Rough God Goes Riding Lyrics

Lyric discussion by Jeffbookman 

Cover art for Rough God Goes Riding lyrics by Van Morrison

The fact that Sir George Ivan Morrison has included WB Yeats in his long list of influential artists, musicians and poets leads me to consider that this song is some kind of interpretation of The Secong Coming, which in itself is a prophesy based on Revelations. The more you pay attention to the state of humanity in the Roaring ‘20’s it’s not hard to view the chaos we witness as being apocalyptic.

I grew up in the second half of the Twentieth Century in the aftermath of World War 2. All around we saw past signs of countless crimes of war and crimes against humanity. America was prosperous as were many nations that took advantage of technological advances and a more civilized progressive society. While there were still significant challenges and difficulties, some among us believed the worst of days were over. The freedom movement lead by ML King, Mandala etc and the peace movement influenced by JFK, Gandhi and so many others were promising signs that a wave of goodness and kindheartedness was growing. But as the assassinations and acts of terror, corruption and seemingly never ending violence, repression and manipulation reared their ugly heads, we discovered that evil had not disappeared; it merely disguised itself through propaganda as something benign. As Yeats so eloquently put it, “Surely the Second Coming is at hand”.

Van Morrison reveals many things about himself in his remarkable body of hundreds and hundreds of masterpieces. It’s an understatement to say that he’s a man of God even though he isn’t pinned down to any particular religion or philosophical context. But over the last few years he’s shown that he’s also a man of truth which in this age of misinformation is not always the easiest path to take. His views on the pandemic with its harmful impact based on what he saw to be pseudoscience turned off many of his fans and drew attacks from others in the music business and media. But rather than get pushed around (something he’s never done) he put out a slew of songs that only meant something if you happened to be playing close attention to the lawlessness and brutality forced on people like never before done in lockstep by fascist governments all over the world. While it’s impossible to know what’s in store for us all as we move into the middle of this decade, when you see psychopathic behavior so prevalent and widespread causing leaders of nations more committed to serving the masters of war and deceit than to the people who they are sworn to serve and protect, you don’t have to be a genius to recognize that the walls are about to come crumbling down.

Just like trying to interpret a Yeats poem, Van leaves much of the meaning of Rough God up to the listener. He talks about this in many interviews that part of the magic and wonders of art are in the eyes of the listener or viewer. For me being a spiritual seeker of truth and practitioner of peace over my five decades of adulthood, I look at this song as a vision of a creator stepping in to take back control of the creation He/She/It manifests out of pure love. But rather than strike down the evil in the way that the God of the Jews did to the Egyptians way back when, this time around the elites who somehow think they have the right to play god will destroy themselves.

There’ll be no more heroes They’ll be reduced to zero When that Rough God goes riding Riding on in