The story of Abraham and Isaac is summarized fairly bluntly here without so much as a stanza of reflection. Judging by the wildly varying opinions on Abraham's character on this site, I'd say this particular narrative of father and son and obligation hits us humans in the guts for some reason. I wouldn't be surprised if Sufjan kept it straightforward simply because the bare essence of the story is one hell of a thing to wrestle with.
The spare accompaniment, the simple plain-song like melody, and the erie female-voiced chorus all speak to me. It sounds like a priest singing "the mystery of faith" or an imam's throaty chants. It's just like "hey before you react let these words sink in a second."
I would also add, it can't be an accident that Mr Stevens is singing TO Abraham...
I would share my own opinion on the story of Abraham, myself, but I cannot put it any better than Soren Kierkegaard did back when he wrote Fear and Trembling. Read it if that brilliant asshole Abraham really haunts you like he does me.
The story of Abraham and Isaac is summarized fairly bluntly here without so much as a stanza of reflection. Judging by the wildly varying opinions on Abraham's character on this site, I'd say this particular narrative of father and son and obligation hits us humans in the guts for some reason. I wouldn't be surprised if Sufjan kept it straightforward simply because the bare essence of the story is one hell of a thing to wrestle with.
The spare accompaniment, the simple plain-song like melody, and the erie female-voiced chorus all speak to me. It sounds like a priest singing "the mystery of faith" or an imam's throaty chants. It's just like "hey before you react let these words sink in a second."
I would also add, it can't be an accident that Mr Stevens is singing TO Abraham...
I would share my own opinion on the story of Abraham, myself, but I cannot put it any better than Soren Kierkegaard did back when he wrote Fear and Trembling. Read it if that brilliant asshole Abraham really haunts you like he does me.