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* Exist Trace: An all female VisualKei metal band 4/5 of whom are {{Bifauxnen}}... in a genre where pretty much the same proportion of ''men'' are WholesomeCrossdressers!
* Self's "Trunk Full Of Amps" would practically be a SingleStanzaSong if not for the fact that every verse namechecks a different rock band or vocalist ("Got a trunk full of amps, mother***er / like (insert musician here), mother***er!"). What do all the acts mentioned have in common beyond being famous rock musicians? They all have songs prominently featuring the word "mother" (or "mama") in their titles or lyrics! Lenny Kravitz's "Mama Said", Music/ElectricLightOrchestra's "Mama" (or possibly "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle"), Music/{{Queen}}'s "Tie Your Mother Down" (or less obviously "Bohemian Rhapsody") and of course Music/{{Danzig}}'s "Mother".
* Music/BlueManGroup, "The Complex". The line in question is "I work on the highest floor / there's nothing in my way / but I saw my picture on the bathroom door / today". It will take you a while to figure out what that means. Why would they put someone's picture on a bathroom door? And then you'll remember that a lot of bathroom doors have one of [[http://www.clker.com/cliparts/8/2/c/d/12065700491766772417johnny_automatic_Accommodations_2.svg.med.png these]], and realized: The singer is concerned about losing his individuality and identity.
* When hearing Music/BadBrains' "Sacred Love", you'll think it's a good song somewhat ruined by a gratuitous vocal effect that made H.R. sound like he was singing through a telephone... Then you'll find out he ''was'' singing through a telephone - he was doing jail time for marijuana distribution while the album was still being finished, so the producer suggested he finish the vocals for that song by phone. Given the circumstances, it's an extremely good vocal performance.



* A Music/MyChemicalRomance example; "Danger Days" is incredidably pop-based, which was a turn-off to some fans. However, If one decides to give the album a second listen before writing it off as crap, and one will find it a lot more enjoyable the second time around. That's not the brilliance part. To contemplate how awesome the album was -- the album is being broadcasted from a radio station. What does the radio play more than anything else? Pop. That was the brilliance part.
** Keeping in theme, the first half of the album is relatively upbeat and rebellious. Then, "Dr. Death Defying" chimes in with a news report about the death of two killjoys. From that point forward, the album takes a much more serious tone, since it's no longer "just fun and games".
* The song "Come on Eileen" by Dexy's Midnight Runners has been rumored to be able an orgasm or something sexual, but it's about a guy reuniting with a girl he liked as a kid. One part of the song starts off slow and gets faster and faster at the end like an orgasm, kind of like Mr. Mojo Rising from "L.A. Woman" by the Doors.



* On Music/LadyGaga's "Paparazzi," if one does a lot of reading about true crime, one would learn a lot about stalkers who act all romantic long enough to control a person, isolate them, and possibly kill them if the real person doesn't measure up with the image the stalker has invented to feel good about him/herself, so one would hate listening to people singing "I'll follow you until you love me" as though that was romantic and loving when one should know how many people had died in situations like that, until theres an explanation that, in the music video, people actually did die, so appearently Gaga knew what she was talking about, so now there's a new brilliance to listen to the song to mock the people who listen to the song.
** Second level of FB that just occurred reading the previous: people think the song is romantic, but it's actually about a type of psychopath that people think are romantics, so they fall for the fake romance in the song the way they would fall for it in real life.
* "Tribute" by Tenacious D is a legendary story about two young rockers and their DealWithTheDevil (actually "a shiny demon") in a friendly music competition that results in them creating: "The Greatest Song in the World". The joke is, of course, that they couldn't remember the song that they ACTUALLY played that day, and that this song is "just a tribute". Then it occurred that any song worthy of the title: "Greatest Song in the World" could never actually be PLAYED. The moment that you HEAR a song, you automatically categorize it and compare it to every other song you've heard, which reduces its greatness. So the "Greatest" Song in the World would have to be the one that only exists in the listener's imagination.
** Also on Tenacious D is the subtle realization that everything J.B.'s father said to him in "Kickapoo" was correct. The Pick of Destiny, the source of all great rock musicians, was forged from the Devil's fang. Gaining its power cause J.B. to fall out with his best friend and lose direction in his life. Eventually, it causes them to deliver the Pick into the Devil's hands. His father had warned him that rock came from the Devil and would cause J.B. to lose his heart and become a puppet of the Devil.
* At first the thought that Lupe Fiasco's "Dumb It Down" was just a bit of irony; the lyrics in the song are far from dumbed down, they're possibly the most complicated lyrics to be ever read. But when seeing the video for the song, which is in black and white, and only really features Lupe and a few other people, there's a realization on how brilliant the song was. Everything has been dumbed down, EXCEPT the lyrics. The song also ends with 'but I flatly refuse I ain't dumb down nothing.' Which is confusing until there's another realization he hasnt dumbed down anything that matters. He's dumbed down everything but the lyrics, and uses just the lyrics themselves to show how much he doesnt need fancy videos and money etc. The lyrics are all that matter.
* Bush's "Glycerine" has a seemingly arbitrary Music/TheBeatles ShoutOut ("...when we rise it's like strawberry fields"), while "Everything Zen" has an equally arbitrary Music/DavidBowie ShoutOut ("Minnie Mouse has grown up a cow, Dave's on sale again"). The thing "Strawberry Fields" and "Life On Mars?" happen to have in common is WordSaladLyrics, something Bush themselves are also known for. Maybe those shout outs are their way of saying "Yeah, none of this makes any sense, but hey, you let The Beatles and David Bowie get away with it..."
* "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" by The Charlie Daniels Band seems to show Johnny victorious, but that's only in the short term. In beating the Devil, Johnny claimed a golden fiddle and mockingly declared his superiority, thus commiting two of the SevenDeadlySins: Greed and Pride. Not only that, but he did so in full knowledge that taking the bet was a sin. As such, he has committed at least one mortal sin, potentially ***ing his soul. So long as Johnny does not repent and gain forgiveness, the Devil was the real winner.



* When hearing Music/BadBrains' "Sacred Love", you'll think it's a good song somewhat ruined by a gratuitous vocal effect that made H.R. sound like he was singing through a telephone... Then you'll find out he ''was'' singing through a telephone - he was doing jail time for marijuana distribution while the album was still being finished, so the producer suggested he finish the vocals for that song by phone. Given the circumstances, it's an extremely good vocal performance.



** There's a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim who tries to escape from or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, a thought of something: what if the wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the victim was her abusive husband?

to:

** There's a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim who tries to escape from or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, a thought think of something: this: what if the wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the victim was her abusive husband?


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* Music/BlueManGroup, "The Complex". The line in question is "I work on the highest floor / there's nothing in my way / but I saw my picture on the bathroom door / today". It will take you a while to figure out what that means. Why would they put someone's picture on a bathroom door? And then you'll remember that a lot of bathroom doors have one of [[http://www.clker.com/cliparts/8/2/c/d/12065700491766772417johnny_automatic_Accommodations_2.svg.med.png these]], and realized: The singer is concerned about losing his individuality and identity.


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* Music/{{Bush}}'s "Glycerine" has a seemingly arbitrary Music/TheBeatles ShoutOut ("...when we rise it's like strawberry fields"), while "Everything Zen" has an equally arbitrary Music/DavidBowie ShoutOut ("Minnie Mouse has grown up a cow, Dave's on sale again"). The thing "Strawberry Fields" and "Life On Mars?" happen to have in common is WordSaladLyrics, something Bush themselves are also known for. Maybe those shout outs are their way of saying "Yeah, none of this makes any sense, but hey, you let The Beatles and David Bowie get away with it..."
* "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" by Music/TheCharlieDanielsBand seems to show Johnny victorious, but that's only in the short term. In beating the Devil, Johnny claimed a golden fiddle and mockingly declared his superiority, thus committing two of the SevenDeadlySins: Greed and Pride. Not only that, but he did so in full knowledge that taking the bet was a sin. As such, he has committed at least one mortal sin, potentially ***ing his soul. So long as Johnny does not repent and gain forgiveness, the Devil was the real winner.


Added DiffLines:

* The song "Come on Eileen" by Music/DexysMidnightRunners has been rumored to be about an orgasm or something sexual, but it's about a guy reuniting with a girl he liked as a kid. One part of the song starts off slow and gets faster and faster at the end like an orgasm, kind of like Mr. Mojo Rising from "L.A. Woman" by the Doors.


Added DiffLines:

* Music/ExistTrace: An all female VisualKei metal band 4/5 of whom are {{Bifauxnen}}... in a genre where pretty much the same proportion of ''men'' are WholesomeCrossdressers!


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* At first it seems that Music/LupeFiasco's "Dumb It Down" is just a bit of irony; the lyrics in the song are far from dumbed down, they're possibly the most complicated lyrics to be ever read. But when seeing the video for the song, which is in black and white, and only really features Lupe and a few other people, there's a realization on how brilliant the song is. Everything has been dumbed down, EXCEPT the lyrics. The song also ends with 'but I flatly refuse I ain't dumb down nothing.' Which is confusing until there's another realization he hasn't dumbed down anything that matters. He's dumbed down everything but the lyrics, and uses just the lyrics themselves to show how much he doesn't need fancy videos and money etc. The lyrics are all that matter.


Added DiffLines:

* On Music/LadyGaga's "Paparazzi," if one does a lot of reading about true crime, one would learn a lot about stalkers who act all romantic long enough to control a person, isolate them, and possibly kill them if the real person doesn't measure up with the image the stalker has invented to feel good about him/herself, so one would hate listening to people singing "I'll follow you until you love me" as though that was romantic and loving when one should know how many people had died in situations like that, until there's an explanation that, in the music video, people actually did die, so apparently Gaga knew what she was talking about, so now there's a new brilliance to listen to the song to mock the people who listen to the song.
** Second level of FB: people think the song is romantic, but it's actually about a type of psychopath that people think are romantics, so they fall for the fake romance in the song the way they would fall for it in real life.


Added DiffLines:

* A Music/MyChemicalRomance example; ''Danger Days'' is incredibly pop-based, which was a turn-off to some fans. However, If one decides to give the album a second listen before writing it off as crap, and one will find it a lot more enjoyable the second time around. That's not the brilliance part. To contemplate how awesome the album was -- the album is being broadcasted from a radio station. What does the radio play more than anything else? Pop. That was the brilliance part.
** Keeping in theme, the first half of the album is relatively upbeat and rebellious. Then, "Dr. Death Defying" chimes in with a news report about the death of two killjoys. From that point forward, the album takes a much more serious tone, since it's no longer "just fun and games".


Added DiffLines:

* Music/{{Self}}'s "Trunk Full Of Amps" would practically be a SingleStanzaSong if not for the fact that every verse namechecks a different rock band or vocalist ("Got a trunk full of amps, mother***er / like (insert musician here), mother***er!"). What do all the acts mentioned have in common beyond being famous rock musicians? They all have songs prominently featuring the word "mother" (or "mama") in their titles or lyrics! Lenny Kravitz's "Mama Said", Music/ElectricLightOrchestra's "Mama" (or possibly "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle"), Music/{{Queen}}'s "Tie Your Mother Down" (or less obviously "Bohemian Rhapsody") and of course Music/{{Danzig}}'s "Mother".


Added DiffLines:

* Music/TenaciousD:
** "Tribute" is a legendary story about two young rockers and their DealWithTheDevil (actually "a shiny demon") in a friendly music competition that results in them creating "The Greatest Song in the World". The joke is, of course, that they couldn't remember the song that they ACTUALLY played that day, and that this song is "just a tribute". Then it occurs that any song worthy of the title: "Greatest Song in the World" could never actually be PLAYED. The moment that you HEAR a song, you automatically categorize it and compare it to every other song you've heard, which reduces its greatness. So the "Greatest" Song in the World would have to be the one that only exists in the listener's imagination.
** Also the subtle realization that everything J.B.'s father said to him in "Kickapoo" was correct. The Pick of Destiny, the source of all great rock musicians, was forged from the Devil's fang. Gaining its power causes J.B. to fall out with his best friend and lose direction in his life. Eventually, it causes them to deliver the Pick into the Devil's hands. His father had warned him that rock came from the Devil and would cause J.B. to lose his heart and become a puppet of the Devil.

Added: 8899

Changed: 795

Removed: 8085

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
cleanup, alphabetizing


* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxyKqH2E4sM "Strawberry Hill"]] by Music/RedHousePainters is a particularly strong one. At first the song just seems like it's about some teenager struggling with drug addiction, severe depression, and thoughts on suicide. The narrator seems to be desperately trying to save the teenager by telling him how wonderful he is. Then after repeated listens, reading the lyrics, and listening to interviews with Mark Kozelek you find out the song is about his younger self. Cue even worse tears than before!
* It takes a while to appreciate "Your Ex-Lover is Dead" by the Canadian band Stars, and an even longer while wondering about the title, when the song clearly depicted both parties alive and well. There's an assumption that the lyrics merely highlighted the fact that their breakup was mutual, and it was their relationship which was "dead." Eventually, it strikes the thought: "ex-lover" refers to the person they once fell in love with, and now, seeing each other again after all that time, and declaring that they had no regrets concerning their relationship, that person is now "dead."
* Listening to a few Anarchy Club albums and one might think they are good but slightly meh; they were just standard angry rock. But when listening to their "The Way And It's Power" album, that's when it clicks: the songs weren't angry, they were bitter. "King of Everything" isn't an egotistical song about how cool the lead singer is; it's a mission statement about how much the lead singer isn't going to let himself be put-down by how much *** life and other people have served him. "Kill For You" isn't about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and thus is going to take it out on everyone else; it's about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and was left so depressed and desperate by it that he was left no other option but to take it out on others. When the album's tone was shifted from unneeded anger and violence to a highly bitter violent reaction to a highly bitter and violent world ("I'm sick and tired of the sick and tired..."), it went from meh and unneeded to something genuinely awe-inspiring and relevant.
* "Syndicate", by Music/TheFray, has an interesting way of making the song related to the title. The beginning riff and the riff that plays throughout the song are in 3/4, as well as the bridge. The rest is in 4/4. Thus, the song is syndicating two different time signatures.
* The Music/LinkinPark album, "A Thousand Suns", starts off with small portion of "The Catalyst", the penultimate track on said album, creating a sort of BookEnds effect. However, halfway through is a track called "Jornuda del Muerto", which is basically the words "Moshiagete, tokihanashite" ("Lift me up, Let me go") repeated a couple of times to a slower version of "The Catalyst"s melody. It seems as if the entire album actually slowly builds up tension and has its climax at "The Catalyst", the same way a movie would build up tension, while also foreshadowing both at the beginning and the middle.



* In the Music/{{Genesis}} song "Stagnation" on their second album "Trespass", there's a line that goes "I wanna sit down" repeated. The next line, also repeated, is "I wanna drink". This all fine and dandy at first, but in the album's liner notes, it says the song is about the last survivor of a nuclear apocalypse. It just turns out that fatigue and extreme thirst are the earliest symptoms of radiation poisoning.



* While listening to the Music/KatyPerry song "Circle the Drain", which was about a breakup caused by drug addiction, one might never understand the dismal, ugly note at the end of the song. Then, one will realize that it could very well symbolize the bitterness of the breakup, or the death of the singer at the hands of her drug addict boyfriend.
* Music/MaryJBlige has the song "No More Drama" which samples "Nadia's Theme" from ''Series/TheYoungAndTheRestless''. Why did she choose to sample that song in her [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=em328ua_Lo8 moving video]]? No more '''Drama''', like a bad soap opera. She wants the drama to ''end''. Brilliant when you stop and think about it.
* As noted on their works page, Music/TheB52s deliberately filled the song "Mesopotamia" with [[ArtisticLicenseHistory incorrect information about Mesopotamia itself]] for the sake of humor. The chorus includes the lines "I ain't no student of ancient culture / before I talk I should read a book", which would probably be a LampshadeHanging.
* {{Music/Primus}}:
** "Glass Sandwich" is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title.
** The third verse of "Jerry Was a Race Car Driver" is only half as long as the other two. [[spoiler:It also tells of Jerry's death in a drunk driving crash. So, it was cut short, much like Jerry's life.]]
* Whether actually intended, or just pure coincidence, Alter Bridge has managed to pull this off with their Album-names. The Album Titles are: One Day Remains, Blackbird, AB III (AB3) and Fortress. At first, this seems like it's just some random names for albums, right? Then look deeper. "One Day Remains" is the first Album released by Alter Bridge, and has the word "One" in its title. "Blackbird" is their second Album, and the word "Blackbird" starts with a B, which is the second letter of the Alphabet. Their third Album is just named "AB III", making this a no-brainer (it's their third album), and their latest album, "Fortress", is a bit more cryptic than their previous ones. It's a bit of a stretch, but "For" in "Fortress" sounds a whole lot like "Four". Coincidentally enough, this is their fourth Album. Whoever names their albums is a freaking genius!
* The Decemberists' song "Sons and Daughters" already contains quite a bit of GeniusBonus / ViewersAreGeniuses references, requiring knowledge that aluminum and cinnamon were once valuable, hence the mention of "build our walls aluminum" and "fill our lives with cinnamon". Notice, though, that the references are anachronistic, not common to a single time period; pure aluminium only started to be produced and thus become valuable after the cinnamon monopoly declined and consequently had the monetary value of cinnamon decreased. Other references are also anachronistic, what with "aris[ing] from the bunkers" and to travel "by dirigible" (aluminium became more commonplace before the turn of the 19th-20th century, thus predating travel by dirigibles and nuclear paranoia). The FridgeBrilliance comes in when you realise these anachronisms are due to the references to ''multiple'' time periods, capturing the hopes and desires to escape horror across different eras of humanity, a common theme throughout history.
** This is further emphasised by the repetition of the last few lines ("Here all the bombs fade away"): where as one era (and consequently its hopes and dreams) fades it is followed by another era with its own motivations.
* The radio edit of Faithless' "Insomnia" has a [[SensoryAbuse loud screeching noise]] before the actual song; this is meant to wake up the listener and put him into a state of insomnia.
* Music/GunsNRoses's probably least popular album, "Chinese Democracy" has several examples of this. The final track on the album, "Prostitute" is probably the most brilliant example. It isn't a love song, it isn't about a prostitute or anything else you'd expect. Nope. It's a message from Axl to '''the fans'''! "If my affections are misunderstood, and you decide I'm up to no good, don't ask me to enjoy them just for you" at first sounds like he's referring to a someone a girlfriend knows (poosibly parents), but when you think about it, it's not. He is referring to the classic line-up (Slash, Izzy, Duff and Steve/Matt). The last chorus is basically Axl saying he'll never make music for the money, if it means compromising his own enjoyment.



* Whether actually intended, or just pure coincidence, Music/AlterBridge has managed to pull this off with their Album-names. The Album Titles are: One Day Remains, Blackbird, AB III (AB3) and Fortress. At first, this seems like it's just some random names for albums, right? Then look deeper. "One Day Remains" is the first Album released by Alter Bridge, and has the word "One" in its title. "Blackbird" is their second Album, and the word "Blackbird" starts with a B, which is the second letter of the Alphabet. Their third Album is just named "AB III", making this a no-brainer (it's their third album), and their latest album, "Fortress", is a bit more cryptic than their previous ones. It's a bit of a stretch, but "For" in "Fortress" sounds a whole lot like "Four". Coincidentally enough, this is their fourth Album. Whoever names their albums is a freaking genius!
* Listen to a few Music/AnarchyClub albums and one might think they are good but slightly meh; they were just standard angry rock. But when listening to their ''The Way And It's Power'' album, that's when it clicks: the songs weren't angry, they were bitter. "King of Everything" isn't an egotistical song about how cool the lead singer is; it's a mission statement about how much the lead singer isn't going to let himself be put-down by how much *** life and other people have served him. "Kill For You" isn't about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and thus is going to take it out on everyone else; it's about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and was left so depressed and desperate by it that he was left no other option but to take it out on others. When the album's tone was shifted from unneeded anger and violence to a highly bitter violent reaction to a highly bitter and violent world ("I'm sick and tired of the sick and tired..."), it went from meh and unneeded to something genuinely awe-inspiring and relevant.



* As noted on their works page, Music/TheB52s deliberately filled the song "Mesopotamia" with [[ArtisticLicenseHistory incorrect information about Mesopotamia itself]] for the sake of humor. The chorus includes the lines "I ain't no student of ancient culture / before I talk I should read a book", which would probably be a LampshadeHanging.



* Music/MaryJBlige has the song "No More Drama" which samples "Nadia's Theme" from ''Series/TheYoungAndTheRestless''. Why did she choose to sample that song in her [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=em328ua_Lo8 moving video]]? No more '''Drama''', like a bad soap opera. She wants the drama to ''end''. Brilliant when you stop and think about it.



* Music/TheDecemberists' song "Sons and Daughters" already contains quite a bit of GeniusBonus / ViewersAreGeniuses references, requiring knowledge that aluminum and cinnamon were once valuable, hence the mention of "build our walls aluminum" and "fill our lives with cinnamon". Notice, though, that the references are anachronistic, not common to a single time period; pure aluminium only started to be produced and thus become valuable after the cinnamon monopoly declined and consequently had the monetary value of cinnamon decreased. Other references are also anachronistic, what with "aris[ing] from the bunkers" and to travel "by dirigible" (aluminium became more commonplace before the turn of the 19th-20th century, thus predating travel by dirigibles and nuclear paranoia). The FridgeBrilliance comes in when you realise these anachronisms are due to the references to ''multiple'' time periods, capturing the hopes and desires to escape horror across different eras of humanity, a common theme throughout history.
** This is further emphasised by the repetition of the last few lines ("Here all the bombs fade away"): where as one era (and consequently its hopes and dreams) fades it is followed by another era with its own motivations.



* The radio edit of Music/{{Faithless}}' "Insomnia" has a [[SensoryAbuse loud screeching noise]] before the actual song; this is meant to wake up the listener and put him into a state of insomnia.
* "Syndicate", by Music/TheFray, has an interesting way of making the song related to the title. The beginning riff and the riff that plays throughout the song are in 3/4, as well as the bridge. The rest is in 4/4. Thus, the song is syndicating two different time signatures.
* In the Music/{{Genesis}} song "Stagnation" on their second album "Trespass", there's a line that goes "I wanna sit down" repeated. The next line, also repeated, is "I wanna drink". This all fine and dandy at first, but in the album's liner notes, it says the song is about the last survivor of a nuclear apocalypse. It just turns out that fatigue and extreme thirst are the earliest symptoms of radiation poisoning.
* Music/GunsNRoses's probably least popular album, "Chinese Democracy" has several examples of this. The final track on the album, "Prostitute" is probably the most brilliant example. It isn't a love song, it isn't about a prostitute or anything else you'd expect. Nope. It's a message from Axl to '''the fans'''! "If my affections are misunderstood, and you decide I'm up to no good, don't ask me to enjoy them just for you" at first sounds like he's referring to a someone a girlfriend knows (possibly parents), but when you think about it, it's not. He is referring to the classic line-up (Slash, Izzy, Duff and Steve/Matt). The last chorus is basically Axl saying he'll never make music for the money, if it means compromising his own enjoyment.



* The Music/LinkinPark album, ''A Thousand Suns'', starts off with small portion of "The Catalyst", the penultimate track on said album, creating a sort of BookEnds effect. However, halfway through is a track called "Jornuda del Muerto", which is basically the words "Moshiagete, tokihanashite" ("Lift me up, Let me go") repeated a couple of times to a slower version of "The Catalyst"s melody. It seems as if the entire album actually slowly builds up tension and has its climax at "The Catalyst", the same way a movie would build up tension, while also foreshadowing both at the beginning and the middle.



* It would be weird that "Dark Horse" by Music/KatyPerry contains the lyrics "Make me your Aphrodite", because the music video takes place in Ancient Egypt and Aphrodite is an Ancient Greek goddess. But then you'll remember that Alexander the Great, who was Greek, conquered Egypt and brought Greek culture to Egypt. After Alexander's death, one of his generals named Ptolemy became Pharaoh, and all of the Ptolemies became pharaohs (whose descendants from him were also Greek). Because Alexander brought Greek culture to all the lands he conquered and the Greek Ptolemys worshipped their gods while they ruled Egypt, Aphrodite would have been worshipped in Ancient Egypt under the Ptolemys. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting That probably wasn't intentional by the songwriters, but the video makes more sense now.]]

to:

* Music/KatyPerry:
** While listening to the song "Circle the Drain", which was about a breakup caused by drug addiction, one might never understand the dismal, ugly note at the end of the song. Then, one will realize that it could very well symbolize the bitterness of the breakup, or the death of the singer at the hands of her drug addict boyfriend.
**
It would be weird that "Dark Horse" by Music/KatyPerry contains the lyrics "Make me your Aphrodite", because the music video takes place in Ancient Egypt and Aphrodite is an Ancient Greek goddess. But then you'll remember that Alexander the Great, who was Greek, conquered Egypt and brought Greek culture to Egypt. After Alexander's death, one of his generals named Ptolemy became Pharaoh, and all of the Ptolemies became pharaohs (whose descendants from him were also Greek). Because Alexander brought Greek culture to all the lands he conquered and the Greek Ptolemys worshipped their gods while they ruled Egypt, Aphrodite would have been worshipped in Ancient Egypt under the Ptolemys. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting That probably wasn't intentional by the songwriters, but the video makes more sense now.]]


