"Fast car" is kind of a continuation of Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run." It has all the clawing your way to a better life, but in this case the protagonist never makes it with her love; in fact she is dragged back down by him.
There is still an amazing amount of hope and will in the lyrics; and the lyrics themselve rank and easy five. If only music was stronger it would be one of those great radio songs that you hear once a week 20 years after it was released. The imagery is almost tear-jerking ("City lights lay out before us", "Speeds so fast felt like I was drunk"), and the idea of starting from nothing and just driving and working and denigrating yourself for a chance at being just above poverty, then losing in the end is just painful and inspiring at the same time.
They heard me singing and they told me to stop
Quit these pretentious things and just punch the clock
These days, my life, I feel it has no purpose
But late at night the feelings swim to the surface
'Cause on the suburbs the city lights shine
They're calling at me, come and find your kind
Sometimes I wonder if the world's so small
Then we can never get away from the sprawl
Living in the sprawl
Dead shopping malls rise like mountains beyond mountains
And there's no end in sight
I need the darkness someone please cut the lights
We rode our bikes to the nearest park
Sat under the swings, we kissed in the dark
We shield our eyes from the police lights
We run away, but we don't know why
And like a mirror these city lights shine
They're screaming at us, we don't need your kind
Sometimes I wonder if the world's so small
Then we can never get away from the sprawl
Living in the sprawl
Dead shopping malls rise like mountains beyond mountains
And there's no end in sight
I need the darkness someone please cut the lights
They heard me singing and they told me to stop
Quit these pretentious things and just punch the clock
Sometimes I wonder if the world's so small
Can we ever get away from the sprawl
Living in the sprawl
Dead shopping malls rise like mountains beyond mountains
And there's no end in sight
I need the darkness someone please cut the lights
Quit these pretentious things and just punch the clock
These days, my life, I feel it has no purpose
But late at night the feelings swim to the surface
'Cause on the suburbs the city lights shine
They're calling at me, come and find your kind
Sometimes I wonder if the world's so small
Then we can never get away from the sprawl
Living in the sprawl
Dead shopping malls rise like mountains beyond mountains
And there's no end in sight
I need the darkness someone please cut the lights
We rode our bikes to the nearest park
Sat under the swings, we kissed in the dark
We shield our eyes from the police lights
We run away, but we don't know why
And like a mirror these city lights shine
They're screaming at us, we don't need your kind
Sometimes I wonder if the world's so small
Then we can never get away from the sprawl
Living in the sprawl
Dead shopping malls rise like mountains beyond mountains
And there's no end in sight
I need the darkness someone please cut the lights
They heard me singing and they told me to stop
Quit these pretentious things and just punch the clock
Sometimes I wonder if the world's so small
Can we ever get away from the sprawl
Living in the sprawl
Dead shopping malls rise like mountains beyond mountains
And there's no end in sight
I need the darkness someone please cut the lights
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Fast Car
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There's matching lyrics in both parts of sprawl, giving me the impression that they're describing the same thing from two different people with two different perspectives, both present during the whole thing. They sound like boyfriend/girlfriend pair, Flatlands from his perspective, Mountains from hers. They describe the same things, like riding bikes, being in a park, and the run in with the cops. At the same time, the lyrics are almost opposites in the feelings conveyed, and even the titles are geographical opposites (flatlands vs. mountains).
I saw the same connection! <br /> <br /> I do have a difference in views. I don't really see opposite perspectives, but as one being much more rebellious and a little louder than the other.<br /> <br /> It's like where one has all these ideas and wants to break out of the box but wants to do it quietly and the other doesn't care. He/she will do whatever they want no matter who they bother.<br /> <br /> I love both Sprawl I and II. Amazing songs.
Yeah, same here. I think we can construct the whole thing in chronological order like this:<br /> <br /> Sprawl II - teenagers escaping the suburbs. They need to find others like them, to explore their own psychologies (the darkness). <br /> <br /> Sprawl I - third stanza; the youths have returned from their night on the town (late) with a newfound appreciation of what the world could be, that they have something to give;<br /> <br /> Sprawl I - (rest of song) in their 30s, the couple revisits the suburbs. The male seems to have lost that confidence and sense of purpose, feeling empty, wanting to recapture youth. His companion, perhaps the female of Sprawl II, is impatient with dredging up the past, thinks he's only trying to revive a time that is now gone. The darkness is now an oppressive force, that misleads and confuses; the thing that he sought as a child seems to be preventing him from understanding himself.
It's kind of baffling to see so many blatant misinterpretations of this song. I've read a few of your interpretations, which seem to think that this song is about rejecting suburban life in exchange for urban life. It is about neither. The Sprawl, by its definition, and through its meaning here, is referring to the lights, life, and overall urban pollution of the city and all of its societal woes that have gradually expanded out to the countryside, creating suburban areas that extend outwardly and create mass consumerism and more problems. Will there be any room for the peaceful and quiet ways of life that once existed as a rational and practical means of survival, and which were previously enough for us to ascertain suitable enjoyment and fulfillment from?
"Dead shopping malls rise like mountains beyond mountains, And there's no end in sight, I need the darkness someone please cut the lights."
We live in cities that never shut down at night. Sure, in certain areas there is less light pollution than others. But the sprawl of the cities and urban life has become so accepted that we can no longer gaze at the stars in full view on a whim. The only way they are now visible to us is through travel to the countryside, which is shrinking and being violated by our way of life at each step. New shopping malls are erected each year, and to what end?
"And like a mirror these city lights shine, They're screaming at us, "we don't need your kind." "
I think a lot of people feel like they're going through existential crises nowadays. Do we really belong amongst society how it exists in its current state? People have become obsessed and entranced by pop culture. What about those people who haven't? Where do they belong?
