom will pay for it all.
its about the loss of a man and the weight of the man as they carry him to be buried. It the insight on how it feels to have such a loss within your heart. As the mother sings and the baby cries.
after all this you question everything about life, what does it mean, what if we could take away all the pain and suffering?? but if you do this we will not see the real beauty of life because pain and suffering help us really realize and cherish it.
we ask for help through all this...we call for an angel so that we dont feel so alone, so you can get through this with someone=an angel there
I first heard this song in the movie "Pay it Forward"...and it was strange, because at 10 years old, this song had a great meaning for me... it reminds me that there is pain and suffering and problems in this world...aside from my own little world...and even though there seems to be no end, the Angels are going to help us through the tough times. i love this song...i always say that about the songs that I comment, but on this one...I really truly mean it.
Definitely one of the most beautiful female singer/songwriter songs to have appeared in the past...18 years? Wow, time flies. This track first appeared in Wim Wenders movie, "Until the End of the World" way back in 1991 and I was struck by it's haunting, delicate beauty. Since then it's popped up sporadically in various media, including "Six Feet Under" and "Pay it Forward." Despite this it's never quite penetrated the mainstream, probably due to its serene, almost glacial pace. The lyrics themselves are pretty straightforward--life is beautiful and painful in roughly equal doses and one must endure the latter in order to fully cherish the former. Is it worth the price? Does any of it have meaning? No one knows.
I first became aware of "Calling All Angels" when the six women sang it to their dead friend in "Six Feet Under." There is a sadness to this song but I think that it's ultimately life affirming. We may need help from time to time that has us calling all angels – and we may question at times if it's all worthwhile – but those vexing emotions are ultimately part of what makes it all so rewarding.
This is just my thoughts on the song's meaning. Please feel free to reply and say anything :)
“A man is placed upon the steps, a baby cries” (someone has died and he is put in a place where is has to ascend <ie: being placed upon the steps, he has to start climbing>. People he is going to leave behind are crying and are called by this song “baby” because earthly life is just the infancy stage of living. We continue to grow even after our death and our life here on earth is just a passing moment in our entirety)
“And high above him you hear the church bells start to ring.” (something higher is ringing. It signals something like when the church bells ring to signal the end of a ceremony and the beginning of another one: a new cycle has begun)
“The heaviness, the heaviness of it settles in,” (the heaviness of the narrator is emphasized as if saying it once is not enough. The narrator is starting to see the how much he/she has lost once the everything has “settled” and has been accounted for)
“A mother starts to sing.” (i think this might the man’s mother, or mother, being the source of creation, another unearthly being beckoning the man to come up by means of singing to him, or singing might be a form of rejoicing at the reunion with the “mother”)
“Then it's one foot then the other as you step along the road Steppin' on the road, how much weight, how much weight?” (this might be the experience the narrator is feeling having been left the “man” he/she starts to go on with baby steps (... one foot then the other...) still feeling the “weight” of the loss. yet the narrator is asking “how much weight, how much weight?” as if he/she is not able to fathom the gravity. Maybe that is why the narrator used “Then it’s one foot then the other as you step along the road” giving the imagery of someone walking carrying something heavy taking one step at a time.)
“And it's how long and how far and how many times, Oh, before it's too late?” (the narrator is wondering “how long” he/she has to journey before he/she can make it through. “How many times” does he/she has to try again to recover from this loss. Or is it too late? Will he/she wander forever unsure what to make out of this “new life he/she has without the “man”... more on the “unsure” part in the chorus)
“Calling all angels, calling all angels. Walk me through this one, don't leave me alone.” (The narrator is summoning help from angels as if because not one man can help out the narrator with his/her ordeal) “Calling all angels, calling all angels. We're trying, we're hoping, but we're not sure how” (trying to cope but is uncertain if the way he/she is coping is the right way)
“Oh and every day you gaze upon the sunset With such love and intensity.” (sunset means it’s the end of the day likewise it may mean the end of a cycle. The narrator may be talking about appreciating the fleeting beauty of the present seeing it in its full circle, for its entirety just when it is about to end) “Why it's almost as if, if you could only crack the code You'd finally understand what this all means.” (once you’ve seen life for what it is, you could see what everything happening is for and about: the meaning of life. the narrator sees the light of his/her suffering.)
