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vilainde Posted - 11/09/2004 : 07:33:43
Has anyone noticed that "Go find your saint" sounds a lot like "Go fuck yourself"? Just wondering.


Denis

"If you do 7-Up, you can't ever do Coke or Pepsi. You've got to hold out for the best deal possible. It's about me being a smart businesswoman as well as a musician." - Jessica Simpson
20   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
billgoodman Posted - 11/23/2004 : 02:54:00
why won't you trust Buddy Holly?
ohh well, Rivers Cuomo is paraniod

"I joined the cult of Jon Tiven/Bye!"
tisasawath Posted - 11/23/2004 : 00:27:58
expanding on the topic a bit, here's what I'd been humming to Weezer's Buddy Holly before I got to read the lyrics:
oo ee oo I don't trust that Buddy Holly
oh oh and no Mary Tyler Moore
I don't care what they say about her silly wig
I don't care 'bout that

now I can't get used to the real lyrics

and in Gigantic: "And he said No..."
floop Posted - 11/22/2004 : 23:16:09
kind of like how sittin here wishin' on the "cement floor" sounds like "semen flow," or vice versa


ist es möglich für ein quesadilla skrotum zu lecken? beim sprechen der quesadillas von LBF, ja. ja in der tatheheheheheheehehee!
Triakel Posted - 11/22/2004 : 14:48:57
Off topic, but for a classical turn on the "f*** off" thread ...

I'm singing in a Bach cantate (BW 140, "Wachet Auf") this year. Hear it sometime. Opens with "Wach auf!" I can NOT keep a straight face when we sing it/bellow it. It sounds well, like "F*** Off!"

And I'm a complete child.

Yes, I agree, Frank sounds like he's singing something else.

leica Posted - 11/18/2004 : 16:22:42
quote:
Originally posted by Newo

I used to think 'Weird at my school' was 'wearin' my spurs' and every so often I forget and think it's that again.


I do that all the time, with various different songs. That's actually one of the best things about rock music. Sometimes you just make up the lyrics that you want.
PixieSteve Posted - 11/13/2004 : 17:34:08
when i was listening to the album without paying attention to track names i thought it was go fuck yourself too, but then i saw the track name and relaised it must be go find yourself.

but after seeing this thread, i realised, looking at the genius of some of frank's other song lyrics (acrostics, acronyms, backwards lyrics and general word play), this is probably meant to sond like go fuck yourself. i like this theory.


I joined the Cult of Pi / Because it's cool
floop Posted - 11/13/2004 : 10:44:15
Frank's done the words-that-sound-like-other-words thing before. i wouldn't doubt if he's conscious of it



ist es möglich für ein quesadilla skrotum zu lecken? beim sprechen der quesadillas von LBF, ja. ja in der tatheheheheheheehehee!
billgoodman Posted - 11/13/2004 : 09:11:18
quote:
Originally posted by peter radiator

quote:
Originally posted by billgoodman

quote:
Originally posted by peter radiator



Whether or not the record will ultimately be viewed (correctly or incorrectly) as "his Blood On The Tracks," I think all that can ever matter in a case like this is not the importance of what the song is about, but what it appears to be about to reasonably informed listeners.







well SMYT was already his Blood On The Tracks
according to various reviews

"I joined the cult of Jon Tiven/Bye!"



Ahh, yes.

But they were wrong, weren't they?

To me, that was a very shallow interpretation of an album that seemed preoccupied with a number of different themes. Most rock critics are complete dumbshits (I should know), and anytime someone releases an album that even mentions the word "divorce" they start calling it "their Blood On The Tracks."

In the case of SMYT, I think this was a knee-jerk reaction, and while I don't think there are too many overt similarities between the version of Honeycomb in circulation now, and Dylan's 1974 opus, a much more reasoned argument could be made to equate those two, than in the case of SMYT.

~ Peter Radiator

"Real music is out there and real people are making it." ~ Webb Wilder



they can't be both his blood on the tracks, can they?


"I joined the cult of Jon Tiven/Bye!"
Newo Posted - 11/13/2004 : 08:19:21
I used to think 'Weird at my school' was 'wearin' my spurs' and every so often I forget and think it's that again.

--

Moving from the clown to the jester will mean moving from similar to same, from alike to identical, from comparable to analogous. Though applied differently, the colours used on one can be used on another, and a couple of changes of costume will rapidly transform the jester into a clown and the clown into a jester. Strictly speaking, they almost duplicate each other as regards clothes and function, the only difference between them, from a social point of view, is that clowns do not usually visit the palaces of kings.
peter radiator Posted - 11/13/2004 : 07:50:07
quote:
Originally posted by billgoodman

quote:
Originally posted by peter radiator



Whether or not the record will ultimately be viewed (correctly or incorrectly) as "his Blood On The Tracks," I think all that can ever matter in a case like this is not the importance of what the song is about, but what it appears to be about to reasonably informed listeners.




well SMYT was already his Blood On The Tracks
according to various reviews

"I joined the cult of Jon Tiven/Bye!"



Ahh, yes.

But they were wrong, weren't they?

To me, that was a very shallow interpretation of an album that seemed preoccupied with a number of different themes. Most rock critics are complete dumbshits (I should know), and anytime someone releases an album that even mentions the word "divorce" they start calling it "their Blood On The Tracks."

