I get the impression that "Johnny" and "Jenny" are representative of everyone (name of the band is The Human Race), and that they're basically creative people who get co-opted by The System.
The world going "pop" might be a reference to the notion that it's all going to end soon (nuclear war [Little Baby & Big Bonhomme = Fat Man & Little Boy?], environmental devastation, etc.) and that, at the same time, the world is going "pop" (popular/shallow); since MWH would work social protest into their songs with both an international and cultural perspective, maybe the play on words was their way of expressing that the two are feeding off of each other: everyone thinks armageddon is just around the corner, so they live for today -- at the risk of indulging in a hedonistic, superficial escapism which all but guarantees a continuation of the same unacceptable status quo they're trying to escape. Not much has changed in 20 years, has it? ;)
The first two verses deal with Johnny and Jenny as musicians. The next two suggest that Johnny and Jenny are in love and wanting to have a kid (boy needs a girl / nest needs a bird), which means they're going to have to make some money off of their otherwise 'pure' creative pursuit. So they focus less on just making decent songs, and more on their image. They'd like to see themselves in magazines and, later, they get smart (it seems) and go into movies. Along the way, they've sold out and lost their music.
With the countoff, MWH seems to be saying that the crowd who came to see them are people who genuinely like music, and that MWH themselves are musicians and not idol singers. Everyone there is a friend of theirs. Or, on the flip side, maybe they're capping on smarmy pop singers who might actually believe that everyone in the crowd is a 'friend' of theirs. And whatever happened to the Duke of Earl? That was a pop song with an honest underpinning of soul, and that seems to be what MWH think pop music should be about: it can be fun, but it has to have substance.
It could be that "Al Gunn" refers to Alexander Gunn, who got into the Canadian House of Commons back in the 19th century and was also famous for being a really macho, fashion savvy, rugby-playing lady's man - one of those whiter-than-white rugged individualists with a big moustache. And maybe "Dr. Ben" refers to Yosef Ben-Jochannan, a guy who has a strongly afrocentric and often pseudo-historical read on history (e.g. Aristotle and Alexander the Great took a road trip together to the Library of Alexandria, everything good came from Africa, et cetera). Say, what planet are we on? I imagine Gunn and Doc Ben are being presented as polar opposites, though I'm only guessing these are the guys MWH had in mind.
And then we're at the bridge, and it's the heart of the song. MWH realizes that they don't get anywhere attempting to unravel the world's ills, either. Trying to figure out where the world went wrong is such a confusing, complex prospect that you wind up doing a faceplant thinking about it, and persisting could drive you nuts. Ding dong! On the other hand, if you don't consider it at all, you think everything's 'right' and hit the disco for another evening of distraction. MWH thinks there's a middle way between obsession and dissipation?
The song closes by throwing it back in your lap. You're either a Johnny or a Jenny (ain't nobody couldn't take their place), so how are you going to handle it? Sell out, zone out, or proceed from a deeper consciousness? Maybe the world going 'pop' is a suggestion that MWH thinks the answer lies in populism, the common people vs. the elites? And so they keep asking, "Everybody, tell me, have you heard?" Did you get the message?
this album was created as a story. it tells the story of jonny and jenny throughout all the songs. the entire thing is told in incredibly cryptic poetry, however, and can be really tough to interpret. i spent a lot of time a few years back finding the lyrics and interpreting them as best i could. it begins with this song setting up the story. jenny and jonny were two musicians with a message. they became more popular than air and ended up selling out. they had a daughter named tuesday, which explains...
this album was created as a story. it tells the story of jonny and jenny throughout all the songs. the entire thing is told in incredibly cryptic poetry, however, and can be really tough to interpret. i spent a lot of time a few years back finding the lyrics and interpreting them as best i could. it begins with this song setting up the story. jenny and jonny were two musicians with a message. they became more popular than air and ended up selling out. they had a daughter named tuesday, which explains that song. the themes and metaphors stay the same through the entire album. angels refer to jonny's dependence on jenny and rainbows refer to his increasing dependence on drugs. there are more, but i havn't listened to the songs for a while and they escape me.
