This is by far the most verbose and descriptive track on "Before and After Science" -- the album is a conceptual exploration of "Science" vs. "Not-Science" (check out my analysis on its other tracks to see how this song fits [in my mind]). This analysis will likely somehow approximate the form and content of the song as I see it, so I'll warn you now my diction may become a touch vulgar or aggressive.
Everything is shiny and in motion. "Turkeys" (ignorant-type humans?) are driving a vehicle recklessly through a city (are they drunk?). The parenthetical asides in the right channel form a commentary, accenting particular details in the scene with additional information or providing a close-up of its imagery.
Elsewhere, a ship moves to dock (isn't this bustling? simultaneous activity!) and Eno paraphrases a classic rock tune (splish splash!) to inform us that he is "raking in the cash." The rock quote and cash imagery enhance the atmosphere of decadence in the song. "Cash" could represent human striving -- getting rich (and/or famous) -- to escape the realities of Nature and the facticity of Death. After all, "the biology of purpose keeps my nose above the suface" -- ie, Eno's drive to survive and achieve and create and accrue keeps his mind off of inevitable demise. This is also quite sexual (Heck, the whole fucking song is extremely sexual -- pay close attention to the imagery. Dicks, jizz everywhere! More than once while listening to this song alone I've lost track of my hands only to discover them cheerfully autonomous, caressing my own suddenly erect penis. But that's just one aspect of the song -- the vehicle is sexual, the message is meta).
"King's Lead Hat" is an anagram for "Talking Heads." The music is certainly Talking Head-esque, but the term "King's Lead Hat" takes on its own meaning as a metaphor for human Scientific masturbation (ugh, what a pretentious-sounding phrase... lemme explain...) -- ie, the human obsession and self-congratulation in our "endeavors" (smug feelings of superiority to Nature) that supposedly allowed us to "transcend" animal behavior. Yeah -- right. Try telling that to your partner the next time you're having sex.
"King's Lead Hat" is the human impulse to continue being human and to create more humans. "King's Lead Hat put the innocence inside her" (hmm, wonder what that means?). "It will come" is repeated over and over (subtle!) rhythmically. The whole song depends on rhythm. The lyrics themselves are primarily dictated by what sounds cool and flows best -- Eno wants to do his best and have fun doing it. Who doesn't enjoy the King's Lead Hat? It's silly, it's preposterous, it's moronic in its own way -- but silly is fun.
Science is the Art of Human Survival. Applied science (in its institutionalized form) searches for more ways to give humanity a leg-up in Nature -- perhaps an advanced form of animal niche-digging. Should we take such a random process seriously? If we do, will we be fooled into madness and perhaps kill ourselves off in hubris (nuclear war, etc. etc.)? Eno questions the value of mindless competition and striving -- what's wrong with right now? Where are you? Who are you? Why are you doing what you do? Will the King's Lead Hat poison the wearer? Isn't it too heavy? Won't it eventually fall off? Is there such a thing as too much fun, does it lead to a crash? Maybe Eno thinks it's time for us (as a whole) to grow up. The earth, the universe has its own program and we are just some subroutines. If we acknowledge the limitations of Science (that most venerated of human survival processes), maybe we can get beyond the random nonsense that is human existence and plug into something bigger: God, Infinity, Non-Duality, or whatever.
Something is approaching, something is going to happen. Eno nervously counts his fingers (phallic symbols?) and draws bananas (phallic symbol? a link to our primate ancestors?) on bathroom walls. He's just biding time. Nature is the Enemy still -- Nature vs. the King's Lead Hat; thus, the "cycles" of life and death in Nature are "killer hertz" (damn he's clever). But he gets moved anyway -- time is measured by the shirts he wears (fashion? fads? the arbitrary nature of what is popular at any given time?), but time and tide are on his side (another precisely-timed classic rock lyric reference). How could they not be, when he is just a bubble or eddie in the waves themselves? There is nothing wrong with death -- not really. The ocean doesn't suffer, after all.
King's Lead Hat is the mother to desire. Desire is the root of all suffering -- the gap between preferred and actual. Suffering begats invention, invention begats progress, and then we'll find something else to bitch about. Why not stop the wheels of desire and just be? Is it better to be happy with what you have, or feel like you're missing something? It's all in your head, anyway, and what you have belief in is what your focus attends. The hat is just a guise, you remain present Before and After Science.
The final verse depicts further moronic activity of bustling human "progress." Weapons are ready (phallic imagery) and guns purr (phallic imagery). Technology (the satellite) distorts (and shapes) communication. A man attempts to give orders and is not heard -- he seems to be schizophrenic (modecate is an anti-psychotic medication), at least in the eyes of the populace, whose perception is shaped by the King's Lead Hat (which fits over their ears). This alienated man may have something useful to say, but the technology that surrounds him is limiting -- it fragments and commodifies the human experience into (unintentionally) meaningless chatter. A telephone finalizes his defeat (check out Captain Beefheart's "Telephone").
The King's Lead Hat keeps the cycles of desire in motion, with gaps of desire being open and filled.