In the case of SMYT, I think this was a knee-jerk reaction, and while I don't think there are too many overt similarities between the version of Honeycomb in circulation now, and Dylan's 1974 opus, a much more reasoned argument could be made to equate those two, than in the case of SMYT.

~ Peter Radiator

"Real music is out there and real people are making it." ~ Webb Wilder
billgoodman Posted - 11/12/2004 : 15:24:52
quote:
Originally posted by peter radiator



Whether or not the record will ultimately be viewed (correctly or incorrectly) as "his Blood On The Tracks," I think all that can ever matter in a case like this is not the importance of what the song is about, but what it appears to be about to reasonably informed listeners.




well SMYT was already his Blood On The Tracks
according to various reviews

"I joined the cult of Jon Tiven/Bye!"
OldManInaCoffeeCan Posted - 11/12/2004 : 15:08:46
Well stated, Peter.
Three Cheers for self-absorbed reflection!!!
I need music, and thank the Lord I've got Frank's, to help me reflect upon me, myself and I, and all of my many interactions in this world, whether they be good, bad or ugly.
I prefer to intially come up with my own impressions, emotions, and conclusions concerning the music, and then, later, I enjoy reading what Frank has to say about it.
peter radiator Posted - 11/12/2004 : 14:31:37
quote:
Originally posted by vilainde

Who knows what the song is about... I tried to transcribe the lyrics and couldn't understand a word.[/i]



I agree that none of us actually know what the song is meant to be about to Frank himself, and unless he takes it upon himself to explain it, we shan't.

However, based on the rough version many of us have heard so far - and coupled with the seemingly straighforward accounts of Frank's breakup that he himself has offered up in a number of interviews, there seems to be some sort of equivocacy going on in the lyrics to many of these songs.

Whether or not the record will ultimately be viewed (correctly or incorrectly) as "his Blood On The Tracks," I think all that can ever matter in a case like this is not the importance of what the song is about, but what it appears to be about to reasonably informed listeners.

Whether we ultimately enjoy or dislike a song is based purely on our own subjective inferences, and with that in mind, I find the lyrics to many of the songs on Honeycomb to quite candidly reference Frank's desire for children, his breakup with his longtime wife, his acknowledged mood change and "loosening up" as a result of therapy and doctor prescribed "chill pills," and his romantic relationship with his current life partner.

I may be wrong, but even if I am, that's OK, because he (like most impressionistic songwriters) willingly offers up his art to the public without a guidebook or manual on how to interpret the work. They expect confusion and self-absorbed reflection on the part of the listeners.

Now, whether or not he was alluding to the phrase "go fuck yourself" is another question...

~ Peter Radiator

"Real music is out there and real people are making it." ~ Webb Wilder
billgoodman Posted - 11/12/2004 : 11:55:00
quote:
Originally posted by peter radiator

quote:
Originally posted by Avid-Fan

To me it sounds exactly like: Go Find Your Saint.
Although "until I say the words, I knew would upset her..." sort of fits in neatly with the other GFY.


I took it that the words he knew would upset here were something to the effect of "I'm ready to have a child."

At which point, she replies, hey, if that's what you're looking for, it ain't me, babe. So go ahead and start looking for someone else to be "your saint".

But then again, maybe I think too much about stuff like this (although it does seem rather transparent to me).

~ Peter Radiator

"Real music is out there and real people are making it." ~ Webb Wilder



speaking of,
in violet he sings violet is the flower of fertility
that does seem to refer to that situation

"I joined the cult of Jon Tiven/Bye!"
billgoodman Posted - 11/12/2004 : 11:52:50
it does sound like go fuck yourself
nice

"I joined the cult of Jon Tiven/Bye!"
vilainde Posted - 11/12/2004 : 10:27:37
Who knows what the song is about... I tried to transcribe the lyrics and couldn't understand a word.


Denis

"I believe in your perfect face..."
peter radiator Posted - 11/12/2004 : 10:24:11
quote:
Originally posted by Avid-Fan

To me it sounds exactly like: Go Find Your Saint.
Although "until I say the words, I knew would upset her..." sort of fits in neatly with the other GFY.


I took it that the words he knew would upset here were something to the effect of "I'm ready to have a child."

At which point, she replies, hey, if that's what you're looking for, it ain't me, babe. So go ahead and start looking for someone else to be "your saint".

But then again, maybe I think too much about stuff like this (although it does seem rather transparent to me).

~ Peter Radiator

"Real music is out there and real people are making it." ~ Webb Wilder
Avid-Fan Posted - 11/12/2004 : 01:37:58
To me it sounds exactly like: Go Find Your Saint.
Although "until I say the words, I knew would upset her..." sort of fits in neatly with the other GFY.

(( I talk plain talk ))
floop Posted - 11/09/2004 : 11:38:51
it does sound like that (go fuck yourself that is)



ist es möglich für ein quesadilla skrotum zu lecken? beim sprechen der quesadillas von LBF, ja. ja in der tatheheheheheheehehee!
Monsieur Posted - 11/09/2004 : 11:06:38
I only noticed that it sounds like 'Can I get a witness'.

But, hey, maybe it's just me...


I will show you fear in a handful of dust

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