This song seemingly tackles the methods of deception those who manipulate others use to get victims to follow their demands, as well as diverting attention away from important issues. They'll also use it as a means to convince people to hate or kill others by pretending acts of terrorism were committed by the enemy when the acts themselves were done by the masters of control to promote discrimination and hate. It also reinforces the idea that these manipulative forces operate in various locations, infiltrating everyday life without detection, and propagate any and everywhere.
In general, it highlights the danger of hidden agendas, manipulation, and distraction, serving as a critique of those who exploit chaos and confusion to control and gain power, depicting a cautionary tale against falling into their traps. It encourages us to question the narratives presented to us and remain vigilant against manipulation in various parts of society.
I was bruised and battered
I couldn't tell what I felt
I was unrecognizable to myself
Saw my reflection in a window
And didn't know my own face
Oh brother are you gonna leave me wastin' away
On the streets of Philadelphia?
I walked the avenue, 'til my legs felt like stone
I heard the voices of friends vanished and gone
At night I could hear the blood in my veins
Just as black and whispering as the rain
On the streets of Philadelphia
Ain't no angel gonna greet me
It's just you and I my friend
And my clothes don't fit me no more, I walk
Thousand miles just to slip this skin
Night has fallen, I'm lyin' awake
I can feel myself fading away
So receive me brother with your faithless kiss
Or will we leave each other alone like this
On the streets of Philadelphia?
I couldn't tell what I felt
I was unrecognizable to myself
Saw my reflection in a window
And didn't know my own face
Oh brother are you gonna leave me wastin' away
On the streets of Philadelphia?
I walked the avenue, 'til my legs felt like stone
I heard the voices of friends vanished and gone
At night I could hear the blood in my veins
Just as black and whispering as the rain
On the streets of Philadelphia
Ain't no angel gonna greet me
It's just you and I my friend
And my clothes don't fit me no more, I walk
Thousand miles just to slip this skin
Night has fallen, I'm lyin' awake
I can feel myself fading away
So receive me brother with your faithless kiss
Or will we leave each other alone like this
On the streets of Philadelphia?
Lyrics submitted by oofus, edited by ice1092977
Streets Of Philadelphia Lyrics as written by Bruce Springsteen
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Lyrics powered by LyricFind
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This song was originally written by a guy called Peter Gutteridge. He was one of the founders of the "Dunedin Sound" a musical scene in the south of New Zealand in the early 80s. From there it was covered by "The Clean" one of the early bands of that scene (he had originally been a member of in it's early days, writing a couple of their best early songs). The Dunedin sound, and the Clean became popular on american college radio in the mid to late 80s. I guess Yo La Tengo heard that version.
Great version of a great song,
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Those of us who are gay, who lived through the 1980s know what this song is about. We were dropping like flies, wasting away, getting all kinds of weird diseases like Kaposi's Sarcoma and PCP Pneumonia. We died, sometimes in horrible agonizing pain, sometimes slowly drowning from the fluid in our lungs. And nobody cared. Nobody gave a damn.
But even if you weren't there, you don't have to do a lot of deep thinking to understand the meaning of this song. The lyrics are perhaps too literal for comfort. We would start losing weight uncontrollably, losing maybe a few pounds, maybe more, every week. Literally "wasting away". It's not surprising that pretty soon we were "unrecognizable to [ourselves]" and our "clothes don't fit me no more". I was down to 112 pounds when the first treatment came out. I literally looked like I had been in a concentration camp.
Every week the paper would come out, and the weekly obituaries. Up to twelve pages in the Washington Blade in a single week. Every week, another friend got sick. Every week, another friend died. Every weekend was spent going to funerals and visiting hospitals. Our friends were literally "vanished and gone".
And indeed there was "no angel gonna greet me". Our churches threw us out. They were afraid to touch us, afraid to share a meal, for fear they would catch it. It was "just you and I my friend".
The movie Philadelphia was the first mainstream film to deal with the issue of AIDS. It even showed a bit of what Kaposi's Sarcoma looks like, although the filmmakers had to water it down a lot to get the film made. If they showed the true horror of AIDS, nobody would pay to see it. But this song captures the pain, the loss, and the loneliness that was AIDS for those of us who lived through it.
Follow this link to see an award winning photograph of Ken Meeks, a real victim of the plague, with Kaposi's Sarcoma. My partner had it in the 1980s. He had it on his skin, and also on his organs -- his kidneys, liver, and intestines. Kaposi's is a terribly painful way to die. He couldn't face his fate, and he killed himself.
nytimes.com/2011/05/31/health/31aids.html
Thanks for sharing your story, very heartfelt indeed.
