Number 3 from "I Am Hollywood" - Once again we find ourselves faced with lyrics and music critiquing the creepy city of Hollywood.
Can you find my angel?
She crawled under the bed
(I can see a distrought parent who is looking for their daughter - their angel - who left home to persue her dreams in the city of angels - I think the metaphor here is that it would be hard to find "their little angel" when she is lost in the acclaimed "city of angels"... which is a needle-in-the-haystack kind of thing - To enter Hollywood would be like crawling under your bed - a place that is dark, and unknown to most ;])
I think I saw her breathing
But found out she was dead
(I think at this point the parents found their daughter - but they found her doing something like prostitution or something degrading. The parents consider her another lost soul of Hollywood; in other words - dead to the modern civilized world)
It is too late
It is over
Can't you feel these dreams (it's over)
Message to the queen (it's over)
The baby stops breathing (it's over)
Can't you feel these dreams?
It's over
(So the parents start asking themselves 'Was this her dream? To be degraded and used?' But the daughter says 'message to the queen (eath to mom) - it's over - I'm not your little girl anymore)
Could you call a doctor who could stop by at nine?
I had planned this day for dying
But now I'm feeling fine
(Sarcastically, the daughter begins to lash out at her parents and asking them if they think there is a simple solution to actions that cannot be undone - a doctor can't make this better. To her parent's credit, she wasnt enthusiastic about this job either and the day she moved in was the day she died, but now that Hollywood sucked her in she feels better because people like her mean something in that city)
The Creature is walking
(Hollywood's newest monster is now fully independant and another drone among the city)
I've got to find a new passage way
I've got to get home by Saturday
(Afraid, the parents wish to leave the city before teh "creatures" or citizens of the city have a chance to suck them in as well)
Queen to Castle, Church to Nun
What a wicked web I've spun
(The mom wants to go home, and she prays to God that he can show her daughter (the nun) the right way out of this wicked web of lies and deciet she has spun)
I've go to get home by Saturday
So I have to find a new passage way
I've got a car with no place to go
"How bout a little fire scarecrow?"
(The daughter laments on the fact that her parents have deserted her. Sure, she owns a fancy car in glitz-n-glam Hollywood - but she has nobody to see and nowhere to be in particular. Props to He Is Legend for their clever use of lyrics; as for the Wizard of Oz reference, your guess is as good as mine. What i see is the daughter resuming prostitution and asking a customer if he is ready for some excitement)
Wake yourself up
You've been dreaming again
About having new friends in a ghost town
(The He Is Legend Punch Line: The daughter was dreaming this entire dream. She only imagined her parents cared enough for her well-being to find her in Hollywood, and she was only dreaming about being a prostitute. She escapes to these dreams because she literally has nobody to call her own in Hollywood, or anywhere in the world)
That being said, the chorus could be the daughter's concience asking her if she can feel these dreams affecting her mentality - but she argues with herself that its over, and she will never find somebody to be with.
Number 3 from "I Am Hollywood" - Once again we find ourselves faced with lyrics and music critiquing the creepy city of Hollywood.
Can you find my angel? She crawled under the bed
(I can see a distrought parent who is looking for their daughter - their angel - who left home to persue her dreams in the city of angels - I think the metaphor here is that it would be hard to find "their little angel" when she is lost in the acclaimed "city of angels"... which is a needle-in-the-haystack kind of thing - To enter Hollywood would be like crawling under your bed - a place that is dark, and unknown to most ;])
I think I saw her breathing But found out she was dead
(I think at this point the parents found their daughter - but they found her doing something like prostitution or something degrading. The parents consider her another lost soul of Hollywood; in other words - dead to the modern civilized world)
It is too late It is over Can't you feel these dreams (it's over) Message to the queen (it's over) The baby stops breathing (it's over) Can't you feel these dreams? It's over
(So the parents start asking themselves 'Was this her dream? To be degraded and used?' But the daughter says 'message to the queen (eath to mom) - it's over - I'm not your little girl anymore)
Could you call a doctor who could stop by at nine? I had planned this day for dying But now I'm feeling fine
(Sarcastically, the daughter begins to lash out at her parents and asking them if they think there is a simple solution to actions that cannot be undone - a doctor can't make this better. To her parent's credit, she wasnt enthusiastic about this job either and the day she moved in was the day she died, but now that Hollywood sucked her in she feels better because people like her mean something in that city)
The Creature is walking
(Hollywood's newest monster is now fully independant and another drone among the city)
I've got to find a new passage way I've got to get home by Saturday
(Afraid, the parents wish to leave the city before teh "creatures" or citizens of the city have a chance to suck them in as well)
Queen to Castle, Church to Nun What a wicked web I've spun
(The mom wants to go home, and she prays to God that he can show her daughter (the nun) the right way out of this wicked web of lies and deciet she has spun)
I've go to get home by Saturday So I have to find a new passage way I've got a car with no place to go "How bout a little fire scarecrow?"
(The daughter laments on the fact that her parents have deserted her. Sure, she owns a fancy car in glitz-n-glam Hollywood - but she has nobody to see and nowhere to be in particular. Props to He Is Legend for their clever use of lyrics; as for the Wizard of Oz reference, your guess is as good as mine. What i see is the daughter resuming prostitution and asking a customer if he is ready for some excitement)
Wake yourself up You've been dreaming again About having new friends in a ghost town
(The He Is Legend Punch Line: The daughter was dreaming this entire dream. She only imagined her parents cared enough for her well-being to find her in Hollywood, and she was only dreaming about being a prostitute. She escapes to these dreams because she literally has nobody to call her own in Hollywood, or anywhere in the world)
That being said, the chorus could be the daughter's concience asking her if she can feel these dreams affecting her mentality - but she argues with herself that its over, and she will never find somebody to be with.