“Oh but if you could, do you think you would Have traded all the pain and suffering?” (But the narrator has been so deeply immersed in “pain and suffering” that he/she is addicted to it. All the drama and crying has been her catharsis. It must have been an outlet for her. Or maybe there might be some other unhealthy outlet that he/she has been using but now she sees that the addiction must be given up in order to “move on” and be better. He/she cries for help from everyone except herself. Will he/she move or will he/she stay in the glum that he/she has been used to?)
“Oh, but then you would've missed the beauty of the light upon this earth And the sweetness of the leaving.” (the narrator is weighing things out. Will she leave the beauty of repetition of the security of the familiar and start anew?)
Calling all angels, calling all angels! Walk me through this one, don't leave me alone Calling all angels, calling all angels, We're trying, we're hoping but we're not sure
Calling all angels (call all angels) Calling all angels (call all angels) Walk me through this one Don't leave me alone.
Calling all angels, calling all angels We're trying, we're hoping, we're hurting, we're loving We're crying, we're calling, But we're not sure how this goes.
This is just my thoughts on the song's meaning. Please feel free to reply and say anything :)
“A man is placed upon the steps, a baby cries” (someone has died and he is put in a place where is has to ascend <ie: being placed upon the steps, he has to start climbing>. People he is going to leave behind are crying and are called by this song “baby” because earthly life is just the infancy stage of living. We continue to grow even after our death and our life here on earth is just a passing moment in our entirety)
“And high above him you hear the church bells start to ring.” (something higher is ringing. It signals something like when the church bells ring to signal the end of a ceremony and the beginning of another one: a new cycle has begun)
“The heaviness, the heaviness of it settles in,” (the heaviness of the narrator is emphasized as if saying it once is not enough. The narrator is starting to see the how much he/she has lost once the everything has “settled” and has been accounted for)
“A mother starts to sing.” (i think this might the man’s mother, or mother, being the source of creation, another unearthly being beckoning the man to come up by means of singing to him, or singing might be a form of rejoicing at the reunion with the “mother”)
“Then it's one foot then the other as you step along the road Steppin' on the road, how much weight, how much weight?” (this might be the experience the narrator is feeling having been left the “man” he/she starts to go on with baby steps (... one foot then the other...) still feeling the “weight” of the loss. yet the narrator is asking “how much weight, how much weight?” as if he/she is not able to fathom the gravity. Maybe that is why the narrator used “Then it’s one foot then the other as you step along the road” giving the imagery of someone walking carrying something heavy taking one step at a time.)
“And it's how long and how far and how many times, Oh, before it's too late?” (the narrator is wondering “how long” he/she has to journey before he/she can make it through. “How many times” does he/she has to try again to recover from this loss. Or is it too late? Will he/she wander forever unsure what to make out of this “new life he/she has without the “man”... more on the “unsure” part in the chorus)
“Calling all angels, calling all angels. Walk me through this one, don't leave me alone.” (The narrator is summoning help from angels as if because not one man can help out the narrator with his/her ordeal) “Calling all angels, calling all angels. We're trying, we're hoping, but we're not sure how” (trying to cope but is uncertain if the way he/she is coping is the right way)
“Oh and every day you gaze upon the sunset With such love and intensity.” (sunset means it’s the end of the day likewise it may mean the end of a cycle. The narrator may be talking about appreciating the fleeting beauty of the present seeing it in its full circle, for its entirety just when it is about to end) “Why it's almost as if, if you could only crack the code You'd finally understand what this all means.” (once you’ve seen life for what it is, you could see what everything happening is for and about: the meaning of life. the narrator sees the light of his/her suffering.)
“Oh but if you could, do you think you would Have traded all the pain and suffering?” (But the narrator has been so deeply immersed in “pain and suffering” that he/she is addicted to it. All the drama and crying has been her catharsis. It must have been an outlet for her. Or maybe there might be some other unhealthy outlet that he/she has been using but now she sees that the addiction must be given up in order to “move on” and be better. He/she cries for help from everyone except herself. Will he/she move or will he/she stay in the glum that he/she has been used to?)
“Oh, but then you would've missed the beauty of the light upon this earth And the sweetness of the leaving.” (the narrator is weighing things out. Will she leave the beauty of repetition of the security of the familiar and start anew?)
Calling all angels, calling all angels! Walk me through this one, don't leave me alone Calling all angels, calling all angels, We're trying, we're hoping but we're not sure
Calling all angels (call all angels) Calling all angels (call all angels) Walk me through this one Don't leave me alone.
Calling all angels, calling all angels We're trying, we're hoping, we're hurting, we're loving We're crying, we're calling, But we're not sure how this goes.