Davey's always held animosity towards the detriment of "mainstream culture" or the bourgeois, so to speak.
This song is from sing the sorrow, and most songs on that album were essentially about just not fitting in and being dispondent. It sounds childish and cliche, but that is the most re-appearing theme.
The lyrics: "See how I blend in with nothing?" very supportive of that claim.
"Fell to the ground and the ground caught me." The "ground" could be a sub-culture, as opposed to the "sky"
The "sky" would then refer to mainstream culture, which needs to be burned eventually because it is both destructive and immediate.
So, accordng to my theory, if the ground is a more secluded sub-culture, which Davey speaks about: "The hardcore scene, the sXe scene." It is something you fall to, when you fall out of the graces of the mainstream, or I guess as more of a suicidal connotation, fall on purpose; and then it catches you! So it is a happy song yaaayyy
Davey's always held animosity towards the detriment of "mainstream culture" or the bourgeois, so to speak.
This song is from sing the sorrow, and most songs on that album were essentially about just not fitting in and being dispondent. It sounds childish and cliche, but that is the most re-appearing theme.
The lyrics: "See how I blend in with nothing?" very supportive of that claim.
"Fell to the ground and the ground caught me." The "ground" could be a sub-culture, as opposed to the "sky"
The "sky" would then refer to mainstream culture, which needs to be burned eventually because it is both destructive and immediate.
So, accordng to my theory, if the ground is a more secluded sub-culture, which Davey speaks about: "The hardcore scene, the sXe scene." It is something you fall to, when you fall out of the graces of the mainstream, or I guess as more of a suicidal connotation, fall on purpose; and then it catches you! So it is a happy song yaaayyy