Added DiffLines:

* {{Music/Primus}}:
** "Glass Sandwich" is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title.
** The third verse of "Jerry Was a Race Car Driver" is only half as long as the other two. [[spoiler:It also tells of Jerry's death in a drunk driving crash. So, it was cut short, much like Jerry's life.]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxyKqH2E4sM "Strawberry Hill"]] by Music/RedHousePainters is a particularly strong one. At first the song just seems like it's about some teenager struggling with drug addiction, severe depression, and thoughts on suicide. The narrator seems to be desperately trying to save the teenager by telling him how wonderful he is. Then after repeated listens, reading the lyrics, and listening to interviews with Mark Kozelek you find out the song is about his younger self. Cue even worse tears than before!


Added DiffLines:

* It takes a while to appreciate "Your Ex-Lover is Dead" by the Canadian band Music/{{Stars}}, and an even longer while wondering about the title, when the song clearly depicted both parties alive and well. There's an assumption that the lyrics merely highlighted the fact that their breakup was mutual, and it was their relationship which was "dead." Eventually, it strikes the thought: "ex-lover" refers to the person they once fell in love with, and now, seeing each other again after all that time, and declaring that they had no regrets concerning their relationship, that person is now "dead."

Added: 6821

Changed: 3200

Removed: 4717

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cleanup, alphabetizing


* In Aqualung by Music/JethroTull , the beginning and ending have hard guitars while the middle is more upbeat and uses folk guitars. Then, realization: the harder parts tell how other people see Aqualung (a homeless guy), while the middle shows how Aqualung sees himself!
* The album "Normal" by Bumblefoot at first just sound like your average shredder's albums, but "Normal" and "Abnormal" are really much deeper and more connected than that. "Normal" starts out with the song "Normal" which talks about how much better his life is after getting new medication. The following songs continue in that vein, up until the track "Breaking", which symbolizes the point where he starts to break down again, and "Shadow" which is where he has finally slipped back into a depression! The next album, "Abnormal" has a much more crazy kind of feel to it, starting with the song "Abnormal", and the entire album sounds exactly like what you would expect from someone who's gone completely crazy. How else can anyone explain the "Super Mario Picks Up A Whole Bunch Of Coins" sound that makes up the solo in "Dash"?
** "Glad To Be Here" sounds like someone who's suicidal, but really it's just how he sees Music/GunsNRoses. The constant chaos in GNR is driving him so crazy that he feels that between killing himself and dealing with Axl Rose's constant chaos, killing himself would be the ''preferable'' option. And yet, he's glad he's there because at least that way he can get out and play for more people than a small venue can hold. The fact that he had 3 weeks to learn the 12 songs from "Chinese Democracy" from start to finish and he only had time to hear each song once, only underscores how chaotic GNR was at that time. No wonder the guy became suicidal!



* Creator/MarkPrindle's [[Music/HenryRollins Rollins Band]] page had [[http://markprindle.com/rollinsband.htm#weighting one for the song "Liar"]] that prompted one fridge moment: He pointed out how he thought the chorus was just poorly written, until he realized the guitar riff was meant to emulate the playground chant "liar, liar, pants on fire". This made realization on how the backing music is used to complement the lyrics: The verse sections are uncharacteristically mellow and jazzy because the narrator is trying to lull you into believing him, and the chorus is deliberately grating and childish-sounding because he's mocking you for falling for his lies.
* In "I Need a Doctor" by Music/DrDre (featuring Eminem and Skylar Gray), the chorus goes "I need a doctor, doctor, to bring me back to life". The first time Gray sings it, you hear the sound of a heart rate monitor that starts beeping, then flatlines. Two choruses later, at probably the most dramatic point in the song, the heart rate monitor sound comes back, first a flatline, then it starts beeping. Immediately afterwards Dre comes in for his verse. It may take years to realize what they did with the heart rate monitor sounds: the doctor brought her back to life. That's genius.
* Music/BetterThanEzra:
** There's a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim who tries to escape from or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, a thought of something: what if the wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the victim was her abusive husband?
** Then there's "Desperately Wanting". The first verse almost sounds like Kevin alone, then the second verse really kicks into gear about halfway through when Tom and Travis join in. It's almost like a reunion of friends...which is alluded to in the lyrics.
* One would like Music/JonathanCoulton 's song "Code Monkey", but one would like it even more now that the realization on exactly why he hates his job so much. He's bad at it. His code doesn't necessarily have to be elegant, but it should at least be functional, when he's depressed he pretends to work and he'd rather be jobless and mooching around.
* The chorus of Joseph Arthur's BreakupSong "In the Sun" has no words but the catchy refrain "May God's love be with you, always," making the ultimate sentiment of the song come off as a warm and heartfelt IWantMyBelovedToBeHappy. This can seem odd, given that the rest of the lyrics seem to portray a tumultuous relationship that ended with heartbreak and hurt feelings. Then you realize: the singer is wishing God's love for his ex-lover because he no longer loves her himself, but hopes that God--who is immune to anger and sadness and regret--still might. "May God's love be with you" is a subtle way of saying "I don't love you anymore, but I hope you're OK."



* It would be weird that "Dark Horse" by Music/KatyPerry contains the lyrics "Make me your Aphrodite", because the music video takes place in Ancient Egypt and Aphrodite is an Ancient Greek goddess. But then you'll remember that Alexander the Great, who was Greek, conquered Egypt and brought Greek culture to Egypt. After Alexander's death, one of his generals named Ptolemy became Pharaoh, and all of the Ptolemies became pharaohs (whoses descendants from him were also Greek). Because Alexander brought Greek culture to all the lands he conquered and the Greek Ptolemys worshipped their gods while they ruled Egypt, Aphrodite would have been worshipped in Ancient Egypt under the Ptolemys. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting That probably wasn't intentional by the songwriters, but the video makes more sense now.]]
* It seems like Music/NeilYoung's "Rockin' In the Free World" has a serious lyrical disconnect between the verses (singing about the ills of the world) and the chorus (happily stating to "Keep on rockin' in the free world"). Then remember the last line of the first verse: "So I try to forget it any way I can." Rockin' in the free world is his way to forget it.
* The first time hearing Music/{{Nightwish}}'s "Passion and the Opera", one would like it well enough, but would feel that Tarja's OneWomanWail at the end [[EndingFatigue went on longer than it probably should have]]. Then if one actually paid attention to [[IntercourseWithYou the lyrics]], and when it finally hits on [[TheImmodestOrgasm what the ending was]]. %% The writer, Mattthelurker, was at church, of all places, when he realized this.
* Music/SufjanStevens' ''Illinois'' originally featured an image of Superman in its album artwork; His label subsequently realized they never got permission from Creator/DCComics to use Superman's image, and subsequent copies either replaced him with a string of balloons, {{Creator/Marvel}}'s Chicago-based superhero The Blue Marvel, or just an empty sky. The balloon version of the cover can still be considered an abstract representation of Superman: The balloons match the red and blue color scheme of his clothing, the positions of the three balloons sort of resembles his head and arms in his trademark flying pose, and the balloons' strings are flowing behind them like a "cape".
* Listening to Jackson Browne's "Rosie" a few dozen times would realize that what sounds like a tender love ballad is a song about [[ADateWithRosiePalms masturbation]]. When you realize that "Rosie" is a reference to "Rosie palm and her five lovely daughters," the chorus makes prefect sense:

to:

%%
%% Entries past this point are alphabetized. Please put new entries in alphabetical order.
%%
* It would The chorus of Music/JosephArthur's BreakupSong "In the Sun" has no words but the catchy refrain "May God's love be weird with you, always," making the ultimate sentiment of the song come off as a warm and heartfelt IWantMyBelovedToBeHappy. This can seem odd, given that "Dark Horse" by Music/KatyPerry contains the rest of the lyrics "Make me your Aphrodite", seem to portray a tumultuous relationship that ended with heartbreak and hurt feelings. Then you realize: the singer is wishing God's love for his ex-lover because the music video takes place in Ancient Egypt and Aphrodite is an Ancient Greek goddess. But then you'll remember he no longer loves her himself, but hopes that Alexander the Great, God--who is immune to anger and sadness and regret--still might. "May God's love be with you" is a subtle way of saying "I don't love you anymore, but I hope you're OK."
* Music/BetterThanEzra:
** There's a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim
who was Greek, conquered Egypt and brought Greek culture tries to Egypt. After Alexander's death, one of his generals named Ptolemy became Pharaoh, and all of the Ptolemies became pharaohs (whoses descendants escape from him were also Greek). Because Alexander brought Greek culture to all or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, a thought of something: what if the lands he conquered wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the Greek Ptolemys worshipped their gods while they ruled Egypt, Aphrodite would have been worshipped in Ancient Egypt under the Ptolemys. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting That probably wasn't intentional by the songwriters, but the video makes more sense now.]]
* It seems like Music/NeilYoung's "Rockin' In the Free World" has a serious lyrical disconnect between the verses (singing about the ills of the world) and the chorus (happily stating to "Keep on rockin' in the free world").
victim was her abusive husband?
**
Then remember the last line of the first verse: "So I try to forget it any way I can." Rockin' in the free world is his way to forget it.
*
there's "Desperately Wanting". The first time hearing Music/{{Nightwish}}'s "Passion and the Opera", one would verse almost sounds like it well enough, but would feel that Tarja's OneWomanWail at Kevin alone, then the end [[EndingFatigue went on longer than it probably should have]]. Then if one actually paid attention to [[IntercourseWithYou the lyrics]], and second verse really kicks into gear about halfway through when it finally hits on [[TheImmodestOrgasm what the ending was]]. %% The writer, Mattthelurker, was at church, of all places, when he realized this.
* Music/SufjanStevens' ''Illinois'' originally featured an image of Superman in its album artwork; His label subsequently realized they never got permission from Creator/DCComics to use Superman's image,
Tom and subsequent copies either replaced him with a string of balloons, {{Creator/Marvel}}'s Chicago-based superhero The Blue Marvel, or just an empty sky. The balloon version of the cover can still be considered an abstract representation of Superman: The balloons match the red and blue color scheme of his clothing, the positions of the three balloons sort of resembles his head and arms in his trademark flying pose, and the balloons' strings are flowing behind them Travis join in. It's almost like a "cape".
reunion of friends...which is alluded to in the lyrics.
* Listening to Jackson Browne's Music/JacksonBrowne's "Rosie" a few dozen times would realize that what sounds like a tender love ballad is a song about [[ADateWithRosiePalms masturbation]]. When you realize that "Rosie" is a reference to "Rosie palm and her five lovely daughters," the chorus makes prefect sense:



* [[WebVideo/FilthyFrank Pink Guy's]] ''Small Dick'' abruptly ends as the singer utters "I only watch porno where the black ma-". Ironic how a song about short assets is too short in itself.

to:

* [[WebVideo/FilthyFrank Pink Guy's]] ''Small Dick'' abruptly ends as Music/{{Bumblefoot}}:
** The album ''Normal'' at first just sounds like your average shredder's albums, but ''Normal'' and ''Abnormal'' are really much deeper and more connected than that. ''Normal'' starts out with
the singer utters "I only watch porno song "Normal" which talks about how much better his life is after getting new medication. The following songs continue in that vein, up until the track "Breaking", which symbolizes the point where he starts to break down again, and "Shadow" which is where he has finally slipped back into a depression! The next album, ''Abnormal'' has a much more crazy kind of feel to it, starting with the black ma-". Ironic how a song about short assets "Abnormal", and the entire album sounds exactly like what you would expect from someone who's gone completely crazy. How else can anyone explain the "Super Mario Picks Up A Whole Bunch Of Coins" sound that makes up the solo in "Dash"?
** "Glad To Be Here" sounds like someone who's suicidal, but really it's just how he sees Music/GunsNRoses. The constant chaos in GNR
is too short in itself.driving him so crazy that he feels that between killing himself and dealing with Axl Rose's constant chaos, killing himself would be the ''preferable'' option. And yet, he's glad he's there because at least that way he can get out and play for more people than a small venue can hold. The fact that he had 3 weeks to learn the 12 songs from "Chinese Democracy" from start to finish and he only had time to hear each song once, only underscores how chaotic GNR was at that time. No wonder the guy became suicidal!



* One would like Music/JonathanCoulton 's song "Code Monkey", but one would like it even more now that the realization on exactly why he hates his job so much. He's bad at it. His code doesn't necessarily have to be elegant, but it should at least be functional, when he's depressed he pretends to work and he'd rather be jobless and mooching around.
* In "I Need a Doctor" by Music/DrDre (featuring Eminem and Skylar Gray), the chorus goes "I need a doctor, doctor, to bring me back to life". The first time Gray sings it, you hear the sound of a heart rate monitor that starts beeping, then flatlines. Two choruses later, at probably the most dramatic point in the song, the heart rate monitor sound comes back, first a flatline, then it starts beeping. Immediately afterwards Dre comes in for his verse. It may take years to realize what they did with the heart rate monitor sounds: the doctor brought her back to life. That's genius.
* In "Aqualung" by Music/JethroTull , the beginning and ending have hard guitars while the middle is more upbeat and uses folk guitars. Then, realization: the harder parts tell how other people see Aqualung (a homeless guy), while the middle shows how Aqualung sees himself!



''You make me completely miserable.''

to:

''You make me completely miserable.''''
* The first time hearing Music/{{Nightwish}}'s "Passion and the Opera", one would like it well enough, but would feel that Tarja's OneWomanWail at the end [[EndingFatigue went on longer than it probably should have]]. Then if one actually paid attention to [[IntercourseWithYou the lyrics]], and when it finally hits on [[TheImmodestOrgasm what the ending was]]. %% The writer, Mattthelurker, was at church, of all places, when he realized this.
* It would be weird that "Dark Horse" by Music/KatyPerry contains the lyrics "Make me your Aphrodite", because the music video takes place in Ancient Egypt and Aphrodite is an Ancient Greek goddess. But then you'll remember that Alexander the Great, who was Greek, conquered Egypt and brought Greek culture to Egypt. After Alexander's death, one of his generals named Ptolemy became Pharaoh, and all of the Ptolemies became pharaohs (whose descendants from him were also Greek). Because Alexander brought Greek culture to all the lands he conquered and the Greek Ptolemys worshipped their gods while they ruled Egypt, Aphrodite would have been worshipped in Ancient Egypt under the Ptolemys. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting That probably wasn't intentional by the songwriters, but the video makes more sense now.]]
* [[WebVideo/FilthyFrank Pink Guy's]] ''Small Dick'' abruptly ends as the singer utters "I only watch porno where the black ma-". Ironic how a song about short assets is too short in itself.
* Creator/MarkPrindle's [[Music/HenryRollins Rollins Band]] page had [[http://markprindle.com/rollinsband.htm#weighting one for the song "Liar"]] that prompted one fridge moment: He pointed out how he thought the chorus was just poorly written, until he realized the guitar riff was meant to emulate the playground chant "liar, liar, pants on fire". This made realization on how the backing music is used to complement the lyrics: The verse sections are uncharacteristically mellow and jazzy because the narrator is trying to lull you into believing him, and the chorus is deliberately grating and childish-sounding because he's mocking you for falling for his lies.
* Music/SufjanStevens' ''Illinois'' originally featured an image of Superman in its album artwork; His label subsequently realized they never got permission from Creator/DCComics to use Superman's image, and subsequent copies either replaced him with a string of balloons, {{Creator/Marvel}}'s Chicago-based superhero The Blue Marvel, or just an empty sky. The balloon version of the cover can still be considered an abstract representation of Superman: The balloons match the red and blue color scheme of his clothing, the positions of the three balloons sort of resembles his head and arms in his trademark flying pose, and the balloons' strings are flowing behind them like a "cape".
* It seems like Music/NeilYoung's "Rockin' In the Free World" has a serious lyrical disconnect between the verses (singing about the ills of the world) and the chorus (happily stating to "Keep on rockin' in the free world"). Then remember the last line of the first verse: "So I try to forget it any way I can." Rockin' in the free world is his way to forget it.

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* U2's "Where The Streets Have No Names". At first, it sounds like a basic "searching for a dream world"-song, with the whole "Streets have no names"-thing being mainly a cool line. Then you read up on it, and learn that the title is a reference to [[UsefulNotes/TheTroubles the religious conflicts in Northern Ireland]]. Since people almost always follow the tradition they grow up in, there are places where you can tell a persons religion just from the name of the street where he lives. Therefore, the place "Where the streets have no names" becomes a metaphor for the place where you are judged for who you are, not where you grew up.

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* U2's Music/{{U2}}:
**
"Where The Streets Have No Names".Name". At first, it sounds like a basic "searching for a dream world"-song, with the whole "Streets have no names"-thing being mainly a cool line. Then you read up on it, and learn that the title is a reference to [[UsefulNotes/TheTroubles the religious conflicts in Northern Ireland]]. Since people almost always follow the tradition they grow up in, there are places where you can tell a persons religion just from the name of the street where he lives. Therefore, the place "Where the streets have no names" becomes a metaphor for the place where you are judged for who you are, not where you grew up.


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** "Peace On Earth" is based on the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omagh_bombing Omagh bombing]] with the third verse listing the first names of some of the victims. The Brilliance comes if you compare the names Bono mentions to the actual list of victims. He lists both Catholics and Protestants, possibly as a way of saying the perpetrators are killing their friends as well as their enemies.
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adding information


* One of the criticisms of Music/{{Coldplay}}'s "Speed of Sound" is that it is eeriely similar to their early hit song "Clocks". But perhaps that was the point (and not in a cynical "cash grab" way, mind you). Both songs not only are similar in instrumentation, but they have also vague lyrics about existencialism. And that's where the genius part is! In "Clocks", the narrator's trying to find his place in the world and in "Speed of Sound", he seemed to have found it and acknownledges on how many hardships he had to get through to achieve that. So in a way, "Speed of Sound" could be interpreted as the perfect sequel song to "Clocks", albeit with a more positive tone and message behind it.

to:

* One of the criticisms of Music/{{Coldplay}}'s "Speed of Sound" is that it is eeriely similar to their early hit song "Clocks". But perhaps that was the point (and not in a cynical "cash grab" way, mind you). Both songs not only are similar in instrumentation, but they have also vague lyrics about existencialism. And that's where the genius part is! In "Clocks", the narrator's trying to find his place in the world and in "Speed of Sound", he seemed to have found it and acknownledges on how many hardships he had to get through to achieve that. So in a way, "Speed of Sound" could be interpreted as the perfect sequel song to "Clocks", albeit with a more positive tone and message behind it.it.
* The double BaitAndSwitchComment in the chorus of Music/{{Lit}}'s "Miserable" could be interpreted as the progression of how he sees the woman he's singing to: first as a sexual object, then as a soulmate, then as an ex he's broken up with. As a reminder, the part is this:
-->''You make me come.''\\
''You make me complete.''\\
''You make me completely miserable.''
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*** From the same song, there's the double meaning with "There we were waving Brenda and Eddie goodbye." At first, it sounds like they're waving goodbye to Brenda and Eddie as they depart on their honeymoon. But when we find out how disastrous their marriage ended up, it can also be interpreted as the end of Brenda and Eddie as a couple.
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None


* The video for the Blink-182 song "Stay Together For the Kids", a song about divorce, takes place in a run-down, destroyed house. One realized it takes place in a '''Broken Home'''. Song [[ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1BFHYtZlAU here]].

to:

* The video for the Blink-182 Music/Blink182 song "Stay Together For the Kids", a song about divorce, takes place in a run-down, destroyed house. One realized it takes place in a '''Broken Home'''. Song [[ https://www.[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1BFHYtZlAU here]].

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adding information


* Music/Talking Heads - the Sand in the Vaseline collection can draw several unseeen connections:

to:

* Music/Talking Heads Music/TalkingHeads - the Sand in the Vaseline collection can draw several unseeen connections:



* "Glass Sandwich" by {{Music/Primus}} is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title.

to:

* {{Music/Primus}}:
**
"Glass Sandwich" by {{Music/Primus}} is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title.title.
** The third verse of "Jerry Was a Race Car Driver" is only half as long as the other two. [[spoiler:It also tells of Jerry's death in a drunk driving crash. So, it was cut short, much like Jerry's life.]]
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None


* One of the criticisms of Music/{{Coldplay}}'s "Speed of Sound" is that it is eeriely similar to their early hit song "Clocks". But perhaps that was the point (and not in a cynical "cash grab" way, mind you). Both songs not only are similar in instrumentation, but they have also vague lyrics about existencialism. And that's where the genius part is! In "Clocks", the narrator sings like he's trying to find his place in the world and in "Speed of Sound", he seemed to have found it and acknownledged on how many hardships he had to get through to achieve that. So in a way, "Speed of Sound" could be interpreted as the perfect sequel song to "Clocks", albeit with a more positive tone and message behind it.

to:

* One of the criticisms of Music/{{Coldplay}}'s "Speed of Sound" is that it is eeriely similar to their early hit song "Clocks". But perhaps that was the point (and not in a cynical "cash grab" way, mind you). Both songs not only are similar in instrumentation, but they have also vague lyrics about existencialism. And that's where the genius part is! In "Clocks", the narrator sings like he's narrator's trying to find his place in the world and in "Speed of Sound", he seemed to have found it and acknownledged acknownledges on how many hardships he had to get through to achieve that. So in a way, "Speed of Sound" could be interpreted as the perfect sequel song to "Clocks", albeit with a more positive tone and message behind it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* One of the criticisms of Music/{{Coldplay}}'s "Speed of Sound" is that it is eeriely similar to their early hit song "Clocks". But perhaps that was the point (and not in a cynical "cash grab" way, mind you). Both songs not only are similar in instrumentation, but they have also vague lyrics about existencialism. And that's where the genius part is! In "Clocks", the narrator sings like he's trying to find his place in the world and in "Speed of Sound", he seemed to have found it and acknownledged on how many hardships he had to get through to achieve that. So in a way, "Speed of Sound" [[SpiritualAdaptation could be interpreted as the perfect sequel song]] to "Clocks", albeit with a more positive tone and message behind it.

to:

* One of the criticisms of Music/{{Coldplay}}'s "Speed of Sound" is that it is eeriely similar to their early hit song "Clocks". But perhaps that was the point (and not in a cynical "cash grab" way, mind you). Both songs not only are similar in instrumentation, but they have also vague lyrics about existencialism. And that's where the genius part is! In "Clocks", the narrator sings like he's trying to find his place in the world and in "Speed of Sound", he seemed to have found it and acknownledged on how many hardships he had to get through to achieve that. So in a way, "Speed of Sound" [[SpiritualAdaptation could be interpreted as the perfect sequel song]] song to "Clocks", albeit with a more positive tone and message behind it.
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None


* [[WebVideo/FilthyFrank Pink Guy's]] ''Small Dick'' abruptly ends as the singer utters "I only watch porno where the black ma-". Ironic how a song about short assets is too short in itself.

to:

* [[WebVideo/FilthyFrank Pink Guy's]] ''Small Dick'' abruptly ends as the singer utters "I only watch porno where the black ma-". Ironic how a song about short assets is too short in itself.itself.
* One of the criticisms of Music/{{Coldplay}}'s "Speed of Sound" is that it is eeriely similar to their early hit song "Clocks". But perhaps that was the point (and not in a cynical "cash grab" way, mind you). Both songs not only are similar in instrumentation, but they have also vague lyrics about existencialism. And that's where the genius part is! In "Clocks", the narrator sings like he's trying to find his place in the world and in "Speed of Sound", he seemed to have found it and acknownledged on how many hardships he had to get through to achieve that. So in a way, "Speed of Sound" [[SpiritualAdaptation could be interpreted as the perfect sequel song]] to "Clocks", albeit with a more positive tone and message behind it.

