"Hey hey hey
yeah we had everything
Vinyl in mono
And we looked the other way
Man we were so dumb "
Monophone recordings in vinyl are a very old medium, probably last produced for the mass market in the 60s and abandoned before the end of the 60s. Truly great founders or precursors of rock and roll cut mono in vinyl. But someone figured something new was better than the original rock and roll inspiration, and this increasingly was the trend until punk came along trying to reestablish the roots of rock and roll.
"Is this the part in the book that you wrote
Where I gotta come and save the day
Did you miss me
Did you miss me
Yeah yeah yeah yeah "
Who is "you"? From the rest of the lyrics, it would seem to refer to God, or some kind of god that cares in the least about the fate of rock and roll music, impliedly in a positive way. An odd attitude to attribute to the Judeo-Christian conception of God, in the least, but maybe that isn't the exclusive conception of God being talked about here. After all, those 12-steppers can as a matter of necessity come up with a "higher power" suited to their idiosyncrasies.
Apparently Ms. Love's higher power referenced in this work would want something about rock and roll salvaged and would like her to do it, or maybe was ignoring her thinking she wasn't able to anyhow? She seems ambivalent about just how much her higher power is willing to be supportive of her throughout the song.
"Hey hey hey yeah we had everything Vinyl in mono And we looked the other way Man we were so dumb "
Monophone recordings in vinyl are a very old medium, probably last produced for the mass market in the 60s and abandoned before the end of the 60s. Truly great founders or precursors of rock and roll cut mono in vinyl. But someone figured something new was better than the original rock and roll inspiration, and this increasingly was the trend until punk came along trying to reestablish the roots of rock and roll.
"Is this the part in the book that you wrote Where I gotta come and save the day Did you miss me Did you miss me Yeah yeah yeah yeah "
Who is "you"? From the rest of the lyrics, it would seem to refer to God, or some kind of god that cares in the least about the fate of rock and roll music, impliedly in a positive way. An odd attitude to attribute to the Judeo-Christian conception of God, in the least, but maybe that isn't the exclusive conception of God being talked about here. After all, those 12-steppers can as a matter of necessity come up with a "higher power" suited to their idiosyncrasies.
Apparently Ms. Love's higher power referenced in this work would want something about rock and roll salvaged and would like her to do it, or maybe was ignoring her thinking she wasn't able to anyhow? She seems ambivalent about just how much her higher power is willing to be supportive of her throughout the song.