Jason Isbell sobered up about a year before me, so my interpretation of his lyrics are always colored by that fact. That said, I think Isbell wrote this song just prior to putting down the bottle for good, and you can see in this song that he's teetering on the brink, wrestling with his demons:
"I'm too scared to ask the right questions
and too tired to fill the right shoes
so I'll take advantage of the blues"
It's a strange place, when you're just starting to realize you might have a problem with alcohol. To me, he's saying that he probably knows that he should quit, but he's too tired to ask the right questions. The blue is that in between, just nothingness.
"Mark me up so they can see the best of me
Hold me down so I can't find a drink"
The closing stanza shows that he knows he shouldn't drink anymore, but that he will if those closest to him don't stop him. "Hold me down" is almost a plea for help -- it's perhaps Jason's first realization that he needs to ask for help.
That time in your life right before you are willing to put in all the work and effort of getting sober is a very strange place, at least it was for me. Life is sort of a haze of self-pity but also helplessness and apathy. That, to me, is what the blue is.
Reminds me of another song Isbell covered, "Rachel's Song" (written by James McMurtry):
"I probably oughta quit my drinking
But I don't believe I will"
Fortunately for us, Isbell did ultimately get sober, and his best writing has emerged since. And another brief chapter without any answers blew by. For both Isbell and myself.
@zcullens I agree with your interpretation, or at least that is how I hear it too. Actually going back and listening to many of his pre sobriety songs I hear them that way. Not sure if that is just me projecting knowing his past or if their were many little calls for help along the way.
Either way great song and great artist.
@zcullens I agree with your interpretation, or at least that is how I hear it too. Actually going back and listening to many of his pre sobriety songs I hear them that way. Not sure if that is just me projecting knowing his past or if their were many little calls for help along the way.
Either way great song and great artist.
Jason Isbell sobered up about a year before me, so my interpretation of his lyrics are always colored by that fact. That said, I think Isbell wrote this song just prior to putting down the bottle for good, and you can see in this song that he's teetering on the brink, wrestling with his demons:
"I'm too scared to ask the right questions and too tired to fill the right shoes so I'll take advantage of the blues"
It's a strange place, when you're just starting to realize you might have a problem with alcohol. To me, he's saying that he probably knows that he should quit, but he's too tired to ask the right questions. The blue is that in between, just nothingness.
"Mark me up so they can see the best of me Hold me down so I can't find a drink"
The closing stanza shows that he knows he shouldn't drink anymore, but that he will if those closest to him don't stop him. "Hold me down" is almost a plea for help -- it's perhaps Jason's first realization that he needs to ask for help.
That time in your life right before you are willing to put in all the work and effort of getting sober is a very strange place, at least it was for me. Life is sort of a haze of self-pity but also helplessness and apathy. That, to me, is what the blue is.
Reminds me of another song Isbell covered, "Rachel's Song" (written by James McMurtry):
"I probably oughta quit my drinking But I don't believe I will"
Fortunately for us, Isbell did ultimately get sober, and his best writing has emerged since. And another brief chapter without any answers blew by. For both Isbell and myself.
@zcullens I agree with your interpretation, or at least that is how I hear it too. Actually going back and listening to many of his pre sobriety songs I hear them that way. Not sure if that is just me projecting knowing his past or if their were many little calls for help along the way.
Either way great song and great artist.
@zcullens I agree with your interpretation, or at least that is how I hear it too. Actually going back and listening to many of his pre sobriety songs I hear them that way. Not sure if that is just me projecting knowing his past or if their were many little calls for help along the way.
Either way great song and great artist.