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* Fridge/TheBonzoDogBand



* Fridge/TheyMightBeGiants



* The video for the Blink-182 song "Stay Together For the Kids", a song about divorce, takes place in a run-down, destroyed house. One day I suddenly realized it takes place in a '''Broken Home'''. Here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1BFHYtZlAU
** "Adam's Song" features a brief reference to the Music/{{Nirvana}} song "Come As You Are". ("I took my time, hurried up./The choice was mine, I didn't think enough.") I later realized that the reference works with the song's theme of suicide. Music/KurtCobain committed suicide and "Come As You Are" contains possibly the band's biggest FunnyAneurysmMoment about his method of suicide. (Cobain died by shooting himself and the bridge of "Come As You Are" repeatedly says "I don't have a gun.")
** More "Adam's Song" related brilliance - at first, while I thought it was a good pop-punk tune, I didn't catch the significance of the changes in the instrumentation during the chorus. The first half is similar to the verses, while the second sounds much fuller. Then I realized that the fuller instrumentation indicates that ''the narrator doesn't really want to die''. This is supported by [[LyricSwap the more idealistic final chorus]] having the fuller sound throughout. -Mattthelurker
* If you know Hebrew, the song "Misparim" (Numbers) by HaDag Nachash is a rap about the status of Israel's economy. The last line is "and the last number, the one that represents hope but also tragedy, is one that makes every man stand still...six million." I always thought it was just 6 million Israeli Jews but then I realized it was the ''six million that died in the Holocaust''. -NewMexico
* When I started listening to Music/{{Deadmau5}}, the first song I listened to was ''Animal Rights'', which featured Wolfgang Gartner. It took me a couple of listens to realize the significance of the title - deadmau5 is an artist who constantly wears a giant mouse head, and he owns two, well-known cats. - IkuMasamune
* The Belgian (dutch) song 'Dos Cervezas por favor' has a chorus saying "every Spaniard has a moustache" ("elke spanjaard heeft een snor"), which just seems like rhymes on a dime and national stereotype. But later in the song, he finds out his Spanish girlfriend has a moustache, so indeed, every Spaniard (even the women) has a moustache. - HerBN
* I sing the song ''Poor Wayfaring Stranger'' for music lessons and love it. But I didn't get the fact that he kept on saying that he was going "home" (heaven). Why was he walking around saying he was going to Heaven soon when he is still alive? Then my music instructor said that maybe he realized that we're all going to die, and traveled around, not doing anything, waiting for death to come. Put it in a new light.- DogLover
* Funny how Summer of 69 by Brian Adams isn't REALLY about the Summerof 1969, eh?-- FlawedDesign
* Tracy Chapman's song ''Fast Car'' drove me bonkers when I first heard it. The verse was just so monotonous and repetitive, and the only part that seemed free and light and airy was the chorus. Then I got it. -- PANTS
* The song Right Where it Belongs by Nine Inch Nails attests to Trent Reznor's talent as a songwriter. Since I like sadder songs, I always did like it, but only recently did I realize that every detail of the song is meant to mirror the lyrics- the song opens with deep, echoing white noise in the background, sounding almost as if you are inside a cage. This is said as Trent Reznor sings "See the animal in his cage that you built, are you sure what side of the glass you are on?". The chorus, "What if everything around you isn't quite as it seems? What if all the world you think you know is an elaborate dream? And if you look at your reflection, is that all you want to be? What if you could look right through the cracks, would you find yourself, find yourself afraid to see?" is, as the rest of the song, sung very softly and quietly. It isn't until the last chorus that suddenly everything becomes crystal clear. I always just saw it as a way to get attention for the last verse, but that isn't it. It was a filter. Removing it is meant to show what would happen if the world wasn't, in fact, quite as it seems. It seems as if he opened your eyes and ears, and suddenly you hear an entire realm of new detail. This revelation made Trent Reznor my favorite songwriter. -Mitch1224
* "What's Up People?!" by Maximum the Hormone struck me at first as the usual spot of death metal; death metal in general and the song in particular certainly isn't without its share of talent in places, but it's not my usual cup of tea. The fact that they were using it to intro the second half of a [[Manga/DeathNote smooth, cerebral detective show]] didn't help matters. Then, I thought about it a little, and then realized just how fitting it was for the series. The first intro involved [[WellIntentionedExtremist the main character's]] [[UtopiaJustifiestheMeans ideals and choices]], while the second was a comment on his mental state. Taken together, the statement is that while Light earnestly wishes for a better world and [[IDidWhatIHadtoDo does what he does]] [[KnightTemplar with a perfectly clear conscience]]...he's still completely out of his mind. As a result of this analysis (or over-analysis, whichever), the song's become a small favorite of mine. - [=TClaymore=]
** I'm not sure if this counts, but on the subject of that song, I never understood the clips they played with it. Then when I finally finished Death Note I watched it again...and the clips all made perfect sense. -Michelle
*** There are other songs that are accidentally good for Death Note. the only one I can remember at the moment is "Peacemaker" by Green Day. --Case
* Iron Maiden end their album "Somewhere in Time" with Alexander The Great. Think about it. The album has a futuristic sound and theme, and then they end it with Ancient History. Pretty cool!-- FlawedDesign
* Whenever I heard Zeromancer's song, ''Famous Last Words'', I'd immediately pick another song because I don't like that much slow songs, as I need some catchy intro or initial lyrics to keep listening to the song. One night, I wasn't paying a lot of attention to my iTunes and missed the beginning of the song. Then, I noticed the chorus of the song and I was surprised since I didn't recall that song at all. When I realized it was ''Famous Last Words'' and paid attention to the whole song, I understood it and felt related to the song. It is now one of my favorite Zeromancer songs. - Haya
* I always wondered why Genghis Khan by Music/IronMaiden was so musically inconsistent- until I realized it's musically supposed to resemble the chaos of a battle.- TheSexiestNerdEver
* I used to think metal was just loud and abrasive rock. However, I bought ''Megadeth's Greatest Hits'' at the urging of various internet users. I figured out that Dave Mustaine was talking about the modern world with all of his songs, taking whatever power he had to tear down the arbitrary rules of the world bureaucracy. Plus, the riffs grew on me, and the lyrics gained true deep meaning. - [[GolemTheTroper Golem]]
* Music/TheBeachBoys's album SMiLE (or at least, the bootlegs and the Brian Wilson solo version) has a lot of musical fridge brilliance, notably in the way it re-uses melodies in different songs. A good example is how the melody of the waltz introduction of ''I'm In Great Shape'' is actually the counter-melody of the "Catina" section of ''Heroes And Villains'' on a different tempo. It's pretty subtle, but once you hear it, it's brilliant.

to:

* The video for the Blink-182 song "Stay Together For the Kids", a song about divorce, takes place in a run-down, destroyed house. One day I suddenly realized it takes place in a '''Broken Home'''. Here: Song [[ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1BFHYtZlAU
com/watch?v=k1BFHYtZlAU here]].
** "Adam's Song" features a brief reference to the Music/{{Nirvana}} song "Come As You Are". ("I took my time, hurried up./The choice was mine, I didn't think enough.") I The realization hits later realized that the reference works with the song's theme of suicide. Music/KurtCobain committed suicide and "Come As You Are" contains possibly the band's biggest FunnyAneurysmMoment about his method of suicide. (Cobain died by shooting himself and the bridge of "Come As You Are" repeatedly says "I don't have a gun.")
** More "Adam's Song" related brilliance - at first, while I thought it was a good pop-punk tune, I didn't catch the significance of the changes in the instrumentation during the chorus.chorus didn't catch initially. The first half is similar to the verses, while the second sounds much fuller. Then I realized that the fuller instrumentation indicates that ''the narrator doesn't really want to die''. This is supported by [[LyricSwap the more idealistic final chorus]] having the fuller sound throughout. -Mattthelurker
throughout.
* If you know Hebrew, the song "Misparim" (Numbers) by HaDag Nachash is a rap about the status of Israel's economy. The last line is "and the last number, the one that represents hope but also tragedy, is one that makes every man stand still...six million." I always thought One would assume it was just 6 million Israeli Jews but then I realized realizaion hits that it was the ''six million that died in the Holocaust''. -NewMexico
Holocaust''.
* When I started listening to Music/{{Deadmau5}}, the first song I listened to was ''Animal Rights'', which featured Wolfgang Gartner. It took me takes a couple of listens to realize the significance of the title - deadmau5 is an artist who constantly wears a giant mouse head, and he owns two, well-known cats. - IkuMasamune
cats.
* The Belgian (dutch) song 'Dos Cervezas por favor' has a chorus saying "every Spaniard has a moustache" ("elke spanjaard heeft een snor"), which just seems like rhymes on a dime and national stereotype. But later in the song, he finds out his Spanish girlfriend has a moustache, so indeed, every Spaniard (even the women) has a moustache. - HerBN
moustache.
* I sing the The song ''Poor Wayfaring Stranger'' for music lessons and love it. But I didn't get has the fact that he the singer kept on saying that he was going "home" (heaven). Why was he walking around saying he was going to Heaven soon when he is still alive? Then my music instructor said that maybe Maybe he realized that we're all going to die, and traveled around, not doing anything, waiting for death to come. Put it in a new light.- DogLover
light.
* Funny how Summer of 69 by Brian Adams isn't REALLY about the Summerof Summer of 1969, eh?-- FlawedDesign
eh?
* Tracy Chapman's Music/TracyChapman's song ''Fast Car'' drove me bonkers when I first heard it. can "drive" the listener bonkers. The verse was just so monotonous and repetitive, and the only part that seemed free and light and airy was the chorus. Then I got it. -- PANTS
chorus.
* The song Right "Right Where it Belongs Belongs" by Nine Inch Nails attests to Trent Reznor's talent as a songwriter. Since I like sadder songs, I always did like it, but only recently did I realize that every Every detail of the song is meant to mirror the lyrics- the song opens with deep, echoing white noise in the background, sounding almost as if you are inside a cage. This is said as Trent Reznor sings "See the animal in his cage that you built, are you sure what side of the glass you are on?". The chorus, "What if everything around you isn't quite as it seems? What if all the world you think you know is an elaborate dream? And if you look at your reflection, is that all you want to be? What if you could look right through the cracks, would you find yourself, find yourself afraid to see?" is, as the rest of the song, sung very softly and quietly. It isn't until the last chorus that suddenly everything becomes crystal clear. I always just saw it It as a way to get attention for the last verse, but that isn't it. It was a filter. Removing it is meant to show what would happen if the world wasn't, in fact, quite as it seems. It seems as if he opened your eyes and ears, and suddenly you hear an entire realm of new detail. This revelation made Trent Reznor my favorite songwriter. -Mitch1224
detail.
* "What's Up People?!" by Maximum the Hormone struck me strikes at first as the usual spot of death metal; death metal in general and the song in particular certainly isn't without its share of talent in places, but it's not my someone's usual cup of tea. The fact that they were using it to intro the second half of a [[Manga/DeathNote smooth, cerebral detective show]] didn't help matters. Then, I thought about it a little, and And then realized realizing just how fitting it was for the series. The first intro involved [[WellIntentionedExtremist the main character's]] [[UtopiaJustifiestheMeans ideals and choices]], while the second was a comment on his mental state. Taken together, the statement is that while Light earnestly wishes for a better world and [[IDidWhatIHadtoDo does what he does]] [[KnightTemplar with a perfectly clear conscience]]...he's still completely out of his mind. As a result of this analysis (or over-analysis, whichever), the song's become a small favorite of mine. - [=TClaymore=]
mind.
** I'm not sure if this counts, but on On the subject of that song, I never understood one can not understand the clips they played with it. Then Only when I finally finished after finishing and rewatching Death Note I watched it again...and Note, all the clips all made make perfect sense. -Michelle
sense.
*** There are other songs that are accidentally good for Death Note. the only one I can remember at the moment One is "Peacemaker" by Green Day. --Case
Music/GreenDay.
* Iron Maiden Music/IronMaiden end their album "Somewhere in Time" with Alexander The Great. Think about it. The album has a futuristic sound and theme, and then they end it with Ancient History. Pretty cool!-- FlawedDesign
History.
* Whenever I heard Zeromancer's song, ''Famous Last Words'', I'd immediately pick another song because I don't like that much slow songs, as I need some catchy intro or initial lyrics to keep listening to the song. One night, I wasn't paying a lot of attention to my iTunes and missed the beginning of the song. Then, I noticed the chorus of the song and I was surprised since I didn't recall that song at all. When I realized it was ''Famous Last Words'' and paid attention to the whole song, I understood it and felt related to the song. It is now one of my favorite Zeromancer songs. - Haya
* I always wondered
could wonder why Genghis Khan by Music/IronMaiden was so musically inconsistent- until I realized one could realize that it's musically supposed to resemble the chaos of a battle.- TheSexiestNerdEver
* I used to think metal was just loud and abrasive rock. However, I bought ''Megadeth's Greatest Hits'' at the urging of various internet users. I figured out that Dave Mustaine was talking about the modern world with all of his songs, taking whatever power he had to tear down the arbitrary rules of the world bureaucracy. Plus, the riffs grew on me, and the lyrics gained true deep meaning. - [[GolemTheTroper Golem]]
battle.
* Music/TheBeachBoys's album SMiLE [=SMiLE=] (or at least, the bootlegs and the Brian Wilson solo version) has a lot of musical fridge brilliance, notably in the way it re-uses melodies in different songs. A good example is how the melody of the waltz introduction of ''I'm In Great Shape'' is actually the counter-melody of the "Catina" section of ''Heroes And Villains'' on a different tempo. It's pretty subtle, but once you hear it, it's brilliant.



* I used to absolutely ''hate'' the Pussycat Dolls, considering their songs to be vapid, insipid things with over-sexualized videos. Then I realised "What are the Pussycat Doll? A burlesque group. What is burlesque? ''Erotic parody!''" Suddenly, it all made sense that the Pussycat Dolls parodied songs with those kind of problems. I think much better of them now. -- Levi
* Dropkick Murphys' ''State of Massachusetts'' is a good song as is, but as a good M*** I eventually realized that ''it is about [[PolarOppositeTwins the]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Bulger Bulger]][[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_J._Bulger Brothers]].'' Once I realized that, it became even better.--{{Namta}}
* The Music/ManicStreetPreachers have a song called "4st 7lb", about an anorexic teenager. It starts out fairly fast and with lots of guitars, then for the last few verses switches to a much slower tempo with more minimalist accompaniment and a slightly altered melody. This never made me dislike it, but it did seem odd - until one day it occurred to me that the slower tempo and starker sound could be seen as a metaphor for the girl's metabolism and physical functions slowing down as she starves to death and her body shuts down. (Yeah, it's cheerful stuff.) -- {{Calla}}
** I chuckled when I realized the title was an abbreviation for "Four Stone, Seven Pounds" -- or 63 pounds, which would be a very anorexic weight indeed. -- MrBadAxe

to:

* I used to absolutely One can initially ''hate'' the Pussycat Dolls, Music/PussycatDolls, considering their songs to be vapid, insipid things with over-sexualized videos. Then I realised a realization to the question: "What are the Pussycat Doll? Dolls"? A burlesque group. What is burlesque? ''Erotic parody!''" Suddenly, it all made sense that the Pussycat Dolls parodied songs with those kind of problems. I think much better of them now. -- Levi
problems.
* Dropkick Murphys' ''State of Massachusetts'' is a good song as is, but as a good M*** I eventually realized realization hits that ''it is about [[PolarOppositeTwins the]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Bulger Bulger]][[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_J._Bulger Brothers]].'' Once I realized that, it became even better.--{{Namta}}
''
* The Music/ManicStreetPreachers have a song called "4st 7lb", about an anorexic teenager. It starts out fairly fast and with lots of guitars, then for the last few verses switches to a much slower tempo with more minimalist accompaniment and a slightly altered melody. This never made me dislike it, but it did It does seem odd at first - until one day it occurred to me the briliiance occurs that the slower tempo and starker sound could be seen as a metaphor for the girl's metabolism and physical functions slowing down as she starves to death and her body shuts down. (Yeah, [[DeadpanSnarker Yeah, it's cheerful stuff.) -- {{Calla}}
]]
** I chuckled Chuckled when I realized realizing the title was an abbreviation for "Four Stone, Seven Pounds" -- or 63 pounds, which would be a very anorexic weight indeed. -- MrBadAxeindeed.



*** The term "pound" has the same meaning in Britain as it does in North America. The use of "pound" for currency stems from pre-Norman times when a Pound Sterling was ''literally'' a pound of silver. --Yun

to:

*** The term "pound" has the same meaning in Britain as it does in North America. The use of "pound" for currency stems from pre-Norman times when a Pound Sterling was ''literally'' a pound of silver. --Yun



* Lemon Demon's little-known but still vaguely popular song "Without My Tonsils" used to be my absolute least favorite song he's ever written. The melody was slow and boring, and the narrator was whiney and seemingly crazy. The strange slow shift from 7/4 to 4/4 really got to me, too. Then one day, I looked up the lyrics and realized that the entire song is actually some pretty brilliant meta-parody, pointing out things like the key it's sung in, the boring fade-out, and the annoying record-scratchy segue halfway through the song. As for the whiney narrator, I think he's actually parodying the whole "whiney song" thing, as bemoaning the loss of fangs and the central nervous system is NOT the usual subject matter. - BLT
* The first time I heard "You Could Drive A Person Crazy" from the musical ''Company'', it was ripped out of context and I found it weird and annoying (why were they singing so fast? and what was with the "do-do-do"s?). Years later, having heard some of the Andrews Sisters songs [[Music/StephenSondheim Sondheim]] was pastiching, and having had a chance to understand the lyrics and the place the song has in the show, I realised what a brilliant piece of work it was: using a bright, cheerful style of music, previously associated with inane, dippy lyrics, to deliver a scathing and rather bitter smackdown to an unresponsive boyfriend. - puritybrown
* Many people have wondered why the Wu-Tang Clan's 'Protect Ya Neck' remains censored in all incarnations, considering that all other songs on the album and the Wu's catalogue are uncensored. Then it hit me: The skit introducing the song is a man calling into a radio station, requesting them to play the song. The track itself is the song being played on the radio, so it's censored! - Cunny
* I used to love the song "Endlessly" purely for the sound of it. I did listen to the music, but never really understood what it meant, thinking it to be some kind of love song. It hit me half-way through a youtube comment. The song is actually refering to love itself. How you can love love endlessly, and no matter what, you always will, but at the same time, love will never love you back. Only people can do that. - Moo
* Originally I thought P!nk's song 'Long Way To Happy' from the "I'm Not Dead" album was about a relationship break-up, as is standard in pop music. Then I listened to it again and actually listened to the lyrics and realised it was actually a rape recovery song - making it instantly quite a creepy thing to find yourself singing along to. - DerekDesAnges
* I had been listening to Music/TheBeatles since I was a small illiterate child, so the spelling of the name didn't mean much to me. It wasn't until I was in my early teens that I realized it was a pun, and not the insect, and I thought it was just about the most brilliant thing ever. - Revolos55
** To top it off, The Beatles had a fondness for Music/BuddyHolly. Buddy Holly's band's name? The Crickets.
* I'm a big fan of Music/QueensOfTheStoneAge and I enjoy their album ''Songs for the Deaf''. But it wasn't until looking at the lyrics to all of the songs combined that I realized they refer to a heroin addiction. --Elk

to:

* Lemon Demon's little-known but still vaguely popular song "Without My Tonsils" used to be my absolute least favorite song he's ever written.Tonsils". The melody was slow and boring, and the narrator was whiney and seemingly crazy. The strange slow shift from 7/4 to 4/4 really got gets to me, too. something. Then one day, I looked looking up the lyrics and realized that the entire song is actually some pretty brilliant meta-parody, pointing out things like the key it's sung in, the boring fade-out, and the annoying record-scratchy segue halfway through the song. As for the whiney narrator, I think he's actually parodying the whole "whiney song" thing, as bemoaning the loss of fangs and the central nervous system is NOT the usual subject matter. - BLT
matter.
* The first time I heard hearing "You Could Drive A Person Crazy" from the musical ''Company'', it was ripped out of context and I found it weird and annoying (why were they singing so fast? and what was with the "do-do-do"s?). Years later, having heard After one hears some of the Andrews Sisters songs [[Music/StephenSondheim Sondheim]] was pastiching, and having had a chance to understand understanding the lyrics and the place the song has in the show, I realised there's a realization on what a brilliant piece of work it was: would be: using a bright, cheerful style of music, previously associated with inane, dippy lyrics, to deliver a scathing and rather bitter smackdown to an unresponsive boyfriend. - puritybrown
boyfriend.
* Many people have wondered why the Wu-Tang Clan's 'Protect Ya Neck' remains censored in all incarnations, considering that all other songs on the album and the Wu's catalogue are uncensored. Then it hit me: a realization hits: The skit introducing the song is a man calling into a radio station, requesting them to play the song. The track itself is the song being played on the radio, so it's censored! - Cunny
censored!
* I used to love the The song "Endlessly" purely for the sound of it. I did listen to the music, but never really understood what it meant, thinking Listening lightly can think it to be some kind of love song. It hit me half-way through a youtube comment. The Once the thought hits half-way, the song is actually refering to love itself. How you can love love endlessly, and no matter what, you always will, but at the same time, love will never love you back. back? Only people can do that. - Moo
that.
* Originally I thought P!nk's Originally, Music/{{Pink}}'s song 'Long Way To Happy' from the "I'm Not Dead" album was about a relationship break-up, as is standard in pop music. Then I listened listening to it again and actually listened to the lyrics and it realised it was actually a rape recovery song - making it instantly quite a creepy thing to find yourself singing along to. - DerekDesAnges
to.
* I had been listening to Music/TheBeatles since I was a small illiterate child, so the spelling of the name didn't mean much to me. It wasn't until I was in my early teens that I realized it was a pun, and not the insect, and I thought it was just about the most brilliant thing ever. - Revolos55
** To top it off, The Beatles had a fondness for Music/BuddyHolly. Buddy Holly's band's name? The Crickets.
* I'm a big fan of Music/QueensOfTheStoneAge and I enjoy their album ''Songs for the Deaf''. But it wasn't until looking
Looking at the lyrics to all of the songs combined of "Songs of the Deaf" by Music/QueensOfTheStoneAge combined, the songs that I realized they refer to a are about heroin addiction. --Elkaddiction.



* When I was young, I was initially forced into a negative impression of the song ''Colors Of The Wind'' by a relative who thought it was all a bunch of new age treehugger hoo-ha. When I was old enough to think for myself, I listened to the song again and realized it was ''brilliant.'' Remember the lyrics ''How high does the sycamore grow?/If you cut it down, then you'll never know''? She wasn't singing about deforestation! That sycamore is the native Americans, whose people and cultures were "cut down" by European settlers. Now we can never know what they might have become if we hadn't oppressed them. -Syera
** Same! I also thought the "How can there be so much you don't know/You don't know" was repetition...then it hit me. -Tropers/RedWren
* It took me until about age 14 to figure out what the running baseball commentary was doing in the middle of Meat Loaf's "Paradise By The Dashboard Light." A definite "you're not a kid anymore" moment. -- MonsterDog
* I ''just'' realized that "Gollum's Song" from [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers the soundtrack to the Two Towers]], isn't sung ''about'' Gollum, it's sung ''by'' Gollum. - Jarl
** I just recently spotted a moment of sheer brilliance in [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing the soundtrack to the Return of the King]]. Six triumphant, joyous notes ring out as the good guys win. They are the opening bars of Mordor's theme, rewritten. This is exactly what happens to [[spoiler:the music of Sauron's boss Morgoth in ''The Silmarillion.'']] In fact, the major themes of the soundtrack for all three movies are as described by the late J.R.R. Tolkien in that book! Somewhere in Heaven there is a pub, and in that pub there is very good beer, and Professor Tolkien is sipping it and humming (probably badly) all of the best bits. - Jenny Islander
* On the topic of movie soundtracks... I just realized that "Across the Stars", Anakin and Padmé's sweeping love theme from ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'', is in fact a [[ShoutOut reference]] to the phrase "StarCrossedLovers". Sheer genius! ...[[{{Foreshadowing}} This works]] [[{{Tragedy}} from any]] [[Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet number]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin of different]] [[LongDistanceRelationship angles.]] Hell, it's even mentioned on that trope's page!
* Long ago (about 6 years ago, give or take), when I first heard Interpol's "Turn On the Bright Lights," I thought it was a sweet album, but I felt that there was nothing more to it other than being a great entrance album for people who didn't understand what indie rock was. As I've lived in a city for the better part of 4 years now, elements from that album popped into my head here and there, but I couldn't understand. Now, as a music journalist, a few weeks ago (in April 2009), it all came to me: The album wasn't a random meshing of 90's indie-rock atrophy. It was a band making an image of New York City, the New York City outside of a few blocks that had everyone's attention because some buildings blew up, the New York City that existed and lived as though September 11, 2001 was really just another day in the grand scheme of all things. And it was prolly NYC at its best: Before the security lockdowns, before clean-up and glamour went into overdrive, before Williamsburg became gentrified and created a cancer that is killing Brooklyn, before the hipsters were identified as the new counterculture, cannibalized, and commodified. A New York City that was, in many ways, '''''real.''''' But more importantly, because of this imagery, it was the last great album to symbolize a regional sound outside of hip hop, just before Website/MySpace decimated the concept of regional music. It was, very much, an album that was perfect for its time, like Michael Jackson's ''Thriller.'' -- brokenwit
* A little more of a lighthearted example to follow: The first time I saw the skit Space Olympics on SNL, I hated it. It was boring. It was stupid. There was autotune. It seemed like a dumbass excuse to put Andy Samberg in a wig and have shiny costumes. I have no idea what changed when I heard it again on Incredibad, but for some reason, it became my favorite song on the album. So delightfully stupid! -- tibieryo
* [[Music/The Move]] I loved "Walk upon the Water" but I took it at first as a warning against drunk swimming. Analyzing the lyrics, a few years later, I realized it was a warning against immersing your self in psychotropic drugs, and the possible tragic death of those who indulge in said drugs. As an added bonus, listen to "Cherry Blossom Clinic" straight afterwards and you'll find out what happened to one of the psychotropic drugtakers that managed to avoid drowning. Then again, it still is a pretty good warning against drunk swimming too...-- Dutch
* Yet another Move related Fridge moment - the tale of "Curly" looking for his girlfriend all over Liverpool? - well, why is "Curly", well, curly? Because Curly is mixed-race and his girlfriend is white - and his girlfriend's parents are racists who want their little girl to have nothing to do with him. Probably counts as Fridge Sadness. -- Dutch
* [[{{randomfanboy}} I]] hated [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants The Statue Got Me High]] the first few times I heard it. It sounded like TMBG at their worst, with lyrics that sounded vaguely meaningful without it actually meaning much. After listening to it a bit more ([[GenreSavvy due to having lived this trope before]]), I realised it was ''very deliberately'' meaningless - unlike most of their songs, it's just a song about a guy whose head blows up because of a statue. I love it now.
** That's funny, because "Statue" has always held so much meaning to me. I see it as a warning against following the latest trends and/or letting other people make decisions for you. The statue stands in for whatever the latest thing is and/or authority. Similar in theme to "Spiraling Shape."
** It gets better. I didn't like [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants Apollo 18]] at all -- until I realized that its songs were all references to bad SF/Fantasy movie tropes. ''The Statue Got Me High'' is all about the black monolith at the start of ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey'', and referenced in other Creator/ArthurCClarke's works. -- zenfrodo
* "Self Inflicted" (by Kevin O'Donnell's Quality Six) seems to have a title completely at odds with its lyrics, which are specifically about how the singer ''didn't'' bring his suffering on himself, ''isn't'' melodramatically exaggerating or wallowing in it, and would do anything to be rid of it if only he could. Eventually it hit me that the title refers to something never explicitly mentioned in the song: [[spoiler:the fatal wound]]. - Tropers/MasoTey
* The intro the song YYZ by Rush always bothered me. It seemed irregular and out of place. Ever since I found out the intro was, in fact, the phrase "YYZ" in morse code, repeated several times, it's fascinated me. - Neopolis
** I read somewhere about how airport regulations require that there be a transmitter broadcasting the airport's IATA code nonstop for the purposes of navigation. YYZ is the IATA code for Toronto, Ontario - The band's hometown. - Tropers/MrBadAxe
* Alphaville's second album, ''Afternoons in Utopia''. This was a German New Wave synthesizer pop band big in the 80s, most famous for the song ''Forever Young'' from their first album, which was full of happy melodies with sometimes dark and sometimes hopeful lyrics. ''Afternoons'' seemed much the same, but some of the lyrics featured the word SMI^2LE. It wasn't until a couple of years later that I realized that SMI^2LE referred to Timothy Leary's idea of expanding your mind through psychedelics. Then I realized that many of the lyrics could be about opening your mind and becoming a "modern" human. It was a couple of years after that I realized that, underneath that, the songs were all addressed to a girl ("Carol Masters"), who was apparently stuck in a mental institution. The whole album was a series of love songs begging this girl to come out of her dementia. That's pretty deep stuff for a pop album.
* After listening to the Vocaloid song "Dark Woods Circus" a few times, and deciding that I liked it, I decided to show a fanvid of it to a friend who I thought would also enjoy it. She pointed out that the song sounded cheerful, but had depressing lyrics, something I had noticed but not really paid attention to. And then I thought about it for a minute. Though most of the song describes just how miserable the freaks are, there's a part towards the beginning that states "All of the cast is jolly". And then I realized the reason behind the LyricalDissonance. It represents how the circus freaks act happy to please their audience, despite being anything but. I enjoyed the song before, but that realization makes it that much better. - {{Umbee}}

to:

