Listen to the drums.
The cello.
the other guitar.
The base.
Then the synthesizer.
The stress of the piano in the end and how it s drown out by do do do dododo.
This song is about satisfaction.
and dissatisfaction.
Selfishness and
Selflessness.
Listening to the purity of right and Wiley of wrong and then drowning the right with enough of the wrong.
There is great conflict in this song.
There is agreement in the beginning, between the piano and guitar. The piano leads and the guitar and the guitar is mirroring the piano in agreement. Then conflict arises, with the introduction of the drums. Then the guitar descends to a different octave... Then it reaches to a higher octave. The piano becomes more adamant yet not insistent. If I were to put labels on the instruments I would say that the piano is the wife. The guitar is the man. The cello is the mother of the wife. or possibly the conscience. The drum is the will of the man. All the other instruments are pawns that draw the man out to his XXXX what ever. Eventually the piano and cello are drowned out.
Do we need words?
The song is told before the lyrics even starts.
Listen to the regret and vulnerability in the last words he sings.
To never to home. then the feeble attempt to be flippant afterwards da da dodod.
The song strips back down in the end.
Everything fades back down to the man his will and his wife.
this says...I have to go home. I have to face what I have done.
This song is complex and gives intimate understanding about the addiction cycle. I think RS grew up in it. His music is retaliatory. This music is retrospective and intelligent.
.
@tebdanner That's the best description of a songs arrangement and meaning i have ever read. Not just on this site. Anywhere including NME, Melody Maker etc
@tebdanner That's the best description of a songs arrangement and meaning i have ever read. Not just on this site. Anywhere including NME, Melody Maker etc
Listen to the juxtaposition of the song itself.
Listen to the piano
Listen to the guitar.
Listen to the drums. The cello. the other guitar. The base. Then the synthesizer.
The stress of the piano in the end and how it s drown out by do do do dododo.
This song is about satisfaction.
and dissatisfaction.
Selfishness and Selflessness.
Listening to the purity of right and Wiley of wrong and then drowning the right with enough of the wrong.
There is great conflict in this song.
There is agreement in the beginning, between the piano and guitar. The piano leads and the guitar and the guitar is mirroring the piano in agreement. Then conflict arises, with the introduction of the drums. Then the guitar descends to a different octave... Then it reaches to a higher octave. The piano becomes more adamant yet not insistent. If I were to put labels on the instruments I would say that the piano is the wife. The guitar is the man. The cello is the mother of the wife. or possibly the conscience. The drum is the will of the man. All the other instruments are pawns that draw the man out to his XXXX what ever. Eventually the piano and cello are drowned out.
Do we need words?
The song is told before the lyrics even starts.
Listen to the regret and vulnerability in the last words he sings.
To never to home. then the feeble attempt to be flippant afterwards da da dodod.
The song strips back down in the end.
Everything fades back down to the man his will and his wife.
this says...I have to go home. I have to face what I have done.
This song is complex and gives intimate understanding about the addiction cycle. I think RS grew up in it. His music is retaliatory. This music is retrospective and intelligent. .
@tebdanner That's the best description of a songs arrangement and meaning i have ever read. Not just on this site. Anywhere including NME, Melody Maker etc
@tebdanner That's the best description of a songs arrangement and meaning i have ever read. Not just on this site. Anywhere including NME, Melody Maker etc
"Do we need words"
"Do we need words"
I applaud you.
I applaud you.
@tebdanner great so g
@tebdanner great so g