Those of us who are not gay that were around in the 80's remember the pain of AIDS as well. The establishment scared to death and promoting fear. The YEARS lost when research could and should have been going full-tilt. Instead blaming the gay community. AIDS was first called GRIDS. An awful name that meant Gay-Related Immune Deficiency. Friends. Family members. It still pisses me off.<br /> <br />
Thank you for putting this song in it historical perspective. Some of the remarks below make me doubt the awareness today's youth when it comes to this crisis. I was too young to be personally effected, beyond of being scared off unprotected sex. I was born in 1975 and raised in the Netherlands, which remained relatively gay-friendly through all of this. Thanks again for sharing you side.
@dmerrill I know you wrote this message 5 years ago--- but I happened to stumble on this site after hearing Streets of Philadelphia on my playlist this afternoon. (Forgot I even had it on there)....at any rate I wanted to thank you for this write up. It is a very poignant message and an outstanding tribute to the song.
@dmerrill <br /> It's 6-and-a-half years since your post, so I doubt you even remember posting it, but I had to thank you for your input. I've never had any inkling what this song might have even remotely been about, but nevertheless, I've always found it poignant, moving and even bittersweet in a lonely kind of way. Now I know why and I need to thank you for helping me to understand the sub-text. While there remain swaths of lyrics -here and there- whose meaning still elude my comprehension, I now know what umbrella these metaphors are all covered by. Thank you.<br /> <br /> Also, re: the other commenters, I was also a young'un in the 70s/ 80s, so I remember the fear and stigma around the dark, early days of AIDS. I remember each day/ week/ month would showcase a new segment on the news, or a special report by current affairs shows revealing even more horrors about this new plague... The 80s were scary enough with the constant threat of nuclear annihilation hanging over our heads every minute of every day. Then the news gave us another thing and told us to be mortally afraid of this new threat, too... Man, we were a poorly informed bunch of twonks back then! While I lived through these years, I can't even imagine what it must have been like to have lived through them while under the spectre's shadow of AIDS. So I salute our brave brothers and sisters who pioneered this trail, so that people today can live a 'normal' life with HIV/ AIDS.<br /> <br /> Peace<br /> <br /> Raz
I was a young doctor in training when the AIDS epidemic hit so hard (1983-1988) We were treating dozens of victims. At first most of the patients had hemophilia and had received monthly blood transfusions since birth. Their infection rate was almost 100%. Sometime after that the young gay men started coming in to the ER. Most of them had Pneumocystis pneumonia for which we had no treatment. They died anonymously on the ventilator and we never got to know them but we met their grief stricken families. Some of the later victims had slower fatal diseases and we got to know them. At that time they were routinely shunned by the community at large and felt so isolated and alone. It was tragic. Somehow Bruce tapped in to that feeling perfectly and the ability to do that confirms his genius.
This song is fantastic and Bruce is a wonderful storyteller.
It was written back in the early 1990s when AIDS was relatively new to the world. At that time there was a lot of fear about how the disease could be spread and so much heartless discrimination against gay people who had the disease.
Bruce wrote this song for the film "Philadelphia' which was based on the true story of a lawyer who sued his law firm for dismissing him because he had AIDS. It was one of the first films to deal with AIDS discrimination and homophobia.
I remember at the time how sad it was that people who were dying of this terrible disease were also having to deal with the incredible cold-heartedness of a society that feared and banished them when they were at their most vulnerable.
I think Bruce's words are very moving and perfectly highlight how the discrimination was a heartbreaking reaction to a tragic disease:
"Oh brother, are you gonna leave me wastin' away"
Yes, he is a great storyteller. Great song. Great movie.
Fucking hell, this is a powerful song.
Freakin' heart-breaking my friends. I read an interview with my idol where he said that this song can be about an AIDS sufferer or a man who has given up on life. He said it's better for us to decide which one affects us more.
springsteen: the greatest
I know what this song is about, but for me, it always reminded me of all the people I've ever known in my life, who I thought were friends, but always ended up being nothing more than strangers.
I'm not someone who ever liked to go around becoming best friends with everybody, so whenever I drifted away from someone who meant anything to me at all, it was always a sad kind of loss. We all end up alone in the end, if you think about it. Pretty sobering, if you think about it. So, I just learned to be okay with being by myself.
@AFae I think you hit the nail here... Thinking the same way like you do :)
Jon Demme (the Director of the film Philadelphia) went to Bruce Springsteen and asked him to write a song for the film. All Demme had in mind was the beat of the song. Bruce picked it up as "walking beat" - He wrote the song in 30 minutes and it was cut on the first take. Demme was blown away.
one of the best songs ever.
Hauntingly beautiful.
On a deepr level, I think its about the anonymity of people in the city, losing their identity, "will you leave me brother alone like this.." It seems like hes talking about his death, alone, disrientated. Quite sad, but probably a prominant feeling for many people.