* When I was young, I was One might be initially forced into a negative impression of the song ''Colors Of The Wind'' by a relative who thought Wind'', thinking that it was all a bunch of new age treehugger hoo-ha. When I was old enough to think for myself, I listened hoo-ha, but listening to the song again and realized one will realize it was ''brilliant.'' Remember the lyrics ''How high does the sycamore grow?/If you cut it down, then you'll never know''? She wasn't singing about deforestation! That sycamore is the native Americans, whose people and cultures were "cut down" by European settlers. Now we can never know what they might have become if we hadn't oppressed them. -Syera
them.
** Same! I also The same thought the on "How can there be so much you don't know/You don't know" was repetition...then it hit me. -Tropers/RedWren
the thought hits.
* It took me until about age 14 takes a while to figure out what the running baseball commentary was doing in the middle of Meat Loaf's "Paradise By The Dashboard Light." A definite "you're not a kid anymore" moment. -- MonsterDog
moment.
* I One ''just'' realized realizes that "Gollum's Song" from [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers the soundtrack to the Two Towers]], isn't sung ''about'' Gollum, it's sung ''by'' Gollum. - Jarl
Gollum.
** I just recently spotted a A moment of sheer brilliance in [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing the soundtrack to the Return of the King]]. Six triumphant, joyous notes ring out as the good guys win. They are the opening bars of Mordor's theme, rewritten. This is exactly what happens to [[spoiler:the music of Sauron's boss Morgoth in ''The Silmarillion.'']] In fact, the major themes of the soundtrack for all three movies are as described by the late J.R.R. Tolkien in that book! Somewhere in Heaven there is a pub, and in that pub there is very good beer, and Professor Tolkien is sipping it and humming (probably badly) all of the best bits. - Jenny Islander
bits.
* On the topic of movie soundtracks... I just realized that "Across the Stars", Anakin and Padmé's sweeping love theme from ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'', is in fact a [[ShoutOut reference]] to the phrase "StarCrossedLovers". Sheer genius! ..."StarCrossedLovers", whic is sheer genius. ...[[{{Foreshadowing}} This works]] [[{{Tragedy}} from any]] [[Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet number]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin of different]] [[LongDistanceRelationship angles.]] Hell, angles]], that it's even mentioned on that trope's page!
page.
* Long ago (about 6 years ago, give or take), when I first heard Interpol's "Turn On the Bright Lights," I thought it was a sweet album, but I felt that there was nothing more to it other than being a great entrance album for people who didn't understand what indie rock was. As I've lived in a city for the better part of 4 years now, elements from that album popped into my head here and there, but I couldn't understand. Now, as a music journalist, a few weeks ago (in April 2009), it all came to me: The album wasn't a random meshing of 90's indie-rock atrophy. It was a band making an image of New York City, the New York City outside of a few blocks that had everyone's attention because some buildings blew up, the New York City that existed and lived as though September 11, 2001 was really just another day in the grand scheme of all things. And it was prolly NYC at its best: Before the security lockdowns, before clean-up and glamour went into overdrive, before Williamsburg became gentrified and created a cancer that is killing Brooklyn, before the hipsters were identified as the new counterculture, cannibalized, and commodified. A New York City that was, in many ways, '''''real.''''' But more importantly, because of this imagery, it was the last great album to symbolize a regional sound outside of hip hop, just before Website/MySpace decimated the concept of regional music. It was, very much, an album that was perfect for its time, like Michael Jackson's ''Thriller.'' -- brokenwit
* A little more of a lighthearted example to follow: The first time I saw the skit Space Olympics on SNL, I hated it. It was boring. It was stupid. There was autotune. It seemed like a dumbass excuse to put Andy Samberg in a wig and have shiny costumes. I have no idea what changed when I heard it again on Incredibad, but for some reason, it became my favorite song on the album. So delightfully stupid! -- tibieryo
* [[Music/The Move]] I loved
"Walk upon the Water" but I took it by [[Music/The Move]] be taken at first as a warning against drunk swimming. Analyzing But analyzing the lyrics, a few years later, I realized it was a warning against immersing your self in psychotropic drugs, and the possible tragic death of those who indulge in said drugs. As an added bonus, listen to "Cherry Blossom Clinic" straight afterwards and you'll find out what happened to one of the psychotropic drugtakers that managed to avoid drowning. Then again, it still is a pretty good warning against drunk swimming too...-- Dutch

* Yet another Move related Fridge moment - the tale of "Curly" looking for his girlfriend all over Liverpool? - well, why is "Curly", well, curly? Because Curly is mixed-race and his girlfriend is white - and his girlfriend's parents are racists who want their little girl to have nothing to do with him. Probably counts as Fridge Sadness. -- Dutch
* [[{{randomfanboy}} I]] hated [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants The Statue Got Me High]] the first few times I heard it. It sounded like TMBG at their worst, with lyrics that sounded vaguely meaningful without it actually meaning much. After listening to it a bit more ([[GenreSavvy due to having lived this trope before]]), I realised it was ''very deliberately'' meaningless - unlike most of their songs, it's just a song about a guy whose head blows up because of a statue. I love it now.
** That's funny, because "Statue" has always held so much meaning to me. I see it as a warning against following the latest trends and/or letting other people make decisions for you. The statue stands in for whatever the latest thing is and/or authority. Similar in theme to "Spiraling Shape."
** It gets better. I didn't like [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants Apollo 18]] at all -- until I realized that its songs were all references to bad SF/Fantasy movie tropes. ''The Statue Got Me High'' is all about the black monolith at the start of ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey'', and referenced in other Creator/ArthurCClarke's works. -- zenfrodo
Sadness.

* "Self Inflicted" (by Kevin O'Donnell's Quality Six) seems to have a title completely at odds with its lyrics, which are specifically about how the singer ''didn't'' bring his suffering on himself, ''isn't'' melodramatically exaggerating or wallowing in it, and would do anything to be rid of it if only he could. Eventually it hit me that the title refers to something never explicitly mentioned in the song: [[spoiler:the fatal wound]]. - Tropers/MasoTey
wound]].
* The intro the song YYZ by Rush always bothered me. It seemed irregular and out of place. Ever since I found out place, until the intro was, in fact, the phrase "YYZ" in morse code, repeated several times, it's fascinated me. - Neopolis
fascinating.
** I read somewhere about how Reading airport regulations require that there be a transmitter broadcasting the airport's IATA code nonstop for the purposes of navigation. YYZ is the IATA code for Toronto, Ontario - The band's hometown. - Tropers/MrBadAxe
* Alphaville's second album, ''Afternoons in Utopia''. This was a German New Wave synthesizer pop band big in the 80s, most famous for the song ''Forever Young'' from their first album, which was full of happy melodies with sometimes dark and sometimes hopeful lyrics. ''Afternoons'' seemed much the same, but some of the lyrics featured the word SMI^2LE. It wasn't until a couple of years Realization hits later that I realized that SMI^2LE referred to Timothy Leary's idea of expanding your mind through psychedelics. Then I realized that many Many of the lyrics could be about opening your mind and becoming a "modern" human. It was a couple of years Another realization hits after that I realized that, underneath that, the songs were all addressed to a girl ("Carol Masters"), who was apparently stuck in a mental institution. The whole album was a series of love songs begging this girl to come out of her dementia. That's pretty deep stuff for a pop album.
* After listening to the Vocaloid song ''Music/{{Vocaloid}}'':
**
"Dark Woods Circus" a few times, and deciding that I liked it, I decided to show a fanvid of Circus", while it to a friend who I thought would also enjoy it. She pointed out that the song sounded cheerful, but had depressing lyrics, something I had noticed but not really paid attention to. And then I thought about it for a minute.lyrics. Though most of the song describes just how miserable the freaks are, there's a part towards the beginning that states "All of the cast is jolly". And then I realized the reason behind the LyricalDissonance. It LyricalDissonance is that it represents how the circus freaks act happy to please their audience, despite being anything but. I enjoyed the song before, but that realization makes it that much better. - {{Umbee}}but.



** I ship Len and Luka. My PortmanteauCoupleName for them is [=LenKa=]. Then I realized: If you [[JapaneseRanguage swap the "L" with "R"]], you get ''[[BilingualBonus renka]]'' (lit. "love song").
** As of this writing, it is Valentine's Day. Or should I say, [=VaLENtine=]'s Day? Even in Japanese, the pun holds: you can't spell バレンタイン (''barentain'') without レン (''ren'').
* I realised soon after I heard the ballad ''Honest Questions'' by Daniel Bedingfield: to my mind the narrator could be singing to God (with the chorus as God's response). I'm an atheist, and a Christian friend with whom I discussed it never thought of that interpretation, so perhaps I'm wrong, but it gives the song (otherwise a generic ballad) an interesting twist. --Herm
* I didn't really like Jonathan Coulton's song "I'm Your Moon" the first time I heard it...I thought it was a really forced love-song metaphor that didn't even make sense. I mean, "I'm your moon, you're my moon"? How can it go both ways? But about the second or third time I heard it, I realized that it wasn't a metaphor at all! It was entirely literal: the two "moons" are Pluto and Charon, which are close to the same size. Charon is singing to Pluto, telling it not to feel bad about being demoted to subplanetary status. Brilliant! ~Tail-Kinker
** Also, at one point Pluto and Charon were to be given double planetary status, making the name Pluto-Charon. If they're both equal, doesn't matter which is the moon. - Tropers/{{sadiebird}}
* I'd been exposed to Music/TheGratefulDead since childhood, but hadn't really gotten into them on my own despite many attempts. It wasn't until I listened to [[http://www.archive.org/details/gd1968-05-18.aud.jorma.gmb.sbeok.94591.flac16 this]] in my 20s that the whole thing clicked for me, and it pretty much blew my face off. Now they're one of my favorite bands. -Tomapella
* The entirety of Music/TheDecemberists' album [[ConceptAlbum The Hazards of Love]]. At first glance (or listen, as it were), it comes off as a pretty stock-standard StarCrossedLovers story with just a bit of woodland fantasy mixed in, incredibly well written, and a joy to listen to, but cliche all the same. When I started listening to individual songs, characters, and delving deeper into the story, it started to actually ''unravel'', there are character traits that seem... slightly off, as if the characters were not as fleshed out as the songs make them seem. Then, it hit me, the album isn't telling a cliche story, it's telling a story ''about'' a cliche story. As in: The characters, plot, settings, etc. are all taking place ''as part of a play''. The characters that aren't human but appear as such because ''they're actually actors playing non-human characters''. Actually, it's probably just me applying copious amounts of FanWank, but hey, it killed a couple of hours - TheRealCJ
** Dude, I had the same idea! When the Rake refers to himself as 'your humble narrator' and the random interludes explaining the story, I instantly thought- "this is a play/pantomine in album form!" -UncleTyki
* I only started listening to 3OH!3 because my friends listened to them a lot and I somewhat reluctantly developed a taste for their music, even if the attitude behind the lyrics didn't always sit well with me. Then when I became a fan of them on Facebook and actually saw them for the first time, I realized it was all a satire and I like their music a lot more. -AkatsukiDaybreak
** the 3Oh!3 song ''Richman'' has a line in it that goes 'I've got 200 seconds and I'm ready to go'. This seemed really strange and and excuse to rhyme with the previous line, until you look at the length of the song: 3:20, or ''two hundred seconds''. - AliasM
* Despite loving the song ''Cry Little Sister'', I always found myself confused by the lyrics - they seemed to run in random directions and never made a lot of sense. Until I realized that the narrator was telling the song from his prison cell, and the "Blue Masquerade" refers to the police. -JMorgan
** Then I thought about it again and realized that the "blue masquerade" refers to the act he's putting on for everyone else and that he's never actually acted on his feelings for his sister, and it made even MORE sense. And I felt kind of stupid.
* I had listened to Dave Matthew's Band's 'Typical Situation' from the 'Live at Red Rocks' album maybe 70 times before I realized that it was just Dave in that particular performance. Made me appreciate how intensity and fullness(?) the man could generate with just his vocals and guitar. -Mookmaster
* "Why Don't You Get a Job?" by Music/TheOffspring sounds very similar to "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" by Music/TheBeatles. While I thought it was another example of an artist stealing from another, it all makes sense when you remember that the song is about mooching off others. - hrdcrnwo
** Another Offspring example: their song "Staring At the Sun" contains a lot of lyrics that seem really random at first. Then I gave a crack at interpreting them... and actually got into a small argument on Website/YouTube about what we each thought they meant. The song suddenly seemed a lot more like the pieces of poetry I read in English class, which are open to multiple interpretations. So it's really a complex poem. - 2writeis2life
* 'Shasta' by Vienna Teng sounds like a getting over a breakup song. Listening intently to the lyrics reveals it's about a woman who decides to not get an abortion. - killerlynnja
* "Crownless" by Nightwish is a song about arrogance, but it didn't seem to make a lot of sense, lyric wise, until I thought about it in the context of 'Macbeth.' The first two stanzas are the people of Scotland talking about Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, the refrain is always Macbeth himself, the bridge is Lady Macbeth, the first two lines of the last stanza is also Macbeth, and the last three lines of the last stanza is the ghost of Macdonwald. - Kintatsu
* "In A Lonely Place", the main character's theme from ''Film/{{Oldboy 2003}}'', is atmospheric and appropriate and awesome. But there's more. In the movie, the main character Oh Dae-Su is imprisoned for fifteen years in a room where the only wall decoration is a rather horrifying picture of Jesus Man of Sorrows, complemented by the first line from Ella Wheeler Wilcox' poem ''Solitude'': "Laugh and the world laughs with you / Weep and you weep alone." On the soundtrack, the song is preceded by Oh Dae-Su reading the line from the poem out loud in Korean. Now listen to the song with the poem next to it. Count the first line as read. Count the number of times the piano theme recurs. Not only does it fit the number of lines in the poem, it also breaks when the poem does, and rises and falls like the lines in the poem do. Yes. Oh Dae-Su's theme is ''Solitude'' set to music. Brilliant. - Dessek
* A lot of songs by ''Pulp'' passed me by when they first came out, being dismissed as just more of the usual "Britpop" of the era. Then, revisiting the songs about ten years later and actually ''listening'' to the lyrics really brought home the incisive and vicious wit behind the songs. To this day I am convinced that the version of Common People I heard was an emasculated radio edit that took out all the bile and barbed turns. And talking of lyrics, Me and Mia by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists at first appeared to be an incredibly catchy power pop song - then you realise Anna and Mia are shorthand for Anorexia and Bulimia, and it's suddenly the most compassionate song written for a sufferer of eating disorders ever - Slave
** It probably ''was'' an emasculated radio edit. The version played on radio was cut down by about half. - Q4
* 'Collide' by Howie Day. At first, I was just thinking, "Oh, that's interesting, he's changing the ends of the words a bit to make it rhyme, but it sounds natural, cool." Then I read through the lyrics while listening, and, well...

to:

** I ship To shippers of Len and Luka. My Luka, whose PortmanteauCoupleName for them is [=LenKa=]. Then I realized: A realization: If you [[JapaneseRanguage swap the "L" with "R"]], you get ''[[BilingualBonus renka]]'' (lit. "love song").
** As of this writing, it is A wordplay on Valentine's Day. Or should I one say, [=VaLENtine=]'s Day? Even in Japanese, the pun holds: you can't spell バレンタイン (''barentain'') without レン (''ren'').
* I realised soon after I heard the The ballad ''Honest Questions'' by Daniel Bedingfield: to my one's mind the narrator could be singing to God (with the chorus as God's response). I'm an atheist, and a Even for some Christian friend with whom I discussed it never thought of that interpretation, so perhaps I'm wrong, but listeners, it gives the song (otherwise a generic ballad) an interesting twist. --Herm
twist.
* I didn't really like The Jonathan Coulton's song "I'm Your Moon" the first time I heard it...I thought it was a really may sound like forced love-song metaphor that didn't even make sense. I mean, sense at first listening such as, "I'm your moon, you're my moon"? How can it go both ways? But about the second listening to it two or third time I heard it, I realized that three times, it wasn't a metaphor at all! It was entirely literal: the two "moons" are Pluto and Charon, which are close to the same size. Charon is singing to Pluto, telling it not to feel bad about being demoted to subplanetary status. Brilliant! ~Tail-Kinker
Brilliant!
** Also, at one point Pluto and Charon were to be given double planetary status, making the name Pluto-Charon. If they're both equal, doesn't matter which is the moon. - Tropers/{{sadiebird}}
* I'd been exposed to Music/TheGratefulDead since childhood, but hadn't really gotten into them on my own despite many attempts. It wasn't until I listened to [[http://www.archive.org/details/gd1968-05-18.aud.jorma.gmb.sbeok.94591.flac16 this]] in my 20s that the whole thing clicked for me, and it pretty much blew my face off. Now they're one of my favorite bands. -Tomapella
moon.
* The entirety of Music/TheDecemberists' album [[ConceptAlbum The Hazards of Love]]. At first glance (or listen, as it were), it comes off as a pretty stock-standard StarCrossedLovers story with just a bit of woodland fantasy mixed in, incredibly well written, and a joy to listen to, but cliche all the same. When I started listening to individual songs, characters, and delving deeper into the story, it started to actually ''unravel'', there are character traits that seem... slightly off, as if the characters were not as fleshed out as the songs make them seem. Then, it hit me, hits you, the album isn't telling a cliche story, it's telling a story ''about'' a cliche story. As in: The characters, plot, settings, etc. are all taking place ''as part of a play''. The characters that aren't human but appear as such because ''they're actually actors playing non-human characters''. Actually, it's probably just me applying copious amounts of FanWank, but hey, it killed a couple of hours - TheRealCJ
hours.
** Dude, I had the same idea! When the Rake refers to himself as 'your humble narrator' and the random interludes explaining the story, I instantly thought- it thinks of- "this is a play/pantomine in album form!" -UncleTyki
form!"
* I only started listening to 3OH!3 because my friends listened to them a lot and I somewhat reluctantly developed a taste for their music, even if the attitude behind the lyrics didn't always sit well with me. Then when I became a fan of them on Facebook and actually saw them for the first time, I realized it was all a satire and I like their music a lot more. -AkatsukiDaybreak
** the
The 3Oh!3 song ''Richman'' has a line in it that goes 'I've got 200 seconds and I'm ready to go'. This seemed really strange and and excuse to rhyme with the previous line, until you look at the length of the song: 3:20, or ''two hundred seconds''. - AliasM
seconds''.
* Despite loving the song ''Cry Little Sister'', I always found myself confused tends to be confusion by the lyrics - they seemed to run in random directions and never made a lot of sense. Until I realized one realizes that the narrator was telling the song from his prison cell, and the "Blue Masquerade" refers to the police. -JMorgan
police.
** Then I thought about it again and realized another realization that the "blue masquerade" refers to the act he's putting on for everyone else and that he's never actually acted on his feelings for his sister, and it made even MORE sense. And I felt kind of stupid.
sense.
* I had listened One could listen to Dave Matthew's Band's 'Typical Situation' from the 'Live at Red Rocks' album maybe 70 times before I realized realizing that it was just Dave in that particular performance. Made me It makes one appreciate how intensity and fullness(?) the man could generate with just his vocals and guitar. -Mookmaster
guitar.
* "Why Don't You Get a Job?" by Music/TheOffspring sounds very similar to "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" by Music/TheBeatles. While I there's a thought that it was another example of an artist stealing from another, it all makes sense when you remember that the song is about mooching off others. - hrdcrnwo
others.
** Another Offspring example: their song "Staring At the Sun" contains a lot of lyrics that seem really random at first. Then I gave to give a crack at interpreting them... and actually got perhaps getting into a small argument on Website/YouTube about what we each thought they meant. The meant, the song suddenly seemed a lot more like the pieces of poetry I that anyone could read in English class, which are open to multiple interpretations. So it's really a complex poem. - 2writeis2life
poem.
* 'Shasta' by Vienna Teng sounds like a getting over a breakup song. Listening intently to the lyrics reveals it's about a woman who decides to not get an abortion. - killerlynnja
abortion.
* "Crownless" by Nightwish is a song about arrogance, but it didn't seem to make a lot of sense, lyric wise, until I thought one thinks about it in the context of 'Macbeth.' The first two stanzas are the people of Scotland talking about Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, the refrain is always Macbeth himself, the bridge is Lady Macbeth, the first two lines of the last stanza is also Macbeth, and the last three lines of the last stanza is the ghost of Macdonwald. - Kintatsu
Macdonwald.
* "In A Lonely Place", the main character's theme from ''Film/{{Oldboy 2003}}'', is atmospheric and appropriate and awesome. But there's more. In the movie, the main character Oh Dae-Su is imprisoned for fifteen years in a room where the only wall decoration is a rather horrifying picture of Jesus Man of Sorrows, complemented by the first line from Ella Wheeler Wilcox' poem ''Solitude'': "Laugh and the world laughs with you / Weep and you weep alone." On the soundtrack, the song is preceded by Oh Dae-Su reading the line from the poem out loud in Korean. Now listen to the song with the poem next to it. Count the first line as read. Count the number of times the piano theme recurs. Not only does it fit the number of lines in the poem, it also breaks when the poem does, and rises and falls like the lines in the poem do. Yes. Oh Dae-Su's theme is ''Solitude'' set to music. Brilliant. - Dessek
Brilliant.
* A lot of songs by ''Pulp'' passed me by when they first came out, being ''Music/{{Pulp}}'' can be dismissed as just more of the usual "Britpop" of the era. Then, revisiting era at fitst. Revisiting the songs about ten years later and actually ''listening'' to the lyrics really brought home the incisive and vicious wit behind the songs. To this day I am convinced that the The emasculated radio edit version of Common People I heard was an emasculated radio edit that took out all the bile and barbed turns. And talking of lyrics, Me and Mia by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists at first appeared to be an incredibly catchy power pop song - then you realise Anna and Mia are shorthand for Anorexia and Bulimia, and it's suddenly the most compassionate song written for a sufferer of eating disorders ever - Slave
** It probably ''was'' an emasculated radio edit. The version played on radio was cut down by about half. - Q4
ever
* 'Collide' by Howie Day. At first, I was just there's the thinking, "Oh, that's interesting, he's changing the ends of the words a bit to make it rhyme, but it sounds natural, cool." Then I read reading through the lyrics while listening, and, well...