This is by far the most verbose and descriptive track on "Before and After Science" -- the album is a conceptual exploration of "Science" vs. "Not-Science" (check out my analysis on its other tracks to see how this song fits [in my mind]). This analysis will likely somehow approximate the form and content of the song as I see it, so I'll warn you now my diction may become a touch vulgar or aggressive.
Everything is shiny and in motion. "Turkeys" (ignorant-type humans?) are driving a vehicle recklessly through a city (are they drunk?). The parenthetical asides in the right channel form a commentary, accenting particular details in the scene with additional information or providing a close-up of its imagery.
Elsewhere, a ship moves to dock (isn't this bustling? simultaneous activity!) and Eno paraphrases a classic rock tune (splish splash!) to inform us that he is "raking in the cash." The rock quote and cash imagery enhance the atmosphere of decadence in the song. "Cash" could represent human striving -- getting rich (and/or famous) -- to escape the realities of Nature and the facticity of Death. After all, "the biology of purpose keeps my nose above the suface" -- ie, Eno's drive to survive and achieve and create and accrue keeps his mind off of inevitable demise. This is also quite sexual (Heck, the whole fucking song is extremely sexual -- pay close attention to the imagery. Dicks, jizz everywhere! More than once while listening to this song alone I've lost track of my hands only to discover them cheerfully autonomous, caressing my own suddenly erect penis. But that's just one aspect of the song -- the vehicle is sexual, the message is meta).
"King's Lead Hat" is an anagram for "Talking Heads." The music is certainly Talking Head-esque, but the term "King's Lead Hat" takes on its own meaning as a metaphor for human Scientific masturbation (ugh, what a pretentious-sounding phrase... lemme explain...) -- ie, the human obsession and self-congratulation in our "endeavors" (smug feelings of superiority to Nature) that supposedly allowed us to "transcend" animal behavior. Yeah -- right. Try telling that to your partner the next time you're having sex.
"King's Lead Hat" is the human impulse to continue being human and to create more humans. "King's Lead Hat put the innocence inside her" (hmm, wonder what that means?). "It will come" is repeated over and over (subtle!) rhythmically. The whole song depends on rhythm. The lyrics themselves are primarily dictated by what sounds cool and flows best -- Eno wants to do his best and have fun doing it. Who doesn't enjoy the King's Lead Hat? It's silly, it's preposterous, it's moronic in its own way -- but silly is fun.
Science is the Art of Human Survival. Applied science (in its institutionalized form) searches for more ways to give humanity a leg-up in Nature -- perhaps an advanced form of animal niche-digging. Should we take such a random process seriously? If we do, will we be fooled into madness and perhaps kill ourselves off in hubris (nuclear war, etc. etc.)? Eno questions the value of mindless competition and striving -- what's wrong with right now? Where are you? Who are you? Why are you doing what you do? Will the King's Lead Hat poison the wearer? Isn't it too heavy? Won't it eventually fall off? Is there such a thing as too much fun, does it lead to a crash? Maybe Eno thinks it's time for us (as a whole) to grow up. The earth, the universe has its own program and we are just some subroutines. If we acknowledge the limitations of Science (that most venerated of human survival processes), maybe we can get beyond the random nonsense that is human existence and plug into something bigger: God, Infinity, Non-Duality, or whatever.
Something is approaching, something is going to happen. Eno nervously counts his fingers (phallic symbols?) and draws bananas (phallic symbol? a link to our primate ancestors?) on bathroom walls. He's just biding time. Nature is the Enemy still -- Nature vs. the King's Lead Hat; thus, the "cycles" of life and death in Nature are "killer hertz" (damn he's clever). But he gets moved anyway -- time is measured by the shirts he wears (fashion? fads? the arbitrary nature of what is popular at any given time?), but time and tide are on his side (another precisely-timed classic rock lyric reference). How could they not be, when he is just a bubble or eddie in the waves themselves? There is nothing wrong with death -- not really. The ocean doesn't suffer, after all.
King's Lead Hat is the mother to desire. Desire is the root of all suffering -- the gap between preferred and actual. Suffering begats invention, invention begats progress, and then we'll find something else to bitch about. Why not stop the wheels of desire and just be? Is it better to be happy with what you have, or feel like you're missing something? It's all in your head, anyway, and what you have belief in is what your focus attends. The hat is just a guise, you remain present Before and After Science.
The final verse depicts further moronic activity of bustling human "progress." Weapons are ready (phallic imagery) and guns purr (phallic imagery). Technology (the satellite) distorts (and shapes) communication. A man attempts to give orders and is not heard -- he seems to be schizophrenic (modecate is an anti-psychotic medication), at least in the eyes of the populace, whose perception is shaped by the King's Lead Hat (which fits over their ears). This alienated man may have something useful to say, but the technology that surrounds him is limiting -- it fragments and commodifies the human experience into (unintentionally) meaningless chatter. A telephone finalizes his defeat (check out Captain Beefheart's "Telephone").
The King's Lead Hat keeps the cycles of desire in motion, with gaps of desire being open and filled.