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Still The Same Lyrics
You always won everytime you placed a bet
You're still damn good
No one's gotten to you yet
Everytime they were sure they had you caught
You were quicker than they thought
You'd just turn your back and walk
You always said
The cards would never do you wrong
The trick you said
Was never play the game too long
A gambler's share
The only risk that you would take
The only loss you could forsake
The only bluff you couldn't fake
And you're still the same
I caught up with you yesterday
Moving game to game
No one standing in your way
Turning on the charm
Long enough to get you by
You're still the same
You still aim high
There you stood
Everybody watched you play
I just turned and walked away
I had nothing left to say
'Cause you're still the same
You're still the same
Moving game to game
Some things never change
You're still the same
You're still damn good
No one's gotten to you yet
Everytime they were sure they had you caught
You were quicker than they thought
You'd just turn your back and walk
The cards would never do you wrong
The trick you said
Was never play the game too long
A gambler's share
The only risk that you would take
The only loss you could forsake
The only bluff you couldn't fake
I caught up with you yesterday
Moving game to game
No one standing in your way
Turning on the charm
Long enough to get you by
You're still the same
You still aim high
Everybody watched you play
I just turned and walked away
I had nothing left to say
'Cause you're still the same
You're still the same
Moving game to game
Some things never change
You're still the same
Song Info
Copyright
Lyrics © Gear Publishing Co.
Writer
Bob Seger
Duration
3:24
Submitted by
kevin On May 24, 2001
Add your song meanings, interpretations, facts, memories & more to the community.
personally i think it's about an ex girlfriend and she gambles her love. She's a player or she's too afraid to get close or both.
You always won everytime you placed a bet You're still damn good No one's gotten to you yet Everytime they were sure they had you caught You were quicker than they thought You'd just turn your back and walk
---Pretty much every time she wanted someone she could get them. If they wanted her she would just walk away so she didn't get attached.---
You always said The cards would never do you wrong The trick you said Was never play the game too long A gambler's share The only risk that you would take The only loss you could forsake The only bluff you couldn't fake
--- Playing the field cards was perfect bec she'd never have to settle down. The trick was to never stay with someone too long never play the game too long and she wouldnt take the risk to stay with someone or fall in love. and i think maybe she fell in love with him... and wouldn't admit it (lied to herself and him)
And you're still the same I caught up with you yesterday Moving game to game No one standing in your way Turning on the charm Long enough to get you by You're still the same You still aim high
---she's still looking for the perfect guy still aim high and she moves from man to man game to game turning on the charm. She leaves before she gets too attached and stays long enough for her to get something out of it long enough to get you by
There you stood Everybody watched you play I just turned and walked away I had nothing left to say 'Cause you're still the same You're still the same Moving game to game Some things never change You're still the same ---all her friends watched her go from man to man. He couldn't stand it anymore so he walked away and he's given up on her because she's still the same... She's still a player... and he doesn't think she'll ever change. He's given up on her
Posted from http://www.segerfile.com/stranger.html
Posted from http://www.segerfile.com/stranger.html
"Still the Same"
"Still the Same"
Charted at #4.
Charted at #4.
Seger: "It's an amalgamation of characters I met when I first went to Hollywood. All Type A personalities...It was another great reason to base out of Michigan." Gary Graff, October 1994, Detroit Free Press. "Bob Seger Tells The Stories Behind The Hits."
Seger: "It's an amalgamation of characters I met when I first went to Hollywood. All Type A personalities...It was another great reason to base out of Michigan." Gary Graff, October 1994, Detroit Free Press. "Bob Seger Tells The Stories Behind The Hits."
Seger describes "Still the Same" as "a good song, but so medium." Seger says Capitol picked it as the single, Capitol says Bob and Punch picked it. Author? August 1978. Magazine?
Seger describes "Still the Same" as "a good song, but so medium." Seger says Capitol picked it as the single, Capitol says Bob and Punch picked it. Author? August 1978. Magazine?
Seger: "The person that I'm...
Seger: "The person that I'm singing about...they're just very charismatic, but they have tremendous faults, but part of the appeal is the charisma. You overlook everything because of the charisma. That's a gift and a curse. I was actually writing about several people that I had met throughout my lifetime..." Interview on Later with Bob Costas.
@saabio That was my interpretation, too. In fact, I heard this song on the radio several months back, and immediately I thought of a woman who had broken my heart a few years back. She once gave a testimony at a "Christ-centered" recovery program about how she "used to" be conceited and judgmental and look down on others. I thought of the way she had treated me, and thought, "What do you mean, 'used to be'?" She's definitely "still the same."
@saabio That was my interpretation, too. In fact, I heard this song on the radio several months back, and immediately I thought of a woman who had broken my heart a few years back. She once gave a testimony at a "Christ-centered" recovery program about how she "used to" be conceited and judgmental and look down on others. I thought of the way she had treated me, and thought, "What do you mean, 'used to be'?" She's definitely "still the same."
@saabio Some would say she's a borderline.
@saabio Some would say she's a borderline.
@saabio Has Taylor Swift covered this?
@saabio Has Taylor Swift covered this?
This song has such a soulful, wistful potency that it is hard to believe that it can be about anything less than an ex-lover, whom the singer is addressing. Maybe she was someone that he loved from the safe distance of "friendship," as he watched her play the field. That's always sure to get you singing the blues. LOL!