** Bonus points for actually emphasizing seem for completely reasonable rhyme scheme reasons, in context. - Tropers/RedWren
* Music/TheSmashingPumpkins album title ''Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness'' just clicked with me. Mellon Collie. Melancholy. It blew my mind. How did I miss that? - c
* When I first listened to Hüsker Dü's album Zen Arcade, it seemed like a messy collage of violent noise with very little going for it. How people fell in love with the album baffled me. And then I read that the album had a story to it. A young boy disappointed with his family life, runs away from home, and then discovers that the world outside is colder and harder than the world he used to know. And then it hit me: this is exactly the type of music that someone in those circumstances would make. It's loud, angry, angsty, full of guitar distortion and screaming, and ballsy. Awesome. - Riosan
* I'd always thought it was ironic that the most well known piece of circus music is called "Entrance of the Gladiators," as gladiators were men who violently fought to the death, and the circus is a silly spectacle. It wasn't until just the other day that I made the connection that gladiator fights were the main attraction of Roman circuses. -Tatterdemalion
** Also, it was originally a military march - {{Medinoc}}
* For the longest time, I never understood "Thumb Cinema" by Music/TheWorldInfernoFriendshipSociety. I got that it was a rant about consumerism, materialism and excess, but it didn't seem to fit with the rest of the songs on "Addicted to Bad Ideas", which is about Creator/PeterLorre's life and generally narrated from his point of view. Suddenly, a year and a half later, it occured to me that since the album was heavily based on a recent biography which elaborates more on Lorre's friendship with BertholtBrecht, the song might be from Brecht's point of view instead. After three songs where Lorre rants about his career decline while deciding to just give in, Brecht criticizes the excesses of Hollywood and how they've damaged Lorre, and begs him to return to postwar Germany with him: "You're not happy, well, no one gives a ***/ This is a game and you're part of it/ Maybe it's time for you to quit." It would fit the album's timeline as well with the next song, "Addicted to Bad Ideas", being about Lorre's growing addiction and despair after returning to Hollywood when his German comeback film flops. - Tropers.TechnicolorPachyderm
* Music/{{Rammstein}}'s song "Benzin" is about someone who ''really'' likes petrol. The line "''Brauch keine Frau, nur Vaselin"'' very roughly translates to, 'I don't need a woman, just Vaseline'. The reference to masturbation was obvious; it wasn't until much later that I remembered what Vaseline is made from. - Dane900
** I got one while watching the ''Haifisch'' video. "Haifisch" is German for shark. During the video, Richard and Paul (I think, it's been a bit since I've seen the video) got into an arguement that devolved into the five remaining members fighting. The fight started when one of them got punched in the nose, drawing blood...which attracts sharks. - {{Kazokuhouou}}

to:

** Bonus points for actually emphasizing seem for completely reasonable rhyme scheme reasons, in context. - Tropers/RedWren
context.
* Music/TheSmashingPumpkins album title ''Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness'' just clicked with me. Mellon Collie. Melancholy. It blew my mind. How did I miss that? - c
Melancholy.
* When I first listened listening to Hüsker Dü's album Zen Arcade, it seemed like a messy collage of violent noise with very little going for it. How people fell in love with the album baffled me. And then I read may baffle some, until reading that the album had a story to it. A young boy disappointed with his family life, runs away from home, and then discovers that the world outside is colder and harder than the world he used to know. And then it hit me: the brilliance hits: this is exactly the type of music that someone in those circumstances would make. It's loud, angry, angsty, full of guitar distortion and screaming, and ballsy. Awesome. - Riosan
Awesome.
* I'd always Who would have thought it was ironic that the most well known piece of circus music is called "Entrance of the Gladiators," as gladiators were men who violently fought to the death, and the circus is a silly spectacle. It wasn't until just the other day that I made one makes the connection that gladiator fights were the main attraction of Roman circuses. -Tatterdemalion
**
circuses. Also, it was originally a military march - {{Medinoc}}
march.
* For the longest time, I never understood "Thumb Cinema" by Music/TheWorldInfernoFriendshipSociety. I got that It might sound like it was a rant about consumerism, materialism and excess, but it didn't seem to fit with the rest of the songs on "Addicted to Bad Ideas", which is about Creator/PeterLorre's life and generally narrated from his point of view. Suddenly, a year and a half later, it occured Until one listems to me that since the album whole album, which was heavily based on a recent biography which elaborates more on Lorre's friendship with BertholtBrecht, Bertholt Brecht, the song might be from Brecht's point of view instead. After three songs where Lorre rants about his career decline while deciding to just give in, Brecht criticizes the excesses of Hollywood and how they've damaged Lorre, and begs him to return to postwar Germany with him: "You're not happy, well, no one gives a ***/ This is a game and you're part of it/ Maybe it's time for you to quit." It would fit the album's timeline as well with the next song, "Addicted to Bad Ideas", being about Lorre's growing addiction and despair after returning to Hollywood when his German comeback film flops. - Tropers.TechnicolorPachyderm
flops.
* Music/{{Rammstein}}'s song "Benzin" is about someone who ''really'' likes petrol. The line "''Brauch keine Frau, nur Vaselin"'' very roughly translates to, 'I don't need a woman, just Vaseline'. The reference to masturbation was obvious; it wasn't until much later that I remembered you what Vaseline is made from. - Dane900
from.
** I got one while While watching the ''Haifisch'' video. video, "Haifisch" is German for shark. During the video, Richard and Paul (I think, it's been a bit since I've seen the video) got into an arguement that devolved into the five remaining members fighting. The fight started when one of them got punched in the nose, drawing blood...which attracts sharks. - {{Kazokuhouou}}



* The song "Hella Good" by No Doubt is actually about sex not dancing. What she really wants him to do is keep on screwing not dancing. This explains why the waves keep on crashing on her and why his love keeps on coming like a thunderbolt. It also explains why she keeps gasping as she sings the song. - MKing49001
** Dude, ''all'' the songs about dancing are about sex. Even (especially!) stuff from the early days of recording, and earler. Those 30's and 40's songs are actually incredibly dirty. This is [[IntercourseWithYou a trope in its own right]].
* The song "Death Cab For Cutie" by the BonzoDogDooDahBand. I enjoyed it, though preferred others like Humanoid Boogie -- until I realize that what the doo-wop singers were really singing, instead of generic doo-wop nonsense (best transcribed as 'Veygahran doo-wah'), was [[spoiler:''baby, don't do it'']]. She enjoyed it a lot more since then.
** Also, Humanoid Boogie has its own -- despite having read the lyrics, I prefer to hear the chorus as 'Some people say they're glad, some people say annoyed, but you know, ain't many tryin' to say they're humanoid' instead of what it actually goes like. Why? Because if you hear it like that, it's easy to interpret it as a group of aliens coming to Earth and trying to ask people if they're, well, humans, using the nearest socially-acceptable term for 'what are you' -- 'how are you'. Finding no people answering with 'Human', they make the song to put out a sort of wanted-poster for humans on the radio, like the rat catcher of Hamelin...
** "Mr. Apollo". I thought it was just a regular, kind-of-campy song about physical fitness -- until I listened to the lyrics, whereupon I thought up the idea that it might be about bullied nerds dreaming up their own fantasy world where someone would teach them how to defend themselves, and going slightly hysterical, perhaps even insane, in the process. This put a dryly sarcastic spin on the tidbit of the chorus that went "''Cause everybody knows that a healthy body makes a healthy mind''", and was reinforced by Vivian Stanshall bursting into the chorus, hysterically yelling "''And you can--beat up bullies 'til they cry! Oh crikey! Oh jove! Let's go you rotter--oh, don't punish me--!''". I thought he had gotten a bit too lost in his fantasy world, and had actually run out, challenging a bully to fisticuffs -- and getting beaten up in the process, of course.
** "Noises For The Leg", at the end, has the sound of a balloon losing air wildly darting from left to right stereo. I thought it was just weird -- until I remembered the old cartoon tidbit of a balloon flying wildly through the air after getting its knot untied.
** This one might be Spotify-exclusive (or, at least, [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks it used to be]]), but if you search for The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band on Spotify, the song order is so that "Look At Me I'm Wonderful" comes right before "Jazz -- Delicious Hot, Disgusting Cold" and "I Left My Heart (In San Francisco)" comes right before "Dr. Jazz". I always chose to interpret that as an SmallNameBigEgo of a singer doing a pep talk to himself before going out on stage -- and when he's out there, his band members upstage him by not letting him get a word in with their constant playing. He manages to get one song, but before he can finish it, they start with their nonsense again. Frustrated, he leaves.
** "Laughing Blues". I thought nothing special of it -- just traditional oddballery. Then she realized 'Blues' can also be said to describe depression, and depression is sometimes a sign of madness, making the title "Laughing Mad". Which you can say about many Bonzo songs.
** "Joke Shop Man". I thought it was a fairly regular jingle-type song -- until I realized that the music sounded slightly sadder at the verse "''Joke Shop Man, help me if you can / it's really oh-so-hard to understand''". The 'joke shop man' is an optimist, or a fellow with humor, and the singer is depressed with the world. There are no words toward the end of the song, with only silly noises, because of one of two causes -- either the joke shop man is helping the singer, well, understand, or the singer has killed himself.
** "Quiet Talks And Summer Walks". I was annoyed with how the voice was barely audible over the music...and then thought back to the title. Also, it finishes with a sound not that unlike a buzzsaw or similar -- the forest the singer was walking through is getting cut down as he walks.
** "Busted". I thought of the song as mostly nonsense...until I heard one verse that went "''I think it'd do more good to try and understand the other guy''". That combined with the chorus made me realize that the singer had been, well, busted for a crime (or just busted up in the skull, for even more simplicity, or busted like a toy, or even ''bested'') and driven to madness by the pressure put on him by society to either reform or prove he didn't do it (or prove he really was as good as he seemed, et cetera). All he wants is some sympathy, but due to society stamping labels on him, he never gets it.
*** Or, considering that Vivian Stanshall, the singer, does his "Look At Me I'm Wonderful" voice, you can even think [[EpilepticTrees it's the same singer from "Look At Me", busted as a fraud/hack/with no skill]].
** "Hello Mable". I thought that the fact that the trumpets got more triumphant toward the end of the song was just traditional progression exaggeration -- plus, I was a bit annoyed with how the repetition went on and on, in comparison to the other Bonzo songs (also, the 'chaperone' part implied she already had a boyfriend). Then I realized that the singer had to ask again and again for Mable to come with him, in [[DoggedNiceGuy more and more]] [[StalkerWithACrush exaggerated ways.]] His request for her to "''leave your chaperone / so we can be alone''" references that he just wants her to walk out on her own, either so he can observe her or so he can ask her to give him up...and the calmer end to the song suggests there was a happy ending for the two.
** "The Trouser Press". Your everyday pop novelty song, really -- I found it average, but prefered others. Then I learnt two things -- that the line "''Oh, you're so savage, Roger''", spoken from a [[HoYay decidedly male voice]], wasn't just a one-shot joke with random name -- Roger-Ruskin Spear was one of the fellows in the band and the one who had discovered them, saying "I couldn't believe anyone was that bad" before changing his mind. The line could have simply referenced his savage critique. And the second thing was that it had featured a solo on an ''actual trouser press''.
** "We Are Normal". The slow, strange, spoken intro always bugged me -- until I realized that was what it was supposed to do. The song began with a bubbling sound, which I didn't understand -- until I understood it was a metaphor for a new type of people (or, heck, aliens) bubbling up to the surface. The title, too -- it's not meant to be 'We are ordinary', they actually ''call'' themselves 'Normal'. The spoken words were basically jeers, with lines such as "''Well, here come some normals! They look like...normal...''" and "''Look at his head! 'E--'es got a head on him like a rabbit!''" These continued through slow pace, as a slow, fast-forwarding sound appeared, which turned into a quicker fast-forwarding sound, which turned into a jittery rapid fast fast-forwarding -- until it became the actual song. This represents the years of insults that seem to pass so quickly, so uneventfully -- up until rebellion, as the song itself is rather [[ThePowerOfRock rocky]], the verses going mostly "''We are normal, and we want our freedom!''" And, finally, the song closes with around fifteen or so seconds of ocean-against-the-beach noises, calling back to the bubbly opening. In the end, despite a few new bubbles, the ocean is big and alike.
** "By A Waterfall". The strangely distant-sounding 'Yoohoohoohoo' of the chorus after the singer exclaims 'All together now' can be explained this way -- the singer is a ThirdPersonPerson, and is ''actually'' singing by a waterfall, out on a cliff. The distance is due to echo. - all above twists of perfectly good Bonzo songs can be attributed to {{Farmelle}}
* In classic FridgeBrilliance style, I liked the music video to ''In Bloom'' by Nirvana, but didn't really understand why they were referencing the Beatles, who didn't seem to have anything to do with the song at all. Then later I learned that the Beatles occasionally shouted Nazi slogans into crowds because they knew that nobody was actually listening to them, or could even hear them over the roar - which basically sums up the song ''In Bloom''. - {{randomfanboy}}
** I took it more as a general sarcastic comparison of the band's sudden rise in popularity to Beatlemania, but come to think of it that ''also'' fits into the meaning of the song a little bit. - MikeK
* {{Sen}}'s experience with the cover of ''Led Zeppelin II'' a while ago, reproduced as closely as possible:
--> Man, that is a butt-ugly cover. Seriously, ''I'' was cool and all, but this?! Did the dude do it in like 30 minutes? Also why's there a chick on the cover? Seriously, this makes no sense. Where's the rhyme and reason? Better check Wikipedia. (checks wikipedia) Oh, hey, Dave Juniper did do it in like 30 minutes. Big surprise. Oh hey, the original's The Red Baron. Pretty neat I guess, but not as cool as the exploding Hindenburg. Chick on the cover's an actress called Creator/GlynisJohns. Never heard of her. Wait. The first album's engineer was ''Glyn'' Johns. * laugh* Did he seriously go through all that trouble for an IncrediblyLamePun? And I thought Webcomic/IrregularWebcomic was overdoing it... Also, ''Andy'' was the engineer this time, not Glyn. Meh, still, this would make a good TV Tropes entry. Still doesn't make the cover good for me though.
* I was recently listening to the song Wander, by Kamelot, and something occured to me. The lyrics in the first half of the chorus isn't just Ariel reflecting on how much he misses Helena. It's an eerie character-doesn't-realize-it foreshadowing towards the events that occur later on. -themagicdance
** Just realized something else. In both Epica and Black Halo, the center of the universe is also called "Epica", where you find the meaning of life. On the Epica CD, Ariel calls his homeland the center of his universe. He finds the meaning of life, or more specifically HIS life, in his homeland. I think my brain just exploded from the..er..epicness.
* It took me several listens before I fully figured out that Music/FleetwoodMac's "Tusk" is about the ElephantInTheLivingRoom, in the form of a dying relationship (and various infidelities) neither partner wants to discuss. - Carty
* In the song Every dog has it's day by Toby Keith I thought the line "when the big dog throws him a bone," was just a random line to set up the next rhyme. It wasn't until later that I realized "The Big Dog" is Toby Keith's nickname. He's talking about himself. -- {{Windweaver19}}
* I always thought Billy Joel's "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" was about two old friends in the eponymous restaurant reminiscing about a couple they happened to know years ago in high school, but what if they themselves are Brenda and Eddie? -- RichardAK
** When I first heard it, I didn't like the song "She's Always a Woman" because it seemed to paint the subject in a very negative light. A little while later, it finally hit me that the narrator isn't bad-mouthing her at all. He's merely acknowledging her flaws, and saying that he loves her anyways. D'awww. - PingoTBest
*** I listened to Billy Joel's own explanation of this song and then re-listened. Notice how all the negative characteristics are nearly all in the second person "She can ruin ''your'' faith", 'She can lead ''you'' to love" but the key phrase is 'She's always a woman to ''me'' '. And the penultimate line is 'Blame it all on ''yourself'' '. Its a man defending his love to an ex-partner and saying that all her supposedly negative characteristics were down to the way he treated her. {{Culfy}}
** I always liked "You're only human (Second Wind)" for being a really upbeat and helpful song. It wasn't until very recently that I realized that Billy himself made a mistake in the recording of it, and kept it in with an ad-libbed laugh, to cement the message of living with your mistakes. - Lumino
* I never understood or fully appreciated the song "Hole Hearted" by Extreme until I realized that it was not a love song but a hymn to God. (Apparently there is even some linguistic support for this: someone here told me before someone inexplicably erased the previous version of this entry that the literal meaning of the Hebrew word "sin" is "to fall short".) -ZiggyZag
* It took me a while listening to the Ludo song ''Lake Pontchartrain'' before I realized the significance of the line "They both had crawfish, strictly chicken for me." Before, the song had a b-movie horror vibe, but that shifted it straight into the [[Creator/HPLovecraft Lovecraft]] zone.- Shinyfox
* It took many years of loving the Music/PetShopBoys' song "Being Boring" to realise it's meaning, I thought the melancholic music and wistful words were merely evocing a lost youth. Then I heard the line "All the people I was kissing, some are here and some are missing in the 1990's" and I realised it was a eulogy to a friend who'd died of AIDS.
* The titles of albums (that aren't collaborations) by Finnish experimental electronic duo Pan Sonic mostly consist of single Finnish words, so their 1999 album called simply ''A'' may seem merely a weird exception from this rule. Not quite... Pan Sonic first named themselves after a certain well-known electronics corporation, and were forced to drop one letter from their name to prevent having further action taken against them. Guess what ''A'''s album title most probably pays tribute to. -Litis
* One of Sting's albums, 'Brand New Day' commences with the song "A Thousand Years" which is basically about the constancy of love even through reincarnation ... and ends with the song "Brand New Day" which talks about resetting the clocks to zero and starting all over again. The very end of Brand New Day is the same riff that starts "A Thousand Years". The whole album is a cycle of rebirth.

to:

* The song "Hella Good" by No Doubt Music/NoDoubt is actually about sex not dancing. What she really wants him to do is keep on screwing not dancing. This explains why the waves keep on crashing on her and why his love keeps on coming like a thunderbolt. It also explains why she keeps gasping as she sings the song. - MKing49001
song.
** Dude, Almost ''all'' the songs about dancing are about sex. Even (especially!) stuff from the early days of recording, and earler.earlier. Those 30's and 40's songs are actually incredibly dirty. This is [[IntercourseWithYou a trope in its own right]].
* The song "Death Cab For Cutie" by the BonzoDogDooDahBand. I enjoyed it, though preferred others like Humanoid Boogie -- until I realize that what the doo-wop singers were really singing, instead of generic doo-wop nonsense (best transcribed as 'Veygahran doo-wah'), was [[spoiler:''baby, don't do it'']]. She enjoyed it a lot more since then.
** Also, Humanoid Boogie has its own -- despite having read the lyrics, I prefer to hear the chorus as 'Some people say they're glad, some people say annoyed, but you know, ain't many tryin' to say they're humanoid' instead of what it actually goes like. Why? Because if you hear it like that, it's easy to interpret it as a group of aliens coming to Earth and trying to ask people if they're, well, humans, using the nearest socially-acceptable term for 'what are you' -- 'how are you'. Finding no people answering with 'Human', they make the song to put out a sort of wanted-poster for humans on the radio, like the rat catcher of Hamelin...
** "Mr. Apollo". I thought it was just a regular, kind-of-campy song about physical fitness -- until I listened to the lyrics, whereupon I thought up the idea that it might be about bullied nerds dreaming up their own fantasy world where someone would teach them how to defend themselves, and going slightly hysterical, perhaps even insane, in the process. This put a dryly sarcastic spin on the tidbit of the chorus that went "''Cause everybody knows that a healthy body makes a healthy mind''", and was reinforced by Vivian Stanshall bursting into the chorus, hysterically yelling "''And you can--beat up bullies 'til they cry! Oh crikey! Oh jove! Let's go you rotter--oh, don't punish me--!''". I thought he had gotten a bit too lost in his fantasy world, and had actually run out, challenging a bully to fisticuffs -- and getting beaten up in the process, of course.
** "Noises For The Leg", at the end, has the sound of a balloon losing air wildly darting from left to right stereo. I thought it was just weird -- until I remembered the old cartoon tidbit of a balloon flying wildly through the air after getting its knot untied.
** This one might be Spotify-exclusive (or, at least, [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks it used to be]]), but if you search for The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band on Spotify, the song order is so that "Look At Me I'm Wonderful" comes right before "Jazz -- Delicious Hot, Disgusting Cold" and "I Left My Heart (In San Francisco)" comes right before "Dr. Jazz". I always chose to interpret that as an SmallNameBigEgo of a singer doing a pep talk to himself before going out on stage -- and when he's out there, his band members upstage him by not letting him get a word in with their constant playing. He manages to get one song, but before he can finish it, they start with their nonsense again. Frustrated, he leaves.
** "Laughing Blues". I thought nothing special of it -- just traditional oddballery. Then she realized 'Blues' can also be said to describe depression, and depression is sometimes a sign of madness, making the title "Laughing Mad". Which you can say about many Bonzo songs.
** "Joke Shop Man". I thought it was a fairly regular jingle-type song -- until I realized that the music sounded slightly sadder at the verse "''Joke Shop Man, help me if you can / it's really oh-so-hard to understand''". The 'joke shop man' is an optimist, or a fellow with humor, and the singer is depressed with the world. There are no words toward the end of the song, with only silly noises, because of one of two causes -- either the joke shop man is helping the singer, well, understand, or the singer has killed himself.
** "Quiet Talks And Summer Walks". I was annoyed with how the voice was barely audible over the music...and then thought back to the title. Also, it finishes with a sound not that unlike a buzzsaw or similar -- the forest the singer was walking through is getting cut down as he walks.
** "Busted". I thought of the song as mostly nonsense...until I heard one verse that went "''I think it'd do more good to try and understand the other guy''". That combined with the chorus made me realize that the singer had been, well, busted for a crime (or just busted up in the skull, for even more simplicity, or busted like a toy, or even ''bested'') and driven to madness by the pressure put on him by society to either reform or prove he didn't do it (or prove he really was as good as he seemed, et cetera). All he wants is some sympathy, but due to society stamping labels on him, he never gets it.
*** Or, considering that Vivian Stanshall, the singer, does his "Look At Me I'm Wonderful" voice, you can even think [[EpilepticTrees it's the same singer from "Look At Me", busted as a fraud/hack/with no skill]].
** "Hello Mable". I thought that the fact that the trumpets got more triumphant toward the end of the song was just traditional progression exaggeration -- plus, I was a bit annoyed with how the repetition went on and on, in comparison to the other Bonzo songs (also, the 'chaperone' part implied she already had a boyfriend). Then I realized that the singer had to ask again and again for Mable to come with him, in [[DoggedNiceGuy more and more]] [[StalkerWithACrush exaggerated ways.]] His request for her to "''leave your chaperone / so we can be alone''" references that he just wants her to walk out on her own, either so he can observe her or so he can ask her to give him up...and the calmer end to the song suggests there was a happy ending for the two.
** "The Trouser Press". Your everyday pop novelty song, really -- I found it average, but prefered others. Then I learnt two things -- that the line "''Oh, you're so savage, Roger''", spoken from a [[HoYay decidedly male voice]], wasn't just a one-shot joke with random name -- Roger-Ruskin Spear was one of the fellows in the band and the one who had discovered them, saying "I couldn't believe anyone was that bad" before changing his mind. The line could have simply referenced his savage critique. And the second thing was that it had featured a solo on an ''actual trouser press''.
** "We Are Normal". The slow, strange, spoken intro always bugged me -- until I realized that was what it was supposed to do. The song began with a bubbling sound, which I didn't understand -- until I understood it was a metaphor for a new type of people (or, heck, aliens) bubbling up to the surface. The title, too -- it's not meant to be 'We are ordinary', they actually ''call'' themselves 'Normal'. The spoken words were basically jeers, with lines such as "''Well, here come some normals! They look like...normal...''" and "''Look at his head! 'E--'es got a head on him like a rabbit!''" These continued through slow pace, as a slow, fast-forwarding sound appeared, which turned into a quicker fast-forwarding sound, which turned into a jittery rapid fast fast-forwarding -- until it became the actual song. This represents the years of insults that seem to pass so quickly, so uneventfully -- up until rebellion, as the song itself is rather [[ThePowerOfRock rocky]], the verses going mostly "''We are normal, and we want our freedom!''" And, finally, the song closes with around fifteen or so seconds of ocean-against-the-beach noises, calling back to the bubbly opening. In the end, despite a few new bubbles, the ocean is big and alike.
** "By A Waterfall". The strangely distant-sounding 'Yoohoohoohoo' of the chorus after the singer exclaims 'All together now' can be explained this way -- the singer is a ThirdPersonPerson, and is ''actually'' singing by a waterfall, out on a cliff. The distance is due to echo. - all above twists of perfectly good Bonzo songs can be attributed to {{Farmelle}}
* In classic FridgeBrilliance style, I liked the music video to ''In Bloom'' by Nirvana, but didn't really understand why they were referencing the Beatles, who Beatles references may not make sense at first, and didn't seem to have anything to do with the song at all. Then later I learned it ''blooms'' with brilliance that the Beatles occasionally shouted Nazi slogans into crowds because they knew that nobody was actually listening to them, or could even hear them over the roar - which basically sums up the song ''In Bloom''. - {{randomfanboy}}
Bloom''.
** I took it It's taken more as a general sarcastic comparison of the band's sudden rise in popularity to Beatlemania, but come to think of it that ''also'' fits into the meaning of the song a little bit. - MikeK
bit.
* {{Sen}}'s Tropers/{{Sen}}'s experience with the cover of ''Led Zeppelin II'' a while ago, ''Music/LedZeppelin II'', reproduced as closely as possible:
--> '''Sen''': Man, that is a butt-ugly cover. Seriously, ''I'' was cool and all, but this?! Did the dude do it in like 30 minutes? Also why's there a chick on the cover? Seriously, this makes no sense. Where's the rhyme and reason? Better check Wikipedia. (checks wikipedia) Oh, hey, Dave Juniper did do it in like 30 minutes. Big surprise. Oh hey, the original's The Red Baron. Pretty neat I guess, but not as cool as the exploding Hindenburg. Chick on the cover's an actress called Creator/GlynisJohns. Never heard of her. Wait. The first album's engineer was ''Glyn'' Johns. * laugh* Did he seriously go through all that trouble for an IncrediblyLamePun? And I thought Webcomic/IrregularWebcomic was overdoing it... Also, ''Andy'' was the engineer this time, not Glyn. Meh, still, this would make a good TV Tropes entry. Still doesn't make the cover good for me though.
* I was recently listening Listening to the song Wander, "Wander", by Kamelot, Music/{{Kamelot}}, and something occured to me.occured. The lyrics in the first half of the chorus isn't just Ariel reflecting on how much he misses Helena. It's an eerie character-doesn't-realize-it foreshadowing towards the events that occur later on. -themagicdance
on.
** Just realized something else. In both Epica and Black Halo, the center of the universe is also called "Epica", where you find the meaning of life. On the Epica CD, Ariel calls his homeland the center of his universe. He finds the meaning of life, or more specifically HIS life, in his homeland. I think my brain just exploded from the..er..epicness.
homeland.
* It took me would take several listens before I fully figured figuring out that Music/FleetwoodMac's "Tusk" is about the ElephantInTheLivingRoom, in the form of a dying relationship (and various infidelities) neither partner wants to discuss. - Carty
discuss.
* In the song Every dog has it's day "Every Dog Has It's Day" by Toby Keith I thought Music/TobyKeith, there's the line "when the big dog throws him a bone," was just a random line to set up the next rhyme. It wasn't isn't until later that I realized "The Big Dog" is Toby Keith's nickname. He's talking about himself. -- {{Windweaver19}}
himself.
* I always Music/BillyJoel:
** There's a
thought Billy Joel's that Music/BillyJoel's "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" was about two old friends in the eponymous restaurant reminiscing about a couple they happened to know years ago in high school, but what if they themselves are Brenda and Eddie? -- RichardAK
Eddie?
** When I first heard it, I didn't like the song hearing "She's Always a Woman" because Woman", it seemed to paint the subject in a very negative light. A little while later, it finally hit me hits that the narrator isn't bad-mouthing her at all. He's merely acknowledging her flaws, and saying that he loves her anyways. D'awww. - PingoTBest
D'awww.
*** I listened Re-listening to Billy Joel's own explanation of this song and then re-listened. Notice song, notice how all the negative characteristics are nearly all in the second person "She can ruin ''your'' faith", 'She can lead ''you'' to love" but the key phrase is 'She's always a woman to ''me'' '. And the penultimate line is 'Blame it all on ''yourself'' '. Its a man defending his love to an ex-partner and saying that all her supposedly negative characteristics were down to the way he treated her. {{Culfy}}
her.
** I always liked "You're only Only human (Second Wind)" for being a is really upbeat and helpful song. It wasn't isn't until very recently that I realized you realize that Billy himself made a mistake in the recording of it, and kept it in with an ad-libbed laugh, to cement the message of living with your mistakes. - Lumino
mistakes.
* I never One could not understood or fully appreciated the song "Hole Hearted" by Extreme until I realized realizing that it was not a love song but a hymn to God. (Apparently there is even some linguistic support for this: someone here told me before someone inexplicably erased the previous version of this entry that the literal meaning of the Hebrew word "sin" is "to fall short".) -ZiggyZag
)
* It took me a while listening to the Ludo song ''Lake Pontchartrain'' before I realized realizing the significance of the line "They both had crawfish, strictly chicken for me." Before, the song had a b-movie horror vibe, but that shifted it straight into the [[Creator/HPLovecraft Lovecraft]] zone.- Shinyfox
zone.
* It took many years of loving the Music/PetShopBoys' song "Being Boring" to realise it's meaning, I thought the The melancholic music and wistful words were merely evocing a lost youth. Then I heard hearing the line "All the people I was kissing, some are here and some are missing in the 1990's" 1990's", and I realised it was a eulogy to a friend who'd died of AIDS.
* The titles of albums (that aren't collaborations) by Finnish experimental electronic duo Pan Sonic mostly consist of single Finnish words, so their 1999 album called simply ''A'' may seem merely a weird exception from this rule. Not quite... Pan Sonic first named themselves after a certain well-known electronics corporation, and were forced to drop one letter from their name to prevent having further action taken against them. Guess what ''A'''s album title most probably pays tribute to. -Litis
to.
* One of Sting's Music/{{Sting}}'s albums, 'Brand New Day' commences with the song "A Thousand Years" which is basically about the constancy of love even through reincarnation ... and ends with the song "Brand New Day" which talks about resetting the clocks to zero and starting all over again. The very end of Brand New Day is the same riff that starts "A Thousand Years". The whole album is a cycle of rebirth.