Life is becoming increasingly metropolitan, and the computer age, the electronic era, mass media - it all dominates the mainstream way of life. The Sprawl of the city and corporate sponsored consumerism has become nearly, if not already universal and ubiquitous.
the Arcade Fire are making social criticism here. They wonder where we're headed as a society. Cities become increasingly crowded, so suburban areas ceaselessly sprout around the main metropolises. When we're finally finished, if there is a such thing to occur (the end of our expansion, the end of our vane projection), will we have completely squelched and vanquished the natural world? I find myself disgusted with the city life all around us all the time. Was this really how it was supposed to be? Nature only exists in its natural state in select and preserved areas throughout the world. How long will they last for? Will society really trade it in for its own arrogantly touted world of mass consumerism?
There's something missing from this life. the Arcade Fire tap into deep rooted feelings of nostalgia in this song, recalling their childhood, and how it effects their current situation. They also do this in others, such as "We Used to Wait" in which Win Butler longs for the slowed-down, even-paced way of life. Society used to wait for letters to come in the mail from loved ones. These were often well thought out and meaningful. We used to wait for all sorts of things. Now we demand immediacy and instant gratification.
@roadswind spot on lad, the song is so beautiful and simple. We’re loosing the simple and beautiful things that bring us joy that we have now forgotten that gives us joy. One of my favourite songs that 95% of the population is about to bury
I think this album's sequencing is perfect. After exploring the flatlands of the suburbs (seeing how your childhood has been whitewashed over) and seeing the mountains beyond mountains of dead malls in the suburbs. The cities, the places where civilization started and where the people and culture are still actually abuzz, call out to your soul.
This album perfectly expresses what the suburbs are in mood and tone, how meaningless, duplicated, shallow and ultimately uniform they all are.
Every town has to have the same thing as every other town, leading to each town changing into being exactly the same thing. A pile of "dead shopping malls" that nobody is actually from, because it doesn't have any characteristics to call its own.
This song also explores how the whole world seems to be getting taken over by the unplanned, sprawling suburbs to the point where it will soon be inescapable.
Which is another central theme of the album, in my opinion, the fact that our lifestyle choices and civilization seem to be on the verge of wiping anything that's beautiful from the planet.
Makes me want to move to the city.
I keep thinking that the album is not so much about how horrible the Suburbs are, but how they represent the basic human condition. In this song she asks if she can ever escape from the sprawl. Well, no, because the same problems that you see in the suburbs can also be everywhere else. Even if you disappear into the wilderness of Alaska (or the jungles of New York) you will still have to face the realities of life.
Agreed. I think this song is actually about how we romanticize the cities as being ultra-contemporary, liberal, etc but we can never escape the small-mindedness and other human problems that we complained about in the suburbs.
no kidding re: the sequencing. it's totally marvelous, and joyous in the face of some really depressing material to put the uplifting music at the end. (and then the hammer of the coda to The Suburbs, that they would love to grow up in the same way, again and again...) <br /> <br />
This is my favorite song on the new album. I think it's beautiful how they always manage to write a song on the album that Regine can totally own. This song is hers, nobody can take that away from her.
Favorite song on the album, by far. Although I have to admit that every time I listen, it reminds me of "Heart of Glass" just a teeny tiny bit.
Wow, me too..!
I actually agree with that one as well, but it kind of is what attracts me to this song.
thank God someone post this,
thehood.raptorhideout.com/arcade_fire_blondie.mp3<br /> <br /> It's amazing.
My interpretation of the song is one in which the protagonist is living in an oppressive environment; it's not overtly oppressive, like Communist Russia, but at the same time, her identity is being stifled to an extent by those around her. They "hear [her] singing and they tell [her] to stop" and to quit being "pretentious." In my understanding of the word, pretentious connotes showing off or being ostentatious, and the fact that these people are equating her singing, a form of expression, to pretentiousness implies that any outpour of emotion or thought is looked down upon; everyone is expected to stay mute, conform, and follow order ("just punch the clock"). I think one of the more insightful lines in the song is when the narrator says that she "needs the darkness, someone please cut the lights." Normally, one must shed light on something to discover its meaning or truth, or in others case, follow the light, but here, she needs the opposite. I feel like this is a way of her going against the grain of what is expected of her. I hear some echoes of Emerson throughout parts of the song, particularly from his essay "Self Reliance." Anyway, this song really is my favorite one by Arcade Fire!
Nobody fucking expects anything of you! You will do as you please, as you always have. You are not persecuted other than you doing it to yourself. Gawd, get it through your thick head! You are free to do as you please. Nobody can stop you, but you. Live. Laugh. Have Sex. Enjoy life. Just don't drag others along when they're not allowed in the front door or front seat. You are such a fucking asshole at times.
Completely agree. Unreal song, my favourite on the album too. Just magnificent. I'd call it this albums version of "No Cars Go"
Also worth noting, though I don't see how it fits in, "Mountains Beyond Mountains" is the name of a book about one of the founders of Partners in Health, a charitable group Arcade Fire is involved with, that has worked extensively on providing support to Haiti.
That's an interesting side-note, it's quite possibly related to the song. Either way, glad to see you appreciate this as much as I do!
"There are mountains beyond mountains" is a Haitian proverb about how there is always another challenge to face after the one immediately confronting you. Regine has Haitian roots, so maybe she's using the proverb to say how even if you got rid of one of the "dead shopping malls" there would just be another one behind it?
Favourite off of this album. Just hypnotic.
i love how all their songs make feel like a kid again favorite song on this album Regine kills it
beautiful, it makes me heart ache