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Neutral Milk Hotel – Communist Daughter Lyrics 10 years ago
The song Communist Daughter is about use and abuse basically. A girl who is passed around like a prostitute to everyone (a reference to ideals on possession of communism) to do as they want with to the point that this becomes her only reality. The mountain tops are obviously her breasts, as well as illustrating what a "high" state an orgasm can put you in, making you feel alive and on top of the world, and the whole song plays on sexual themes because thats what her world has become. It plays on the idea that many girls try to find love and connection through sex. She wants to prove that she exists to a world that has seemingly forgotten or is simply not interested in her, and she does this in the only way she knows or feels is working, through sex.

submissions
Neutral Milk Hotel – Communist Daughter Lyrics 10 years ago
The song Communist Daughter is about use and abuse basically. A girl who is passed around like a prostitute to everyone (a reference to ideals on possession of communism) to do as they want with to the point that this becomes her only reality. The mountain tops are obviously her breasts, as well as illustrating what a "high" state an orgasm can put you in, making you feel alive and on top of the world, and the whole song plays on sexual themes because thats what her world has become. It plays on the idea that many girls try to find love and connection through sex. She wants to prove that she exists to a world that has seemingly forgotten or is simply not interested in her, and she does this in the only way she knows or feels is working, through sex.

submissions
Nirvana – Sliver Lyrics 10 years ago
Kurt was abandoned by his parents and even lived with at his teacher's house for a while when he was 15. He used to spend as little time as possible at home Something In the Way, for example, talks about him living under a bridge. While this is mostly a metaphor, it's actually established that he used to spend a lot of time under a bridge in his home town. This song is entirely about abandonment.

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Just Jack – The Day I Died Lyrics 11 years ago
I think it's pretty clear that the song depicts the day he dies as just any other day basically. He describes all these things he is noticing all of a sudden that are making him happy, but in the end it's just another day. Nothing special about it really. That's what the song is trying to stress, that every day should be "the best day of your life" basically and it's the little things that make it so.

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Belle & Sebastian – Piazza, New York Catcher Lyrics 11 years ago
I think the "life outside the diamond is a wrench" part is talking about the baseball player realizing how confusing, tough, and stressful life outside his area of comfort (baseball) really is, and getting involved in things just makes him wish he could go back to just being int he diamond all the time and not having to worry about anything other than just playing the game he knows?

submissions
AJJ – People II: The Reckoning Lyrics 11 years ago
I think there's a few things people might be confused about. First of all this song is obviously about bipolar disorder, as it's mentioned in the song multiple times, or (if you do not have bipolar disorder) you can interpret it as a feeling of bipolar disorder instead, either way, it concentrates on that feeling. Having bipolar disorder I can strongly relate to the entire, if not every single verse, of the song.


-"Nobody knows everything, we know this to be true. Everything is difficult, except what's in front of you" = We accept that no one posses any real knowledge on what's what in this world and we all have to figure it out as we go along. Our entire world and society and life as a whole is too complicated (war, famine, corruption, climate change, etc.) and difficult to concentrate on, so you have to deal with what's in front of you.

-"But it's complicated even under your nose, bullshit math equations and your highs and your lows" = even what's in front of you, the "little" thing (relationships, jobs, friends, etc.) are complicated. It all feels like meaningless and trivial "math equations" that you have to complete as well as deal with your highs and lows.

-"And your manic depression, it comes and it goes" = That feeling of mania or depression that bipolar people deal with seems to come and go. When you're in a high it doesn't really feel like there's anything wrong with you and then your mood shifts and all of a sudden you start to realize something might be wrong with you after all. Your moods keep violently shifting.

-"Your parasympathetic nervous system reacts, and you're in fight-or-flight mode" = The parasympathetic system deals with your body's response to things like relaxation. I do find it strange that he talks about the parasympathetic system and not the sympathetic system, so it must more of a comparison, not a causation between the two lines. Your body's own response is what puts you in that fight or flight mode, you have no option over how your body reacts.

-"How's the world so small, when the world is so large" = Why does it all feel so cluttered and trivial when our society and world seem to be so much grander than just the basic motions we go through every day.

-"And what made the world, could I please speak to who's in charge?" = For some reason this line seems to be said more jokingly than the others to me. He changes tone slightly from the previous line and then changed it back again after this line. He's asking jokingly "who" made the world be what it currently is, as if he could change it or scold "whoever's in charge" over it, but he knows the answer is simply "people".

-"Everything is real but it's also just as fake, from your daughter's birthday party to your grandmother's wake" = Frustration over events and actions and traditions in our lives that he finds fake and trivial on certain levels. He believes things like birthdays and wakes are really just fake traditions used to mask or help people deal with their personal emotions. This, however, because people make the world what is also makes these things real, as the nature of our world is decided through our own actions. He however interprets it all as a delusion.

-"And your bi-polar illness, it comes and it goes" - Again, same thing as the first line. He switches to calling it its new name "bipolar disorder" rather than its old name, "manic depression", and accepts it as an illness.

-"I've tried to know which words to sing so many times, and I've tried to know which chords to play, and I've tried to make it rhyme, and I've tried to find the key that all good songs are in, and I've tried to find the notes to make that great resounding din" = He tries desperately to understand how to live and what to do and how to achieve happiness and how to fulfill himself.

-"But there's a bad man in everyone, no matter who we are" = We all have that side in us that tries to hurt ourselves and bring us down or make us feel inferior or insecure.

-"There's a rapist and a Nazi living in our tiny hearts, child pornographers and cannibals, and politicians too, there's someone in your head waiting to fucking strangle you" = Same as before basically. We all have a side that we view as awful and try to hide it from everyone and keep it to ourselves in fear of hurting anyone and it'll always be there to try to "strangle" us and work to try to bring us down. "There's someone in my head, but it's not me" ala pink floyd

-"So here's to you, Mrs. Robinson, people love you more, oh nevermind, oh nevermind" = Mrs. Robinson is an archetype created by Simon and Garfunkel to represent the new generation that tries to overthrow the false and delusional image the older generation. In this case however, contrary to Simon and Garfunkel's song, he's saying this new generation is no longer loved by anyone and people are becoming more isolated.

-"In fucking fact, Mrs. Robinson, the world won't care whether you live or die, live or die, in fucking fact, Mrs. Robinson, they probably hate to see your stupid face, your stupid face" = The world doesn't care about the new generation or its troubles and problems and would rather just see it die. No one cares about anyone else anymore and we're all bitter and unconcerned with each other. But note that Mrs. Robinson is again used throughout these lines to try to represent the individual this song is about, and try to show that the individual this song is about is actually a much larger group that has come together.

-"So here's to you, Mrs. Robinson, you live in an unforgiving place." = This last line is sort of a "hang in there" for everyone in our times and an acknowledgement to the growing isolation we all face.

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