* When I first listened to ''Music/TheWall'''s opening track (In The Flesh?), I didn't understand why it started with a man saying "We came in." (a seeming non-sequitur). Then, listening to the final track (Outside the Wall) end with 'Isn't this where-?', it occurred to me; it was to connect the beginning of the album to the end (Isn't this where...we came in?), turning the album into one big cycle to recommend that what happened to [[spoiler: Pink in the course of [[Music/TheWall two vinyl discs]] could very well happen to someone else (or to put it differently, one wall comes up as another one goes down)]]. My god! =Roger Waters was creative! -Antoine
* Also on ''Music/The Wall'', the song Another Brick in the Wall Part III has these really intense strings in the background. They fade out as it goes into Goodbye Cruel World... but if you crank the volume all the way up, you'll hear that they never fade out completely. The agitated string music almost subconsciously cranks it up from "deep depression" to "full-fledged nervous breakdown."
* U2's "Where The Streets Have No Names". At first, it sounds like a basic "searching for a dream world"-song, with the whole "Streets have no names"-thing being mainly a cool line. Then you read up on it, and learn that the title is a reference to the religious conflicts in Northern Ireland. Since people almost always follow the tradition they grow up in, there are places where you can tell a persons religion just from the name of the street where he lives. Therefore, the place "Where the streets have no names" becomes a metaphor for the place where you are judged for who you are, not where you grew up.

to:

* When I first listened listening to ''Music/TheWall'''s opening track (In The Flesh?), I it didn't understand make sense on why it started with a man saying "We came in." (a seeming non-sequitur). Then, listening to the final track (Outside the Wall) end with 'Isn't this where-?', it occurred to me; occurred; it was to connect the beginning of the album to the end (Isn't this where...we came in?), turning the album into one big cycle to recommend that what happened to [[spoiler: Pink in the course of [[Music/TheWall two vinyl discs]] could very well happen to someone else (or to put it differently, one wall comes up as another one goes down)]]. My god! =Roger Roger Waters was creative! -Antoine
creative!
* Also on ''Music/The Wall'', ''Music/TheWall'', the song Another Brick in the Wall Part III has these really intense strings in the background. They fade out as it goes into Goodbye Cruel World... but if you crank the volume all the way up, you'll hear that they never fade out completely. The agitated string music almost subconsciously cranks it up from "deep depression" to "full-fledged nervous breakdown."
* U2's "Where The Streets Have No Names". At first, it sounds like a basic "searching for a dream world"-song, with the whole "Streets have no names"-thing being mainly a cool line. Then you read up on it, and learn that the title is a reference to [[UsefulNotes/TheTroubles the religious conflicts in Northern Ireland.Ireland]]. Since people almost always follow the tradition they grow up in, there are places where you can tell a persons religion just from the name of the street where he lives. Therefore, the place "Where the streets have no names" becomes a metaphor for the place where you are judged for who you are, not where you grew up.



* For years, I thought the Music/SteelyDan song "Deacon Blues" was about an ultra-hip jazz musician who's had some hard knocks, but he's still the shiznit and he knows it. "They're singing about the coolest person in the world," I thought. Then I read where it's actually about a wannabe who fantasizes about being this hip jazz cat but doesn't have the guts to go out and make it happen. The more I think about the lyrics, it makes sense: "I'll make it this time/I'm ready to cross that fine line," turns to "A world of my own/I'll make it my home sweet home." --RAFritz
* The 2010 Eurovision winner, "Satellite" sounds like yet another pathetic love song at first listen, but then, when you start thinking about the lyrics, you realise that the song really is about a half-psychotic stalker probably halfway to a complete postal spree already. - Belrondis
* The Music/SimonAndGarfunkel song 'Richard Cory' tells the story of a wealthy and successful businessman named Richard Cory. The chorus goes 'But I work in his factory / and I curse the life I'm living / and I curse my poverty / and I wish that I could be / Richard Cory. Pretty simple so far, but then the last verse describes Richard Cory committing suicide, ''and the chorus repeats after that''. This annoyed me for quite a while, but then.. I understood.
** Have you not read the poem of the same title? I don't recall offhand who wrote it, but it's rather nice iambic pentameter. . .(Hakeber)
*** Edwin Arlington Robinson.
* Not necessarily Fridge-y for everyone, but: I was listening to "Total Eclipse of the Heart" for the singer's emotional delivery and tune, because the lyrics just seemed sort of...eh. I still picked up "Total Eclipse of the Heart," because [[TitleDrop you have to.]] I figured it was talking about how she was without his love, her heart was in total darkness ([[MeaninglessMeaningfulWords whatever that means...]]), and then another line made its way in: ''Your love is like a shadow on me all of the time.'' She is in complete darkness because he loves her that much. And suddenly it fit much better with, "Turn around, bright eyes." She knows he loves her, and ''that's'' what the song is about, not how "every now and then [she] fall[s] apart." When she asks him to hold her, ''he's there''. And then it went from weepy to dramatic expression of love. --@/RedWren
** Weeellll, yes, the imagery and metaphors are all there and well and good and all... but the song is actually about vampires. No, I'm not joking. --@/DangerSwan333
* When first listening to the Therapy? song ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNdTs9Ar3h4 Polar Bear]]'', the song seemed very simple and the lyrics monotonous. However, think about what the lyrics say about being a polar bear in a zoo. Out of all of the zoo animals, the polar bear is not only one of the the most potentially vicious (there have been several past cases of suicide by polar bear) but also one of the most out of place and out of its natural environment. Add that to the fact that the music gets slowly more out of control, going from tight basslines to the messy pick scrapes and strings being caught on the guitar to the final bludgeoning outro. It's lyrically and musically a journal of being alienated and completely out of place and becoming more and more agitated to the point of losing control - Slave
* [[Music/WeirdAlYankovic Weird Al's]] "Wanna B Ur Lovr" from the ''Poodle Hat'' album is an IntercourseWithYou song consisting entirely of cheesy, off-the-wall pickup lines that would never work on anyone in real life... EXCEPT other fans who had heard the song. Anyone who understood the context would love it, thus subverting its original intent as a parody of such songs, making it the perfect IntercourseWithYou song for Weird Al fans.
* Why do so many Japanese songs have upbeat melodies but depressing lyrics? It's because it's an "in the moment" song. The times between the people mentioned in this song are good, but there are also bad times, and even with those still going on, it makes the good times even sweeter. Even if there's a melancholy to the lyrics, the song stays upbeat because the "memories" that come with them are worth it. (originally by Tropers/{{anelaidlives}})
* "Love (Can Make You Happy)", a big hit ballad for the OneHitWonder band Mercy in 1969, is one of the sappiest songs of all time. The whole thing seems like a banal celebration of how wonderful it is to be in love. Until you look at the lyrics a little more closely. Most of the lyrics are written in a conditional tense: "love ''CAN'' make you happy/''IF'' you find someone who cares.." or "''IF'' you ''THINK'' you've found someone you'll love forevermore." The narrator isn't saying "love has made me happy", so odds are they aren't currently in love, but they're trying to distract themselves from thinking about their current lonely state by imagining a perfect romance. Or, they've just suffered a horrible breakup and are pondering how elusive true love can be. Love can make you happy if you find someone who cares, but when you don't it's a living hell. Or the narrator is going through unrequited love: "Your mind is filled with the thoughts of a certain someone that you love/your life is filled with joy when she is there." It doesn't say anything about her reciprocating those feelings. Also, the song is sung as a male-female duet, so maybe it's about ''mutually'' unrequited love. - Ezclee4050

to:

* For years, I thought the The Music/SteelyDan song "Deacon Blues" was thought about as an ultra-hip jazz musician who's had some hard knocks, but he's still the shiznit and he knows it. "They're singing about the coolest person in the world," I thought. Then I read where it's one would think. It's actually about a wannabe who fantasizes about being this hip jazz cat but doesn't have the guts to go out and make it happen. The more I think one thinks about the lyrics, it makes sense: "I'll make it this time/I'm ready to cross that fine line," turns to "A world of my own/I'll make it my home sweet home." --RAFritz
"
* The 2010 Eurovision winner, "Satellite" sounds like yet another pathetic love song at first listen, but then, when you start thinking about the lyrics, you realise that the song really is about a half-psychotic stalker probably halfway to a complete postal spree already. - Belrondis
already.
* The Music/SimonAndGarfunkel song 'Richard Cory' tells the story of a wealthy and successful businessman named Richard Cory. The chorus goes 'But I work in his factory / and I curse the life I'm living / and I curse my poverty / and I wish that I could be / Richard Cory. Pretty simple so far, but then the last verse describes Richard Cory committing suicide, ''and the chorus repeats after that''. This annoyed me for quite a while, but then.. I understood.
that''.
** Have you not read the poem of the same title? I don't recall offhand who wrote it, but It's written by Edwin Arlington Robinson and it's a rather nice iambic pentameter. . .(Hakeber)
*** Edwin Arlington Robinson.
pentameter.
* Not necessarily Fridge-y for everyone, but: I was listening Listening to "Total Eclipse of the Heart" for the singer's emotional delivery and tune, because the lyrics just seemed sort of...eh. I still picked up Still recommending "Total Eclipse of the Heart," because [[TitleDrop you have to.]] I figured it one has to. It was talking about how she was without his love, her heart was in total darkness ([[MeaninglessMeaningfulWords whatever that means...]]), and then another line made its way in: ''Your love is like a shadow on me all of the time.'' She is in complete darkness because he loves her that much. And suddenly it fit much better with, "Turn around, bright eyes." She knows he loves her, and ''that's'' what the song is about, not how "every now and then [she] fall[s] apart." When she asks him to hold her, ''he's there''. And then it went from weepy to dramatic expression of love. --@/RedWren
love.
** Weeellll, yes, the imagery and metaphors are all there and well and good and all... but the song is actually about vampires. No, I'm not joking. --@/DangerSwan333
it's no joke.
* When first listening to the Therapy? song ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNdTs9Ar3h4 Polar Bear]]'', the song seemed very simple and the lyrics monotonous. However, think about what the lyrics say about being a polar bear in a zoo. Out of all of the zoo animals, the polar bear is not only one of the the most potentially vicious (there have been several past cases of suicide by polar bear) but also one of the most out of place and out of its natural environment. Add that to the fact that the music gets slowly more out of control, going from tight basslines to the messy pick scrapes and strings being caught on the guitar to the final bludgeoning outro. It's lyrically and musically a journal of being alienated and completely out of place and becoming more and more agitated to the point of losing control - Slave
* [[Music/WeirdAlYankovic Weird Al's]] "Wanna B Ur Lovr" from the ''Poodle Hat'' album is an IntercourseWithYou song consisting entirely of cheesy, off-the-wall pickup lines that would never work on anyone in real life... EXCEPT other fans who had heard the song. Anyone who understood the context would love it, thus subverting its original intent as a parody of such songs, making it the perfect IntercourseWithYou song for Weird Al fans.
control
* Why do so many Japanese songs have upbeat melodies but depressing lyrics? It's because it's an "in the moment" song. The times between the people mentioned in this song are good, but there are also bad times, and even with those still going on, it makes the good times even sweeter. Even if there's a melancholy to the lyrics, the song stays upbeat because the "memories" that come with them are worth it. (originally by Tropers/{{anelaidlives}})
it.
* "Love (Can Make You Happy)", a big hit ballad for the OneHitWonder band Mercy in 1969, is one of the sappiest songs of all time. The whole thing seems like a banal celebration of how wonderful it is to be in love. Until you look at the lyrics a little more closely. Most of the lyrics are written in a conditional tense: "love ''CAN'' make you happy/''IF'' you find someone who cares.." or "''IF'' you ''THINK'' you've found someone you'll love forevermore." The narrator isn't saying "love has made me happy", so odds are they aren't currently in love, but they're trying to distract themselves from thinking about their current lonely state by imagining a perfect romance. Or, they've just suffered a horrible breakup and are pondering how elusive true love can be. Love can make you happy if you find someone who cares, but when you don't it's a living hell. Or the narrator is going through unrequited love: "Your mind is filled with the thoughts of a certain someone that you love/your life is filled with joy when she is there." It doesn't say anything about her reciprocating those feelings. Also, the song is sung as a male-female duet, so maybe it's about ''mutually'' unrequited love. - Ezclee4050



* "Absolutely ([[RefrainFromAssuming Story of a Girl]]), or, as you may know it, TropeNamer for WhenSheSmiles: At first I thought that, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her WhenSheSmiles," being shortened and, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her," was just a cut off, the sort of thing you end with a dash. Then I realized, no, that's a complete sentence. [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments And the, "aw..." factor went way up.]] --@/RedWren
* This is probably an obvious one, but... I enjoyed the song "High School Never Ends" by Music/BowlingForSoup, but I thought it was a bit repetitive. Then I realized the song was all about how when you leave high school you think things will be different, but they're not. The entire world is filled with people who are "just as obsessed with who's the best dressed and who's having sex". So, it makes perfect sense for a song about how nothing changes anywhere to be repetitive! - HackeySack
* "Fantastic Rose" by Geoff Smith. I was listening to it with a FanVid to ''Series/DoctorWho'', and it was surrounding the Doctor and Rose's relationship. I thought it was a love song, and there was just a nod to her leaving at the end...then I realized, no. It's an upbeat song, yes, but it's and upbeat song about a good breakup. It might have been IJustWantMyBelovedToBeHappy, it might have been them realizing they were BetterAsFriends, regardless, it was a (bad) breakup that he's good with now. But they're not together anymore, and you know what? That's okay. It's a love song about how it's okay to break up with someone and then move on without leaving the person you broke up with in the dust. It's...it's a happy breakup song for ''both'' parties. This was the first song I'd ever seen with that as the message. And it was ''perfect'' for the Doctor and Rose. ''Addendum: I just found out he wrote it about Rose Tyler. Win.'' --@/RedWren

to:

* "Absolutely ([[RefrainFromAssuming Story of a Girl]]), or, as you may know it, TropeNamer for WhenSheSmiles: At first I it's thought that, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her WhenSheSmiles," being shortened and, to "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her," was just a cut off, the sort of thing you end with a dash. Then I realized, you realize, no, that's a complete sentence. [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments And the, "aw..." factor went way up.]] --@/RedWren
]]
* This is probably an obvious one, but... I enjoyed the song "High School Never Ends" by Music/BowlingForSoup, but I was thought that it was a bit repetitive. Then I realized one would realize the song was all about how when you leave high school you think things will be different, but they're not. The entire world is filled with people who are "just as obsessed with who's the best dressed and who's having sex". So, it makes perfect sense for a song about how nothing changes anywhere to be repetitive! - HackeySack
repetitive!
* "Fantastic Rose" by Geoff Smith. I was listening Listening to it with a FanVid to ''Series/DoctorWho'', and it was surrounding the Doctor and Rose's relationship. I thought One would think it was a love song, and there was just a nod to her leaving at the end...then I realized, then, no. It's an upbeat song, yes, but it's and upbeat song about a good breakup. It might have been IJustWantMyBelovedToBeHappy, it might have been them realizing they were BetterAsFriends, regardless, it was a (bad) breakup that he's good with now. But they're not together anymore, and you know what? That's okay. It's a love song about how it's okay to break up with someone and then move on without leaving the person you broke up with in the dust. It's...it's a happy breakup song for ''both'' parties. This was the first song I'd ever seen with that as the message. And it was ''perfect'' for the Doctor and Rose. ''Addendum: I just found out he He wrote it about Rose Tyler. Win.'' --@/RedWren''



* The album False Priest by Of Montreal seemed a bit weird to me- not musicwise, bit the way the songs were structured. The two albums up to this one, Hissing Fauna Are You The Destroyer and Skeletal Lamping, both had a long epic mood-changing song in the middle of them, which False Priest doesn't have. But the real FridgeLogic moment came about when I realized that False Priest has absolutely no mention of Georgie Fruit, Kevin Barnes' alter-ego, in the lyrics. So that's why it sounded so weird... --{brosandi}
* I have always been a fan of one specific song by The Police, "Synchronicity II", but the lyrics always seemed a little odd to me, in that these two events described in the lyrics have no relation to one another. Recently I listened to "Synchronicity I" from the same album, and it suddenly hit me. In the lyrics of the latter the singer explains the concept of synchronicity, seemingly defined as an intangible, almost imperceptible link. Then I listened to the former again and realized it was presented as an example of the previously defined concept. Now it makes so much more sense to me! -Araneas
* For a while the lyrics to "The Sharpest Lives" left me rather confused, until I realised that they aren't suposed to make sense,the narrator is drunk and the lyrics are his drunken ramblings.- Galen Lionheart.
* [[{{JHM}} I]] have had a few moments of musical Fridge Brilliance in my life, but perhaps the most satisfying was that which accompanied figuring out ''exactly'' what Wire's (utterly baffling) B-side "Former Airline" was about. Then I lost it. I'm still trying to recover my wee epiphany... That said, unraveling the lyrics to the same band's "Silk Skin Paws" comes ***ably close. In short, they are from the perspective of a ManipulativeBastard banker watching the stock market implode, realizing what he has done/become, and finally snapping under the pressure and committing suicide. It's so subtly written, so insidious and sardonic that you don't quite get the full picture until the last lines:

to:

* The album False Priest by Of Montreal seemed a bit weird to me- not musicwise, bit the way the songs were structured. The two albums up to this one, Hissing Fauna Are You The Destroyer and Skeletal Lamping, both had a long epic mood-changing song in the middle of them, which False Priest doesn't have. But the real FridgeLogic moment came about when I realized a realization that False Priest has absolutely no mention of Georgie Fruit, Kevin Barnes' alter-ego, in the lyrics. So that's why it sounded so weird... --{brosandi}
weird...
* I have always been There's a fan of peculiarity about one specific song by The Police, Music/ThePolice, "Synchronicity II", but the lyrics always seemed a little odd to me, odd, in that these two events described in the lyrics have no relation to one another. Recently I listened Listening to "Synchronicity I" from the same album, and it suddenly hit me.strikes. In the lyrics of the latter the singer explains the concept of synchronicity, seemingly defined as an intangible, almost imperceptible link. Then I listened listening to the former again and realized it was presented as an example of the previously defined concept. Now it makes so much more sense to me! -Araneas
sense!
* For a while the lyrics to "The Sharpest Lives" left me rather confused, until I realised realizing that they aren't suposed to make sense,the sense, the narrator is drunk and the lyrics are his drunken ramblings.- Galen Lionheart.
ramblings.
* [[{{JHM}} I]] There have had a few moments of musical Fridge Brilliance in my life, Brilliance, but perhaps the most satisfying was that which accompanied figuring out ''exactly'' what Wire's Music/{{Wire}}'s (utterly baffling) B-side "Former Airline" was about. Then I lost it. I'm still trying to recover my wee epiphany... That said, unraveling Unraveling the lyrics to the same band's "Silk Skin Paws" comes ***ably close. In short, they are from the perspective of a ManipulativeBastard banker watching the stock market implode, realizing what he has done/become, and finally snapping under the pressure and committing suicide. It's so subtly written, so insidious and sardonic that you don't quite get the full picture until the last lines:



* I had a fridge brilliance for Techno (this stripped-down, dark and robotic subgenre of electronic music) recently: why was there no melodies, cool fat synths like in Electro-House? 'Cause it's made for live performance. Live, cool synths often get completely squashed: only remains the drums and the bassline, which are THE elements that will make a human dance. Since that, I love techno. -Stay'n Alive
* The first time I heard The Vaselines' "I Hate The 80's", I liked it, but also thought the verse riff was too much of a Psychedelic Furs rip-off. Then it occurred to me they were likely going for deliberate irony by de-romanticizing TheEighties while borrowing from a song best known as the theme song to [[Film/PrettyInPink a John Hughes movie]] - Tropers/MikeK
* Sometime around my fifteenth viewing of Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boo2Zm69fhY&feature=related "Drumming Song"]], I stopped staring at her fantastic legs long enough to realize that the backup dancers didn't really exist. Florence is just imagining them. She might be [[AllJustADream imagining the whole video]], which explains why said dancers go from angels, to devils, to representations of her mental state. Sometimes more than one at once.
** It took a few listens for me to get this bit of Drumming Song. It's about a girl who tries to hide her love for another person and drowns herself in the ending. Perhaps a reference to Ophelia from "Hamlet" - the narrator of the song tries to hide her heartbeat by hiding in a church (vaguely mirroring the 'Get thee to a nunnery!' scene in "Hamlet"), then drowns herself to stop the beating (Ophelia drowns herself in the play).
* I was listening to "Happy Birthday" by Music/TheBirthdayMassacre again, and it hit me: in the chorus, when she sings "'You're a murder tramp, murder tramp'/I think he said/'You're a murder boy, birthday boy'/I think I said", he's not repeating 'murder tramp', it's what he's ''calling her by'', just like how she's calling him 'birthday boy'. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}
* A trademark of The Melvins is to put the track-list on the front of their cd's and what would normally be considered the "cover art" on the back (while the vinyl versions of their albums are oriented the normal way). I initially thought this was just done for the sake of being weird, but there sort of is a practical reason for designing it that way: the back cover of a cd is a little bit wider than the front, so they get to have a slightly larger cover image by putting it on the back insert instead of on the front of the booklet. - Tropers/MikeK
* A while ago, I was listening to Music/LadyGaga's "So Happy I Could Die" and I realised something: there's more than a few references to masturbation in there, along with the repeated line 'So happy I could die'... and 'die' was repeatedly used by Shakespeare to mean orgasm. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}

to:

* I had a A fridge brilliance for Techno {{Techno}} (this stripped-down, dark and robotic subgenre of electronic music) recently: music): why was there no melodies, cool fat synths like in Electro-House? 'Cause it's made for live performance. Live, cool synths often get completely squashed: only remains the drums and the bassline, which are THE elements that will make a human dance. Since that, I love techno. -Stay'n Alive
dance.
* The first time I heard The Vaselines' Upon hearing Music/TheVaselines' "I Hate The 80's", I liked it, but also there's the thought that the verse riff was being too much of a Psychedelic Furs rip-off. Then it occurred to me an occurance where they were likely going for deliberate irony by de-romanticizing TheEighties while borrowing from a song best known as the theme song to [[Film/PrettyInPink a John Hughes movie]] - Tropers/MikeK
movie]]
* Sometime around my fifteenth viewing the several viewings of Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boo2Zm69fhY&feature=related "Drumming Song"]], I stopped one could stop [[HeadTurningBeauty staring at her fantastic legs legs]] long enough to realize that the backup dancers didn't really exist. Florence is just imagining them. She might be [[AllJustADream imagining the whole video]], which explains why said dancers go from angels, to devils, to representations of her mental state. Sometimes more than one at once.
** It took a few listens for me to get this bit of Drumming Song."Drumming Song". It's about a girl who tries to hide her love for another person and drowns herself in the ending. Perhaps a reference to Ophelia from "Hamlet" from
''Theatre/{{Hamlet}}''
- the narrator of the song tries to hide her heartbeat by hiding in a church (vaguely mirroring the 'Get thee to a nunnery!' scene in "Hamlet"), then drowns herself to stop the beating (Ophelia drowns herself in the play).
* I was listening Listening to "Happy Birthday" by Music/TheBirthdayMassacre again, Music/TheBirthdayMassacre, and it hit me: hits you: in the chorus, when she sings "'You're a murder tramp, murder tramp'/I think he said/'You're a murder boy, birthday boy'/I think I said", he's not repeating 'murder tramp', it's what he's ''calling her by'', just like how she's calling him 'birthday boy'. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}
boy'.
* A trademark of The Melvins is to put the track-list on the front of their cd's and what would normally be considered the "cover art" on the back (while the vinyl versions of their albums are oriented the normal way). I initially An initial thought was this was just done for the sake of being weird, but there sort of is a practical reason for designing it that way: the back cover of a cd is a little bit wider than the front, so they get to have a slightly larger cover image by putting it on the back insert instead of on the front of the booklet. - Tropers/MikeK
booklet.
* A while ago, I was listening Listening to Music/LadyGaga's "So Happy I Could Die" and I realised realized something: there's more than a few references to masturbation in there, along with the repeated line 'So happy I could die'... and 'die' was repeatedly used by Shakespeare to mean orgasm. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}



* I'd always enjoyed the Movie WesternAnimation/HowTheGrinchStoleChristmas, and didn't question the "you really are a heel" line in You're a Mean One, Mister Grinch. Then I joined Wiki/TVTropes, and the line made perfect sense. The narrorater is a) {{foreshadowing}} the HeelFaceTurn and b) giving a GeniusBonus to wrestling fans! -SenshiSun
** I think "heel" was used in common language to mean an unpleasant person well before it was adopted into use in professional wrestling. - Tropers/DevilsAdvocate
* Patron is an expensive brand of tequila that has made its way into a lot of rap/r&b lyrics. I thought that, because a bottle costs so much, Patron was popular with music artists because of this association with the excess of success. Then I realized that Patron just rhymes with a lot of words. I think you can make a similar case for Henny and Goose.
* The ''Music/{{Coldplay}}'' have quite a bit of Music/LyricalDissonance in their songs. But if you think about it they're actually cases of [[UnreliableNarrator Unreliable]] [[strike: [[UnreliableNarrator Narrator]]]] [[UnreliableNarrator Singer]];

to:

* I'd always enjoyed One could enjoy the Movie WesternAnimation/HowTheGrinchStoleChristmas, 1966 movie '' WesternAnimation/HowTheGrinchStoleChristmas'', and didn't question the "you really are a heel" line in You're "You're a Mean One, Mister Grinch. Then I joined Wiki/TVTropes, Grinch", until joining Wiki/TVTropes and the line made perfect sense. The narrorater is a) {{foreshadowing}} the HeelFaceTurn and b) giving a GeniusBonus to wrestling fans! -SenshiSun
fans!
** I think "heel" "Heel" was used in common language to mean an unpleasant person well before it was adopted into use in professional wrestling. - Tropers/DevilsAdvocate
wrestling.
* Patron is an expensive brand of tequila that has made its way into a lot of rap/r&b lyrics. I The thought that, because a bottle costs so much, Patron was popular with music artists because of this association with the excess of success. Then I realized realizing that Patron just rhymes with a lot of words. I think you You can make a similar case for Henny and Goose.
Goose, or Grey Poupon.
* The ''Music/{{Coldplay}}'' have quite a bit of Music/LyricalDissonance in their songs. But if you think about it they're actually cases of [[UnreliableNarrator Unreliable]] [[strike: [[UnreliableNarrator Narrator]]]] [[UnreliableNarrator Singer]];



* In the song "The Fear" by Music/LilyAllen, there's the line "I'll look at the sun and I'll look in the mirror". The song is about trying to become famous, so I always thought that it was "look at the sun" (symbolizing hope) and "look in the mirror" (vanity). I just got that there are two meanings to that line: She'll also look at The Sun and The Mirror (the tabloids) to see what she needs to do to be famous. To be fair, I'm American, so even though I like British shows and music, I'm not part of the culture. -- animeHrmIne
* While reading about Elizabeth Kubler-Ross' model of the Five Stages of Grief, it suddenly hit me, after years of assuming it to be drug-inspired randomness, that THAT is what Bohemian Rhapsody is all about (through the eyes of a man on death row). {{mariposa}}

to:

* In the song "The Fear" by Music/LilyAllen, there's the line "I'll look at the sun and I'll look in the mirror". The song is about trying to become famous, so I always there's the thought that it was "look at the sun" (symbolizing hope) and "look in the mirror" (vanity). I just got Then you'll get that there are two meanings to that line: She'll also look at The Sun and The Mirror (the British tabloids) to see what she needs to do to be famous. To be fair, I'm American, so even though I like British shows and music, I'm not part of the culture. -- animeHrmIne
famous.
* Music/{{Queen}}:
**
While reading about Elizabeth Kubler-Ross' model of the Five Stages of Grief, it suddenly hit me, hits you, after years of assuming it to be drug-inspired randomness, that THAT is what "[[Music/{{Queen}} Bohemian Rhapsody Rhapsody]]" is all about (through the eyes of a man on death row). {{mariposa}}row).
** Music/{{Queen}}'s ''39' isn't about someone who returns from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It's about an astronaut in 2039, who returns from colonising other planets to find that time dilation has made him only one year older while his love has grown old.
*** Additional trivia: if one were to list all of Queen's studio album tracks in order, "39" would be the 39th song.
*** "The Show Must Go On", which is about a dying performer, increases in tone by a half step in the second verse, giving the song a happier and more hopeful sound, [[HopeSpot only to return back to the original key before the chorus.]] Indeed, this was the last song the band recorded with Music/{{Freddie Mercury}} before his death.



* This may make me an idiot, but only after listening to Christmas music at work for weeks on end after living through 20-something holiday seasons did I realize the actual humor in "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Clause;" rather than it being a laugh for the singer's father to see the title going on, ''Santa IS her father in disguise.''

to:

* This may make me From an idiot, but only after listening to Christmas music at work for weeks idiot troper's realization on end after living through 20-something holiday seasons did I realize the actual humor in "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Clause;" rather than it being a laugh for the singer's father to see the title going on, ''Santa IS her father in disguise.''



* I was listening to 'Lady Of The Flowers' by Placebo on repeat and I literally stood in my room after the second listen and said, "Oh. It's about vaginas."
* Mae's "Mistakes We Knew We Were Making" is about a soon-to-be mother and father expecting their first child. The last verse is about the birth, and I had previously always interpreted it to be about joyous new life. But then I really thought about what the words said: "What can now be said, oh, little one / On the other side? / Dance until the band stops playing, / Sing with all your might. And then I realized "the other side" might also mean the baby had died, and the dancing and singing was meant to help cope with the grief of a miscarriage. The chorus also has the line "Don't think about chances we're taking / Don't think about rules we were breaking" which could also tie in with either the anxiety a couple can have in starting a new family, or the knowledge that the pregnancy may have complications.
* The line "Put on your ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Shoes_(fairy_tale) red shoes]]'' and dance the blues" immediately makes Music/DavidBowie's "Let's Dance" darker than most dance tunes of the early [[Main/TheEighties 1980s]] if you know your Creator/HansChristianAndersen. -- Sapphire Redux
* One More Minute by Weird Al Yankovic is the most accurate description of putting on a brave face when confronted with heartbreak ever written. He's telling her "Psh; you're no big deal, I'd rather jump into a thumbtack pile than spend time with you," but every painful thing he describes is how living without her and watching her dating someone else feels. The only thing in the world he wants is to spend one more minute with her. I've never been able to hear the humor in that song; I love it but it's absolutely heartwrenching. - @/BreakfastFish
** That works very well if you consider one little homophone. In your interpretation, all you have to do is realize he's not saying he'd rather do anything than spend one more minute with her... it's he'd do anything (as some form of either penance for a mistake, or to prove he's worthy of that one minute), '''then''' spend one more minute with her.
* The song ''Your Woman'' by White Town. I already knew most of the lyrics had double meanings, but reading a quote from the song writer made it clear that he meant wanted it that way. From Wiki/TheOtherWiki: "The lyrics could mean 'Being a member of an orthodox Trotskyist / Marxist movement. Being a straight guy in love with a lesbian. Being a gay guy in love with a straight man. Being a straight girl in love with a lying, two-timing, fake-ass Marxist. The hypocrisy that results when love and lust get mixed up with highbrow ideals.' Many listeners also likened the song to a breakup letter, where the man reading the breakup letter imitates the woman's voice."
* On first listen Tim Minchin's ''You Grew On Me'' is a funny song that just can't be taken as a serious love song. But then I realised that all of it is one deep, intelligent love simile/metaphor. It's really quite beautiful. - BladeSatoshiX
* I first heard Music/TheBlackEyedPeas song "Imma Be" during the WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows review, and agreed with him that the title sounds entirely too much like "I'm a bee", and the single's cover itself admits it. Upon reflection, that may have been the entire point of the title. The video is apparently about the evils of assimilation and the whole idea of producing music mechanically, with visuals involving robots and being literally stuck in a rut. In essence, creating a hive mind. In fact, the repetition of the line throughout the first part can only be described as [[StealthPun droning]]. Then you add in the actual verses about standing out from the crowd, and the term "Imma be" is now a positive message about having aspirations and personal interests. While sounding exactly the same as the previous term with the opposite meaning. -Tropers/FalconPain
* The song "Ironic" contains absolutely no irony in the lyrics. ''That's what is ironic about it.'' -Tropers/TheNumber
** Well, my mind was just blown. Irony ''is'' getting the opposite of what is expected. You'd expect a song called "Ironic" to be, well, ironic. It's ironic because it ''isn't'' ironic.
*** [[MindScrew My aching head...]]
*** LampshadeHanging by Alanis Morisette on the Late Late Show:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2UQqzFJee4
* "NTF" by illScarlet: The other day I was listening to this, and in an instant, the meaning dawned on me. Initially, I just assumed it was a generic break up song. But then I realized it was actually about get repeatedly rejected by a girl, and trying to move past his feelings for her. Not an amazing epiphany, but it hit me right where it hurts, because I've been there before. -Tropers/TheGreatCoolEnergy
* When I first heard 'Dog Days Are Over' by Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine I merely thought it was about how everything was "looking up". Then I read the lyrics and watched the video (the 2008 version) and realized that perhaps she is trying avoid being that happy. -Tropers/RuffleMyFeathers
** I always interpreted it as being about a sort of manic happiness/hysteria. Florence herself said the song is about being "destructively happy."
* When I first started listening to Music/OKGo, I wasn't much into 'A Million Ways.' But today, I was listening to it in the car when I heard them chanting. I started it again and laughed when I realized they weren't chanting, they were saying one million as a numerical value.
* The Minutemen included a live version of their cover of "Don't Look Now" by Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival on ''Double Nickels On The Dime'', which is otherwise entirely a studio album. I had always wondered why this was, especially since it's not a very clear recording of the song, and you can hear the audience talking over most of it. I figured maybe they really wanted the song to be on the album, but couldn't seem to do a good studio performance of it, so they just grabbed the best live recording they happened to have of it. Then I read the book from the 33 1/3 series on the album, and it was noted that a friend of the band had made the recording from the audience, and convinced them to use it because he thought the audience chatter actually added something to the song. It suddenly started to make sense: "Don't Look Now" is sort of about taking conveniences for granted (and more specifically the hard work that goes into those conveniences), so using a live recording where the audience seems to be too busy talking among themselves to hear the message of the song adds a level of irony. -Tropers/MikeK

to:

* I was listening Listening to 'Lady Of The Flowers' by Placebo on repeat and I one would literally stood stand in my their room after the second listen and said, say, "Oh. It's about vaginas."
* Mae's "Mistakes We Knew We Were Making" is about a soon-to-be mother and father expecting their first child. The last verse is about the birth, and I had it was previously always interpreted it to be about joyous new life. But then I really there's a thought about what the words said: "What can now be said, oh, little one / On the other side? / Dance until the band stops playing, / Sing with all your might. might". And then I realized the realization that "the other side" might also mean the baby had died, and the dancing and singing was meant to help cope with the grief of a miscarriage. The chorus also has the line "Don't think about chances we're taking / Don't think about rules we were breaking" which could also tie in with either the anxiety a couple can have in starting a new family, or the knowledge that the pregnancy may have complications.
* The line "Put on your ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Shoes_(fairy_tale) red shoes]]'' and dance the blues" immediately makes Music/DavidBowie's "Let's Dance" darker than most dance tunes of the early [[Main/TheEighties 1980s]] if you know your Creator/HansChristianAndersen. -- Sapphire Redux
* One More Minute by Weird Al Yankovic is the most accurate description of putting on a brave face when confronted with heartbreak ever written. He's telling her "Psh; you're no big deal, I'd rather jump into a thumbtack pile than spend time with you," but every painful thing he describes is how living without her and watching her dating someone else feels. The only thing in the world he wants is to spend one more minute with her. I've never been able to hear the humor in that song; I love it but it's absolutely heartwrenching. - @/BreakfastFish
Creator/HansChristianAndersen.
** That works very well if you consider one little homophone. In your one interpretation, all you have to do is realize he's not saying he'd rather do anything than spend one more minute with her... it's he'd do anything (as some form of either penance for a mistake, or to prove he's worthy of that one minute), '''then''' spend one more minute with her.
* The song ''Your Woman'' by White Town. I already knew most of the The lyrics had may have double meanings, but reading a quote from the song writer made it clear that he meant wanted it that way. From Wiki/TheOtherWiki: "The lyrics could mean 'Being a member of an orthodox Trotskyist / Marxist movement. Being a straight guy in love with a lesbian. Being a gay guy in love with a straight man. Being a straight girl in love with a lying, two-timing, fake-ass Marxist. The hypocrisy that results when love and lust get mixed up with highbrow ideals.' Many listeners also likened the song to a breakup letter, where the man reading the breakup letter imitates the woman's voice."
* On first listen Tim Minchin's ''You Grew On Me'' is a funny song that just can't be taken as a serious love song. But then I realised A realization that all of it is one deep, intelligent love simile/metaphor. It's really quite beautiful. - BladeSatoshiX
beautiful.
* I first heard Upon listening Music/TheBlackEyedPeas song "Imma Be" during the through a WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows review, and agreed there would be an agreement with him that the title sounds entirely too much like "I'm a bee", and the single's cover itself admits it. Upon reflection, that may have been the entire point of the title. The video is apparently about the evils of assimilation and the whole idea of producing music mechanically, with visuals involving robots and being literally stuck in a rut. In essence, creating a hive mind. In fact, the repetition of the line throughout the first part can only be described as [[StealthPun droning]]. Then you add in the actual verses about standing out from the crowd, and the term "Imma be" is now a positive message about having aspirations and personal interests. While sounding exactly the same as the previous term with the opposite meaning. -Tropers/FalconPain
meaning.
* The song "Ironic" contains absolutely no irony in the lyrics. ''That's what is ironic about it.'' -Tropers/TheNumber
''
** Well, my mind was just blown. Irony ''is'' getting the opposite of what is expected. You'd expect a song called "Ironic" to be, well, ironic. It's ironic because it ''isn't'' ironic.
*** [[MindScrew My aching head...]]
*** LampshadeHanging by Alanis Morisette on the Late Late Show:https://www.[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2UQqzFJee4
com/watch?v=-2UQqzFJee4 the Late Late Show]].
* "NTF" by illScarlet: The other day I was listening to this, and in an instant, the meaning dawned on me. Initially, I It was just assumed it was a generic break up song. But then I realized it was actually about get repeatedly rejected by a girl, and trying to move past his feelings for her. Not an amazing epiphany, but it hit me right where it hurts, because I've especially to those who have been there before. -Tropers/TheGreatCoolEnergy
before.
* When I first heard hearing 'Dog Days Are Over' by Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine I merely thought a firsthand thouht was it was about how everything was "looking up". Then I read reading the lyrics and watched watching the video (the 2008 version) and realized a one could realize that perhaps she is trying avoid being that happy. -Tropers/RuffleMyFeathers
happy.
** I always interpreted Another way to interpret it as being about a sort of manic happiness/hysteria. Florence herself said the song is about being "destructively happy."
* When I first started listening to Music/OKGo, I wasn't much into Music/OKGo's 'A Million Ways.' But today, I was listening to one may assume it in the car when I heard as hearing them chanting. I started Starting it again and laughed when I realized one will realize they weren't chanting, they were saying one million as a numerical value.
* The Minutemen Music/{{Minutemen}} included a live version of their cover of "Don't Look Now" by Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival on ''Double Nickels On The Dime'', which is otherwise entirely a studio album. I had always wondered One would wonder why this was, especially since it's not a very clear recording of the song, and you can hear the audience talking over most of it. I figured It could figure maybe they really wanted the song to be on the album, but couldn't seem to do a good studio performance of it, so they just grabbed the best live recording they happened to have of it. Then I read reading the book from the 33 1/3 series on the album, and it was noted that a friend of the band had made the recording from the audience, and convinced them to use it because he thought the audience chatter actually added something to the song. It suddenly started to make sense: "Don't Look Now" is sort of about taking conveniences for granted (and more specifically the hard work that goes into those conveniences), so using a live recording where the audience seems to be too busy talking among themselves to hear the message of the song adds a level of irony. -Tropers/MikeK



* George Michaels song "Father figure" has squicked a few of my friends who think it is a paedophile singing to his next victim. I think its perspective of older man - younger partner stems from the narrator being a vampire. When he says he'll love his baby to the end of time, he ''really'' means it. -HQ42
* "Dirty Water" by The Standells has a couple of seemingly throwaway lyrics at the end that actually change the meaning of the whole song: "Have you heard about [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Strangler the strangler?]]\ I'm the man, I'm the man!". Unless those two lines are actually meant to be unconnected, that means it's actually a VillainSong from the point of view of an infamous serial killer. Definitely puts a creepier spin on lines like "But I'm wishin' and a-hopin' that just once those doors weren't locked". -Tropers/MikeK
* Hate to do another one of these so soon, but: There's a line in The Wrens' "Everyone Choose Sides" that makes much more sense when you know a bit of the backstory to ''The Meadowlands''. The Wrens put out their first two albums on an independent label called Grass Records. After this, the label was bought out and the new owner wanted the band to sign a bigger contract and record more radio-friendly songs. When they refused, they were dropped and their albums were pulled out of print. Grass Records subsequently became Wind-Up Records (whose most successful act was Music/{{Creed}}, by the way), and The Wrens were left quietly working on new material while simultaneously looking for a new label, which they eventually found 6 years later. Thus the somewhat punny TakeThat "Greener grasses fade from where you wind up". -Tropers/MikeK
* In Ana Ng by Music/TheyMightBeGiants there is the line "I saw this painted on a BRIDGE, "I don't want the world I just want your half." Guess what section of the song it happens in? Here's a hint, it's not in the verse, chorus, intro, or outro... also the answer is in caps. - {{brainlesswonder}}
* "Hey Ya!" by Music/{{Outkast}} was/is very popular and very catchy, yet has the culturally unpopular message that love fades. I always found it funny that no-one ever talks about the lyrics, then realized that the line 'Y'all don't want me here you just wanna dance' after a verse shows that the band predicted this phenomenon. After this, I've noticed many Outkast songs have lines that seem to bash mainstream music and ways of thinking, while remaining pop songs themselves. - {{Littleloup}}
* I was just listening to Music/SteelyDan's song "Black Friday", and the first line is "When Black Friday comes, I'll stand down by the door, and watch the gray men when they dive from the fourteenth floor." It just hit me: Many buildings don't have a thirteenth floor; they go straight from twelve to fourteen, so ''technically'' the fourteenth floor is actually the thirteenth. - Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
* For a while, I've been wondering why Music/{{Angelspit}} named a song "Homo-Machinery", as I was thinking of the name as the insult. Several months, many Biology lessons and another look at the lyrics later and it hit me... their point is that by following constant routines, we are becoming humanoid machines, or Homo machinery- Homo as in the genus. God, I'm an idiot sometimes...- @/{{Zadia}}
* I kept misreading the song on Music/ThemCrookedVultures self-titled as 'Interlude with Lutes', which made no sense but I figured it was just another WordSaladTitle that Josh Homme appears so fond. When I actually looked and saw it was 'Interlude with LUDES', the reason why it seemed so psychadelic compared to the rest of the album was suddenly so obvious - [[spoiler:the 'Ludes' of the title refer to Quaaludes.]] - {{Be}}
* "Grenade" by Bruno Mars would make so much more sense when viewed as being from a bodyguard's point of view. The bodyguard gets into a brief affair with his client, who decides to toy with his feelings. And although it hurts him, he's got no choice but to keep protecting her because it's his *** job. -- Tropers/MiraShio

to:

* George Michaels song "Father figure" has squicked a few of my friends who think Figure" can be squickworthy, thinking it is a paedophile singing to his next victim. I think its It's the perspective of an older man - younger partner stems stemming from the narrator being a vampire. When he says he'll love his baby to the end of time, he ''really'' means it. -HQ42
it.
* "Dirty Water" by The Standells has a couple of seemingly throwaway lyrics at the end that actually change the meaning of the whole song: "Have you heard about [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Strangler the strangler?]]\ I'm the man, I'm the man!". Unless those two lines are actually meant to be unconnected, that means it's actually a VillainSong from the point of view of an infamous serial killer. Definitely puts a creepier spin on lines like "But I'm wishin' and a-hopin' that just once those doors weren't locked". -Tropers/MikeK
locked".
* Hate to do another one of these so soon, but: There's a line in The Wrens' "Everyone Choose Sides" that makes much more sense when you know a bit of the backstory to ''The Meadowlands''. The Wrens put out their first two albums on an independent label called Grass Records. After this, the label was bought out and the new owner wanted the band to sign a bigger contract and record more radio-friendly songs. When they refused, they were dropped and their albums were pulled out of print. Grass Records subsequently became Wind-Up Records (whose most successful act was Music/{{Creed}}, by the way), and The Wrens were left quietly working on new material while simultaneously looking for a new label, which they eventually found 6 years later. Thus the somewhat punny TakeThat "Greener grasses fade from where you wind up". -Tropers/MikeK
* In Ana Ng by Music/TheyMightBeGiants there is the line "I saw this painted on a BRIDGE, "I don't want the world I just want your half." Guess what section of the song it happens in? Here's a hint, it's not in the verse, chorus, intro, or outro... also the answer is in caps. - {{brainlesswonder}}
up".
* "Hey Ya!" by Music/{{Outkast}} was/is very popular and very catchy, yet has the culturally unpopular message that love fades. I always found it funny Funny that no-one ever talks about the lyrics, then realized realizing that the line 'Y'all don't want me here you just wanna dance' after a verse shows that the band predicted this phenomenon. After this, I've noticed there's a notice where many Outkast songs have lines that seem to bash mainstream music and ways of thinking, while remaining pop songs themselves. - {{Littleloup}}
* I was just listening Listening to Music/SteelyDan's song "Black Friday", and the first line is "When Black Friday comes, I'll stand down by the door, and watch the gray men when they dive from the fourteenth floor." It just hit me: Many makes sense where many buildings don't have a thirteenth floor; they go straight from twelve to fourteen, so ''technically'' the fourteenth floor is actually the thirteenth. - Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
thirteenth.
* For a while, I've it's been wondering why Music/{{Angelspit}} named a song "Homo-Machinery", as I was there's assumed thinking of the name as the insult. Several months, many If one reads their Biology lessons and another look at the lyrics later and it hit me... lessons, their point is that by following constant routines, we are becoming humanoid machines, or Homo machinery- Homo as in the genus. God, I'm an idiot sometimes...- @/{{Zadia}}
genus.
* I kept There's a constant misreading on the song on Music/ThemCrookedVultures self-titled as song 'Interlude with Lutes', Lutes' by Music/ThemCrookedVultures, which made makes no sense but I figured sense, figuring it was just another WordSaladTitle that Josh Homme appears so fond. When I actually looked Looking over it and saw one will see it was as 'Interlude with LUDES', the reason why it seemed so psychadelic compared to the rest of the album was suddenly so obvious - [[spoiler:the 'Ludes' of the title refer to Quaaludes.]] - {{Be}}
]]
* "Grenade" by Bruno Mars would make so much more sense when viewed as being from a bodyguard's point of view. The bodyguard gets into a brief affair with his client, who decides to toy with his feelings. And although it hurts him, he's got no choice but to keep protecting her because it's his *** job. -- Tropers/MiraShiojob.



