While it may literally refer to a piano, I think it's a good metaphor for people in general, and accepting someone for who they are, faults and all, and not trying to "fix them" to fit your image of how they should be.
"and the expert
with his tools
said to bring it up to pitch would snap the sucker in two
I guess we're tuning to you"
While it may literally refer to a piano, I think it's a good metaphor for people in general, and accepting someone for who they are, faults and all, and not trying to "fix them" to fit your image of how they should be.
"and the expert with his tools said to bring it up to pitch would snap the sucker in two I guess we're tuning to you"
I buy these meanings, but nobody thinks any of it relates to 'corazon,' which means 'heart' in Spanish?
I buy these meanings, but nobody thinks any of it relates to 'corazon,' which means 'heart' in Spanish?
You must be right. "I swear I felt a pulse beneath your keys" is a pretty clear heart metaphor. "Until your first chord struck" is another one.
You must be right. "I swear I felt a pulse beneath your keys" is a pretty clear heart metaphor. "Until your first chord struck" is another one.