Great songs can rarely be understood by looking at the lyrics in isolation from the music. This piece is a great example - the music creates the tone for the lyrics. The lyrics on their own might be said by someone who is resentful, or just laughing at someone who is a fool. But the music is so very sad that the lyrics take on a sense of wistfulness, and unresolved feelings of what must be love.
@PaulSouth Excellent point about the music's role in enhancing the lyrics. I agree it's about love forsaken and an ex-lover observing her after a long time.
@PaulSouth Excellent point about the music's role in enhancing the lyrics. I agree it's about love forsaken and an ex-lover observing her after a long time.
I also can't help but think it's about an Annie Dukes (No offense meant Annie) type woman who is a professional gambler. It's kinda fun to look at it that way some times.
I also can't help but think it's about an Annie Dukes (No offense meant Annie) type woman who is a professional gambler. It's kinda fun to look at it that way some times.
Just heard this song on my way home, and realized why I must've always thought he was speaking of a woman. The chorus (not shown above) has the line, "Baby, babe you're sill the same". I doubt he would be saying that to a buddy =)
For me definitely about a woman, although carefully worded to avoid gender, and not about literal gambling and cards but about the deck life gives you and the gambles we have to take in life. It's about someone who keeps everyone at a distance. He can see the sadness of this and has tried to make this person see it but has said it all before and has nothing else to say. It's sad and he doesn't want to watch what this person is doing.
@Had2comment I like your interpretation that this person is sadly keeping everyone in life at a distance.
@Had2comment I like your interpretation that this person is sadly keeping everyone in life at a distance.
This songs seems to be about a man who runs into an old girlfriend, someone he loved very much. But she wasn't ready to settle down and it seems will never be. He talks about catching up with her and realizing she'll never change. He still has feelings for her, but she hurt him and he keeps telling himself she'll always play the field.
@sowaltongrrl Great interpretation! I think you're right that it's probably about someone who was not ready to settle down and continually wants to play the field. No one wants to be with someone like that.
@sowaltongrrl Great interpretation! I think you're right that it's probably about someone who was not ready to settle down and continually wants to play the field. No one wants to be with someone like that.
This is a very underrated and beautiful song from Bob Seger.
I think this is a little story about the narrator catching up with an old friend of his. He's using poker as a metaphor for his friends' life. Back in the day, he was pretty cool and a lucky dude. I somewhat take this as his friend's luck with the ladies. 'The trick you said is to never play the game too long' maybe means he goes from girl to girl. He had his own way of doing things, and the narrator could've quite possibly idolized him. Now several years later, he ends up catching up to this old friend of his. The narrator has grown up and matured quite a bit. he's changed his ways and he sees his friend, who has still remained the same. This also somewhat makes the narrator sad, because the friend of his is still living his so-called charmed life. And all that the narrator could do was walk away, cuz nothing was left to say to him.
The tone of the song seems to be a sad tone, like feeling sorry for the guy....
But that's what I get out of it
This song is about me!! My friend who has moved on and played the "game" of life, comes home to see that I still gamble on love, never settling down with one woman, just playing my own game, refusing to get to attached. He is not put off, but just knows that I am still the same..he walks off..after watching from a distance, content..but knowing I'm still the same.
This song is about me!! My friend who has moved on and played the "game" of life, comes home to see that I still gamble on love, never settling down with one woman, just playing my own game, refusing to get to attached. He is not put off, but just knows that I am still the same..he walks off..after watching from a distance, content..but knowing I'm still the same.
You are 100% right...i always thought that. He says "Moving game to game." That probably means "girl to girl"...or one night stands,
You are 100% right...i always thought that. He says "Moving game to game." That probably means "girl to girl"...or one night stands,
I never associated this song literally with gambling. The narrator is both impressed by the friends ability to "deal" people, never allowing anyone to get "in" or too close, but saddened that after the years have passed, the friend never moved into being more substantial. We all know people like that. A great song.
I totally agree with Saabio and 4Lanie (I'm a man). In my eyes there's never been any doubt that he's referring to a girl, either one he's had or wanted and is bitter at how it all ended. The card games in question, of course, are relationships. She goes from one to another, always getting out before she gets too close and has to show who she truly is and before her vulnerability starts to show.
"A gambler's share The only risk that you would take The only loss you could forsake The only bluff you couldn't fake," There are probably a few realationships that she would have liked to continue a little longer, or even start, but circumstances decided otherwise. Those would be the gambler's share.
He catches up with her several years later, and see's that he still doesn't have a chanche and that she's still after the perfect man. He just can't come to terms with this and walks away in frustration.
This is a very compelling song, musically, and I think Seger did a clever thing: he employed a consistent and extended metaphor about a WOMAN with whom he may have had a close relationship.
The song is written ambiguously, so that the gender of the subject is unknown, but I think the key is a sort of bittersweet wistfulness and regret that comes out in the mood established.
Reinforcing the idea that it's a woman, is he marked use of the term "baby, baby" in the final chorus.
If we accept this, then gambling is a metaphor for how she lives her life--she is a confident individual who seems always to come out to the better, and is able to remain above the emotions of her many affairs.
In a sense, it's a song a lot like Tangerine, or Girl From Ipanema, where the female subject is held up as near goddess-like.
Okay, since I first heard this song, I thought it was about a woman. Yes, it could be about a gambler friend(please no Kenny Rogers), but come on, a song with this much feeling, I doubt he is talking about a dude. It sounds like a woman he had feelings for in the past and come across her again and she hasn't changed(duh). But he has moved on and see she is no different than she was in the past. I love this song. His best song, hands down.