I get the impression that "Johnny" and "Jenny" are representative of everyone (name of the band is The Human Race), and that they're basically creative people who get co-opted by The System.
The world going "pop" might be a reference to the notion that it's all going to end soon (nuclear war [Little Baby & Big Bonhomme = Fat Man & Little Boy?], environmental devastation, etc.) and that, at the same time, the world is going "pop" (popular/shallow); since MWH would work social protest into their songs with both an international and cultural perspective, maybe the play on words was their way of expressing that the two are feeding off of each other: everyone thinks armageddon is just around the corner, so they live for today -- at the risk of indulging in a hedonistic, superficial escapism which all but guarantees a continuation of the same unacceptable status quo they're trying to escape. Not much has changed in 20 years, has it? ;)
The first two verses deal with Johnny and Jenny as musicians. The next two suggest that Johnny and Jenny are in love and wanting to have a kid (boy needs a girl / nest needs a bird), which means they're going to have to make some money off of their otherwise 'pure' creative pursuit. So they focus less on just making decent songs, and more on their image. They'd like to see themselves in magazines and, later, they get smart (it seems) and go into movies. Along the way, they've sold out and lost their music.
With the countoff, MWH seems to be saying that the crowd who came to see them are people who genuinely like music, and that MWH themselves are musicians and not idol singers. Everyone there is a friend of theirs. Or, on the flip side, maybe they're capping on smarmy pop singers who might actually believe that everyone in the crowd is a 'friend' of theirs. And whatever happened to the Duke of Earl? That was a pop song with an honest underpinning of soul, and that seems to be what MWH think pop music should be about: it can be fun, but it has to have substance.
It could be that "Al Gunn" refers to Alexander Gunn, who got into the Canadian House of Commons back in the 19th century and was also famous for being a really macho, fashion savvy, rugby-playing lady's man - one of those whiter-than-white rugged individualists with a big moustache. And maybe "Dr. Ben" refers to Yosef Ben-Jochannan, a guy who has a strongly afrocentric and often pseudo-historical read on history (e.g. Aristotle and Alexander the Great took a road trip together to the Library of Alexandria, everything good came from Africa, et cetera). Say, what planet are we on? I imagine Gunn and Doc Ben are being presented as polar opposites, though I'm only guessing these are the guys MWH had in mind.
And then we're at the bridge, and it's the heart of the song. MWH realizes that they don't get anywhere attempting to unravel the world's ills, either. Trying to figure out where the world went wrong is such a confusing, complex prospect that you wind up doing a faceplant thinking about it, and persisting could drive you nuts. Ding dong! On the other hand, if you don't consider it at all, you think everything's 'right' and hit the disco for another evening of distraction. MWH thinks there's a middle way between obsession and dissipation?
The song closes by throwing it back in your lap. You're either a Johnny or a Jenny (ain't nobody couldn't take their place), so how are you going to handle it? Sell out, zone out, or proceed from a deeper consciousness? Maybe the world going 'pop' is a suggestion that MWH thinks the answer lies in populism, the common people vs. the elites? And so they keep asking, "Everybody, tell me, have you heard?" Did you get the message?
Hope that's not too navel-gazy...
this album was created as a story. it tells the story of jonny and jenny throughout all the songs. the entire thing is told in incredibly cryptic poetry, however, and can be really tough to interpret. i spent a lot of time a few years back finding the lyrics and interpreting them as best i could. it begins with this song setting up the story. jenny and jonny were two musicians with a message. they became more popular than air and ended up selling out. they had a daughter named tuesday, which explains...
this album was created as a story. it tells the story of jonny and jenny throughout all the songs. the entire thing is told in incredibly cryptic poetry, however, and can be really tough to interpret. i spent a lot of time a few years back finding the lyrics and interpreting them as best i could. it begins with this song setting up the story. jenny and jonny were two musicians with a message. they became more popular than air and ended up selling out. they had a daughter named tuesday, which explains that song. the themes and metaphors stay the same through the entire album. angels refer to jonny's dependence on jenny and rainbows refer to his increasing dependence on drugs. there are more, but i havn't listened to the songs for a while and they escape me.