** I recently had a case of FridgeBrilliance with this song. The reason why the singer's "this is what I'd do for you" bits are describing things that would cause immense pain or death? It's the "I don't want to live after this girl dumped me" kind of song fused with the "I would do anything for you" kind of song. The whole thing is a collision of the "I love you" and "I hate you" kind of songs that are filled with hyperbole. This revalation made this song a whole lot deeper to me. Oh, and for WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows' confusion about the "Should've known you were trouble from the first kiss, had your eyes wide open" lyric? Maybe the first kiss happened when other people were around and the singer's knowledge of here eyes being open came from the other people who were there. - Tropers/{{Bobpiecheese}}

to:

** I recently had a There's another case of FridgeBrilliance with this song. The reason why the singer's "this is what I'd do for you" bits are describing things that would cause immense pain or death? It's the "I don't want to live after this girl dumped me" kind of song fused with the "I would do anything for you" kind of song. The whole thing is a collision of the "I love you" and "I hate you" kind of songs that are filled with hyperbole. This revalation made this song a whole lot deeper to me. Oh, and for WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows' confusion about the "Should've known you were trouble from the first kiss, had your eyes wide open" lyric? Maybe the first kiss happened when other people were around and the singer's knowledge of here eyes being open came from the other people who were there. - Tropers/{{Bobpiecheese}}



* In Music/TheyMightBeGiants' "Weep Day", there are the lines "I didn't write the words you hear me singing \ I didn't sing the line before this one", which fits in perfectly with the MindScrew self-contradiction of the rest of the lyrics. But John Flansburgh repeats those lyrics right after John Linnell sings them, and when ''he'' sings them, they're both true: Flansburgh didn't write the lyrics and didn't sing the previous line. - Tropers/MikeK
* I fell in love with 'Wedding Song' (the first track) from "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadestown Hadestown]]" by Anais Mitchell almost the first time I heard it. For those of you who don't know, the whole album is a "folk opera" based on the Greek myth [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orpheus Orpheus and Eurydice]], which is about a husband who goes down to Hell to bring his wife back to life. Originally I could only think about how sweet and romantic it was. Then after hearing 'Hey Little Songbird' all the way through a couple of times, I realised: 'Wedding Song' ''is'' sweet, but it's what brings Eurydice into this mess. She's freaking out about the wedding and he's all "don't worry about it, my natural talent will bring everything about because I am totally awesome", leaning on his voice to bring them all they'll ever need. And then when she sees Hadestown and meets Hades, he tempts her with riches and things that her husband isn't willing to work for to provide, leading to their eventual downfall. - Tropers/{{sadiebird}}
* Because it was sold out, I have Act II of Music/TheProtomen, but not Act I. So after hearing act II multiple times, I decided to go back to Act I. That's where I remember Proto Man's last lines, which serve as the overarchng theme to the opera: "A Hero's just a man who knows he's free." This is a BrokenAesop in Act I though, because the good guys are higher spec robots than their foes. Then Act II comes. One of the heroes is a guy named Joe, who is a norma member of Wily's society, except he realizes that something is wrong. Later he beats a Sniper Robot, before helping Light in his attempt to take Wily down. It is this act - this proof that humans ''can'' beat Wily's robots - is what turns an Average Joe into Sniper Joe. - {{Stinkoman87}}
* Re: Talking Heads - the Sand in the Vaseline collection drew connections I hadn't seen.

to:

* In Music/TheyMightBeGiants' "Weep Day", there are the lines "I didn't write the words you hear me singing \ I didn't sing the line before this one", which fits in perfectly with the MindScrew self-contradiction of the rest of the lyrics. But John Flansburgh repeats those lyrics right after John Linnell sings them, and when ''he'' sings them, they're both true: Flansburgh didn't write the lyrics and didn't sing the previous line. - Tropers/MikeK
* I fell in love with
'Wedding Song' (the first track) from "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadestown Hadestown]]" by Anais Mitchell almost the first time I heard it.Mitchell. For those of you who don't know, the whole album is a "folk opera" based on the Greek myth [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orpheus Orpheus and Eurydice]], which is about a husband who goes down to Hell to bring his wife back to life. Originally I Originally, one could only think about how sweet and romantic it was. Then after hearing 'Hey Little Songbird' all the way through a couple of times, I realised: there's a realization: 'Wedding Song' ''is'' sweet, but it's what brings Eurydice into this mess. She's freaking out about the wedding and he's all "don't worry about it, my natural talent will bring everything about because I am totally awesome", leaning on his voice to bring them all they'll ever need. And then when she sees Hadestown and meets Hades, he tempts her with riches and things that her husband isn't willing to work for to provide, leading to their eventual downfall. - Tropers/{{sadiebird}}
downfall.
* Because it was sold out, I To those who have have Act II of Music/TheProtomen, but not Act I. So I, and after hearing act II multiple times, I decided try to go back to Act I. That's where I one will remember Proto Man's last lines, which serve as the overarchng theme to the opera: "A Hero's just a man who knows he's free." This is a BrokenAesop in Act I though, because the good guys are higher spec robots than their foes. Then Act II comes. One of the heroes is a guy named Joe, who is a norma member of Wily's society, except he realizes that something is wrong. Later he beats a Sniper Robot, before helping Light in his attempt to take Wily down. It is this act - this proof that humans ''can'' beat Wily's robots - is what turns an Average Joe into Sniper Joe. - {{Stinkoman87}}
Joe.
* Re: Talking Music/Talking Heads - the Sand in the Vaseline collection drew connections I hadn't seen.can draw several unseeen connections:



** '(Nothing but) Flowers': is a inversion of the classic 'Big Yellow Taxi' and its lyric "They paved paradise and put in a parking lot" - when society fails (apocalypse?, end of gasoline reserves?), nature will reclaim the parking lot and other symbols of modernity. - {{Kpriv}}
*** 'And She Was' could alternately be about an affair. The lines about her moving above the earth could be an allegory to her graceful movements, 'She isn't sure just what she's done, no time to think about what to tell them, no time to think about what she's done' Them being her husband and children. - DrFlesh

to:

** '(Nothing but) Flowers': is a inversion of the classic 'Big Yellow Taxi' and its lyric "They paved paradise and put in a parking lot" - when society fails (apocalypse?, end of gasoline reserves?), nature will reclaim the parking lot and other symbols of modernity. - {{Kpriv}}
***
modernity.
**
'And She Was' could alternately be about an affair. The lines about her moving above the earth could be an allegory to her graceful movements, 'She isn't sure just what she's done, no time to think about what to tell them, no time to think about what she's done' Them being her husband and children. - DrFlesh



* The Music/PinkFloyd GreatestHitsAlbum ''Echoes'' has a few examples of deliberately placing songs from different eras of the band with similar lyrical themes next to each other. One such case took a while to fully creep up on me, namely following "Wish You Were Here" with "Jugband Blues". I knew enough about the background of both songs to get the most obvious significance of this: The former is often interpreted to be about original lead singer Syd Barrett's mental breakdown, and the latter is the last song Barrett wrote with the band (and can be viewed as a SanitySlippageSong). But why put "Wish You Were Here" first then? Well, because it makes "Jugband Blues" seem like an AnswerSong to "Wish You Were Here" despite being recorded first. Especially because of the first few lines: "It's awfully considerate of you to think of me here / and I'm much obliged to you for making it clear / that I'm not here" - Tropers/MikeK

to:

* The Music/PinkFloyd GreatestHitsAlbum ''Echoes'' has a few examples of deliberately placing songs from different eras of the band with similar lyrical themes next to each other. One such case took a while to fully creep up on me, namely following "Wish You Were Here" with "Jugband Blues". I knew If one knows enough about the background of both songs to get the most obvious significance of this: The former is often interpreted to be about original lead singer Syd Barrett's mental breakdown, and the latter is the last song Barrett wrote with the band (and can be viewed as a SanitySlippageSong). But why put "Wish You Were Here" first then? Well, because it makes "Jugband Blues" seem like an AnswerSong to "Wish You Were Here" despite being recorded first. Especially because of the first few lines: "It's awfully considerate of you to think of me here / and I'm much obliged to you for making it clear / that I'm not here" - Tropers/MikeKhere"



* Chameleon Circuit's song Exterminate, Regenerate features the lyrics: "No matter how hard you try to remove me, I think you will agree that if one of us dies then the other will too, I am locked in war with you." This song was a duet between Davros and the Doctor, but it could also be interpreted as a song about the fight between the Doctor and the Daleks, and indeed many people hear it this way. Now, the other day I realized: in the new series, nearly every time the Doctor regenerates, some Daleks die, therefore: "if one of us dies then the other will too"! Also, "I am locked in war with you"- subtle reference to the time-lock on the time war? I think so. Brilliance.
* Not exactly a moment regarding lyrical content, but of compositional brilliance: I have been working on arranging [[Music/{{Tool}} Lateralus]] for SATB performance, and as I listened, I realized--Tool used two major themes the whole time, but broke them down and made little alterations to it so you heard what sounded like totally different movements. There is the 9-8-7/8 of the main riff, and then the softer riff heard in the intro and middle section. It blew my mind when I realized it. This is coming from a (hopeful) future major in Music Theory & Composition. - Valbinooo
** It goes much [[http://www.peteofthestreet.net/sayz/C1151806467/E1494764863/ MUCH deeper than that.]] -DangerSwan333
* The song "Homecoming" off the Kanye West album ''Graduation'' (also released as "Home" on a previous mixtape) at first seems like a love song about a girl named Wendy. It isn't until hearing the last line "If you ain't know by now, I'm talkin' 'bout Chi-town" that you realize the girl he was talking about was actually West's hometown of Chicago. - Tropers/JesusByArmbar

to:

* Chameleon Circuit's Music/ChameleonCircuit's song Exterminate, Regenerate "Exterminate, Regenerate" features the lyrics: "No matter how hard you try to remove me, I think you will agree that if one of us dies then the other will too, I am locked in war with you." This song was a duet between Davros and the Doctor, but it could also be interpreted as a song about the fight between the Doctor and the Daleks, and indeed many people hear it this way. Now, Now on the other day I realized: in the new 2011 series, nearly every time the Doctor regenerates, some Daleks die, therefore: "if one of us dies then the other will too"! Also, "I am locked in war with you"- subtle reference to the time-lock on the time war? I think One thinks so. Brilliance.
* Not exactly a moment regarding lyrical content, but of compositional brilliance: I have been When working on arranging [[Music/{{Tool}} Lateralus]] for SATB performance, and as I listened, I realized--Tool one will realize while listening to it -- Tool used two major themes the whole time, but broke them down and made little alterations to it so you heard what sounded like totally different movements. There is the 9-8-7/8 of the main riff, and then the softer riff heard in the intro and middle section. It blew my mind when I realized it. This is coming from a (hopeful) future major in Music Theory & Composition. - Valbinooo
section.
** It goes much [[http://www.peteofthestreet.net/sayz/C1151806467/E1494764863/ MUCH deeper than that.]] -DangerSwan333
]]
* The song "Homecoming" off the Kanye West album ''Graduation'' (also released as "Home" on a previous mixtape) at first seems like a love song about a girl named Wendy. It isn't until hearing the last line "If you ain't know by now, I'm talkin' 'bout Chi-town" that you realize the girl he was talking about was actually West's hometown of Chicago. - Tropers/JesusByArmbar



** Also, Chicago is known as the Windy City, and a lot of people pronounce "Wendy" with an I.
* In Music/{{Pink}}'s music video for "Raise Your Glass", it bothered me that the non-outcasts were being treated like...um. Outcasts. Then came the prom scene: ''everybody's'' having fun; it's not the closer-to-average people who are being treated like that, just bullies. --@/RedWren
* Music/{{Queen}}'s ''39' isn't about someone who returns from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It's about an astronaut in 2039, who returns from colonising other planets to find that time dilation has made him only one year older while his love has grown old.
** Additional trivia: if one were to list all of Queen's studio album tracks in order, "39" would be the 39th song.
** "The Show Must Go On", which is about a dying performer, increases in tone by a half step in the second verse, giving the song a happier and more hopeful sound, [[HopeSpot only to return back to the original key before the chorus.]] Indeed, this was the last song the band recorded with Music/{{Freddie Mercury}} before his death.

to:

** Also, Chicago is known as the Windy City, and a lot of people pronounce "Wendy" with an I.
"I".
* In Music/{{Pink}}'s music video for "Raise Your Glass", it bothered me it's bothersome that the non-outcasts were being treated like...um.um... Outcasts. Then came the prom scene: ''everybody's'' having fun; it's not the closer-to-average people who are being treated like that, just bullies. --@/RedWren\n* Music/{{Queen}}'s ''39' isn't about someone who returns from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It's about an astronaut in 2039, who returns from colonising other planets to find that time dilation has made him only one year older while his love has grown old.\n** Additional trivia: if one were to list all of Queen's studio album tracks in order, "39" would be the 39th song.\n** "The Show Must Go On", which is about a dying performer, increases in tone by a half step in the second verse, giving the song a happier and more hopeful sound, [[HopeSpot only to return back to the original key before the chorus.]] Indeed, this was the last song the band recorded with Music/{{Freddie Mercury}} before his death.



* I always thought Papoose's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KH-eJODRWZI ''Gun of Mines'']] (also known as ''Drop It'') was just another gangsta rap track he put out, but when I took my first look at the [[http://www.lyricsmania.com/drop_it_lyrics_papoose.html lyrics]] realized the song title should have been "Gun to Mind", because it's a song that explores the advantages of both. For example, the chorus. It's basically Papoose asking, "Knowledge or Power/Violence: which one is more important to survival, and why?" The rest of the first half of the chorus is him saying knowledge is more important because the mind drives all action refines the ignorant, and gives man a way to protect himself from anything he may encounter, while the rest of the second half is him saying that when the *** hits the fan, power/violence is your umbrella. Further backed up by the fact that the first verse is the argument in defense of knowledge, while the third verse is the same for power. But that leaves the question: What about the second verse? The middle verse by Busta Rhymes basically bridges both ideas by basically saying they're both valid (and necessary) means of survival, which is why he lives by both.
* Music/FrankZappa's "Why Does It Hurt When I Pee" is obviously a parody of over-dramatic rock opera songs, and based on some crude humor, but consider this: What can be more heartbreaking than contracting an [=STD=] from someone you love and trust implicitly? -Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
* The video for Music/{{Iamamiwhoami}}'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VduvB5xY2L0 "Clump"]] alternates between a static shot of Jonna Lee from the neck up lip-synching while laying on a toilet paper bed and bobbing up and down rather suggestively, and outdoor scenes in a thicket of tall grass and reeds. Sometimes the latter shots only occur for half a second. It took someone's youtube comment to make me realize that they cut to the outdoor shots every time Jonna closes her eyes, and cut back to her on the bed every time she opens them again. Thus, those scenes are apparently what she sees when her eyes are closed, or just what she's imagining. Tropers/MikeK
* The classic '80s song "867-5309/Jenny" by Music/TommyTutone contains the lines "Jenny, Jenny, you're the girl for me/You don't know me but you make me so happy." That rhyme is a bit of a stretch. Can you think of a different word that starts with H and rhymes better with "for me"? — Tropers/{{Skagway}}
* Marilyn Manson's song "Kaboom Kaboom". The lyrics in one part is "I hope this hook gets caught in your mouth." When I was younger (15 or so), my mind always went to someone with a fishhook in their mouth. Okay, typical Marilyn Manson imagery. It was only until just recently (I'm 20 now) that I realized it's also a bit of Fridge Brilliance/Logic: The part of the song that line is in IS the hook! He's saying "I hope this song sticks with you, long enough for you to start singing it." -N37
* The line "kick out the jams" among the rebel slogans in Music/DavidBowie's "Cygnet Committee" seems like {{Narm}} born of ignorance with the knowledge that "kick out the jams" wasn't meant to be anything subversive or countercultural, as many theories had it, but just a way of telling the audience "do I look like [[Music/TheGratefulDead Jerry Garcia]] to you?!" However, recall that the song was inspired by the creative bankruptcy Bowie saw in the Arts Lab he had been trying to set up, when people would go for his performances, contributing nothing, a kind of dynamic being not only endorsed but ''enforced'' by [=MC5=] - he knew ''exactly'' what it meant, tying the two "acts" together. - Tropers/TwinBird
* Exist Trace: An all female VisualKei metal band 4/5 of whom are {{Bifauxnen}}... in a genre where pretty much the same proportion of ''men'' are WholesomeCrossdressers! -Yun
* Self's "Trunk Full Of Amps" would practically be a SingleStanzaSong if not for the fact that every verse namechecks a different rock band or vocalist ("Got a trunk full of amps, mother***er / like (insert musician here), mother***er!"). What do all the acts mentioned have in common beyond being famous rock musicians? They all have songs prominently featuring the word "mother" (or "mama") in their titles or lyrics! Lenny Kravitz's "Mama Said", Music/ElectricLightOrchestra's "Mama" (or possibly "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle"), Music/{{Queen}}'s "Tie Your Mother Down" (or less obviously "Bohemian Rhapsody") and of course Music/{{Danzig}}'s "Mother". - Tropers/MikeK
* Music/BlueManGroup, "The Complex". The line in question is "I work on the highest floor / there's nothing in my way / but I saw my picture on the bathroom door / today". It took me a while to figure out what that means. Why would they put someone's picture on a bathroom door? And then I remembered that a lot of bathroom doors have one of [[http://www.clker.com/cliparts/8/2/c/d/12065700491766772417johnny_automatic_Accommodations_2.svg.med.png these]], and realized: The singer is concerned about losing his individuality and identity.
* When I first heard Music/BadBrains' "Sacred Love", I thought it was a good song somewhat ruined by a gratuitous vocal effect that made H.R. sound like he was singing through a telephone... Then I found out he ''was'' singing through a telephone - he was doing jail time for marijuana distribution while the album was still being finished, so the producer suggested he finish the vocals for that song by phone. Given the circumstances, it's an extremely good vocal performance. - Tropers/MikeK
* I've listened to ''Les Miserables'' for years, since I was too little to understand it. Recently I realized how "What Have I Done" (Jean Valjean's epiphany from Act One) and "Javert's Suicide" (Javert's epiphany from Act Two) basically mirror each other musically - except for the ending. Valjean, having been shown true Christian kindness by the Bishop, sees an opportunity to become a new man and make up for the time he has lost. Javert, on the other hand, is shown Christian kindness by Valjean and is forced to see what ''he'' has done to himself by doggedly pursuing Valjean, and sees no other way out except to kill himself. -CuteQueenPika
** On a related note, Javert is the only character in ''Les Miserables'' who actually dies ''miserable.'' Think about it: Fantine dies knowing Cosette is safe, Eponine dies saving the love of her life, Enjolras and the other students die fighting for their causes, and Valjean dies surrounded by the family he has created. Javert is the only one who dies alone and conflicted. -CuteQueenPika
* A Music/MyChemicalRomance example; Danger Days is incredidably pop-based, which was a turn-off to some fans. I was one of those fans, however, I decided to give the album a second listen before writing it off as crap, and found it a lot more enjoyable the second time around. That's not the brilliance part. The next day, contemplating how awesome the album was, something occured to me -- the album is being broadcasted from a radio station. What does the radio play more than anything else? Pop. That was the brilliance part.
** Keeping in theme, the first half of the album is relatively upbeat and rebellious. Then, Dr. Death Defying chimes in with a news report about the death of two killjoys. From that point forward, the album takes a much more serious tone, since it's no longer "just fun and games"

to:

* I always thought You think that Papoose's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KH-eJODRWZI ''Gun of Mines'']] (also known as ''Drop It'') was just another gangsta rap track he put out, but when I took my first you take a look at the [[http://www.lyricsmania.com/drop_it_lyrics_papoose.html lyrics]] realized lyrics]], you'll realize the song title should have been "Gun to Mind", because it's a song that explores the advantages of both. For example, the chorus. It's basically Papoose asking, "Knowledge or Power/Violence: which one is more important to survival, and why?" The rest of the first half of the chorus is him saying knowledge is more important because the mind drives all action refines the ignorant, and gives man a way to protect himself from anything he may encounter, while the rest of the second half is him saying that when the *** shit hits the fan, power/violence is your umbrella. Further backed up by the fact that the first verse is the argument in defense of knowledge, while the third verse is the same for power. But that leaves the question: What about the second verse? The middle verse by Busta Rhymes basically bridges both ideas by basically saying they're both valid (and necessary) means of survival, which is why he lives by both.
* Music/FrankZappa's "Why Does It Hurt When I Pee" is obviously a parody of over-dramatic rock opera songs, and based on some crude humor, but consider this: What can be more heartbreaking than contracting an [=STD=] from someone you love and trust implicitly? -Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
implicitly?
* The video for Music/{{Iamamiwhoami}}'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VduvB5xY2L0 "Clump"]] alternates between a static shot of Jonna Lee from the neck up lip-synching while laying on a toilet paper bed and bobbing up and down rather suggestively, and outdoor scenes in a thicket of tall grass and reeds. Sometimes the latter shots only occur for half a second. It took someone's youtube comment to make me realize that they cut to the outdoor shots every time Jonna closes her eyes, and cut back to her on the bed every time she opens them again. Thus, those scenes are apparently what she sees when her eyes are closed, or just what she's imagining. Tropers/MikeK
imagining.
* The classic '80s song "867-5309/Jenny" by Music/TommyTutone contains the lines "Jenny, Jenny, you're the girl for me/You don't know me but you make me so happy." That rhyme is a bit of a stretch. Can you think of a different word that starts with H and rhymes better with "for me"? — Tropers/{{Skagway}}
me"?
* Marilyn Manson's song "Kaboom Kaboom". The lyrics in one part is "I hope this hook gets caught in your mouth." When I was younger (15 or so), my At initial thought, your mind always went would go to someone with a fishhook in their mouth. Okay, typical Marilyn Manson imagery. It was only until just recently (I'm 20 now) that I realized Until you realize it's also a bit of Fridge Brilliance/Logic: The part of the song that line is in IS the hook! He's saying "I hope this song sticks with you, long enough for you to start singing it." -N37
"
* The line "kick out the jams" among the rebel slogans in Music/DavidBowie's "Cygnet Committee" seems like {{Narm}} born of ignorance with the knowledge that "kick out the jams" wasn't meant to be anything subversive or countercultural, as many theories had it, but just a way of telling the audience "do I look like [[Music/TheGratefulDead Jerry Garcia]] to you?!" However, recall that the song was inspired by the creative bankruptcy Bowie saw in the Arts Lab he had been trying to set up, when people would go for his performances, contributing nothing, a kind of dynamic being not only endorsed but ''enforced'' by [=MC5=] - he knew ''exactly'' what it meant, tying the two "acts" together. - Tropers/TwinBird
together.
* Exist Trace: An all female VisualKei metal band 4/5 of whom are {{Bifauxnen}}... in a genre where pretty much the same proportion of ''men'' are WholesomeCrossdressers! -Yun
WholesomeCrossdressers!
* Self's "Trunk Full Of Amps" would practically be a SingleStanzaSong if not for the fact that every verse namechecks a different rock band or vocalist ("Got a trunk full of amps, mother***er / like (insert musician here), mother***er!"). What do all the acts mentioned have in common beyond being famous rock musicians? They all have songs prominently featuring the word "mother" (or "mama") in their titles or lyrics! Lenny Kravitz's "Mama Said", Music/ElectricLightOrchestra's "Mama" (or possibly "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle"), Music/{{Queen}}'s "Tie Your Mother Down" (or less obviously "Bohemian Rhapsody") and of course Music/{{Danzig}}'s "Mother". - Tropers/MikeK
"Mother".
* Music/BlueManGroup, "The Complex". The line in question is "I work on the highest floor / there's nothing in my way / but I saw my picture on the bathroom door / today". It took me will take you a while to figure out what that means. Why would they put someone's picture on a bathroom door? And then I remembered you'll remember that a lot of bathroom doors have one of [[http://www.clker.com/cliparts/8/2/c/d/12065700491766772417johnny_automatic_Accommodations_2.svg.med.png these]], and realized: The singer is concerned about losing his individuality and identity.
* When I first heard hearing Music/BadBrains' "Sacred Love", I thought it was you'll think it's a good song somewhat ruined by a gratuitous vocal effect that made H.R. sound like he was singing through a telephone... Then I found you'll find out he ''was'' singing through a telephone - he was doing jail time for marijuana distribution while the album was still being finished, so the producer suggested he finish the vocals for that song by phone. Given the circumstances, it's an extremely good vocal performance. - Tropers/MikeK
performance.
* I've listened to ''Les Miserables'' for years, since I was too little to understand it. Recently I realized ''Theatre/LesMiserables'': You'll realize how "What Have I Done" (Jean Valjean's epiphany from Act One) and "Javert's Suicide" (Javert's epiphany from Act Two) basically mirror each other musically - except for the ending. Valjean, having been shown true Christian kindness by the Bishop, sees an opportunity to become a new man and make up for the time he has lost. Javert, on the other hand, is shown Christian kindness by Valjean and is forced to see what ''he'' has done to himself by doggedly pursuing Valjean, and sees no other way out except to kill himself. -CuteQueenPika
himself.
** On a related note, Javert is the only character in ''Les Miserables'' who actually dies ''miserable.'' Think about it: Fantine dies knowing Cosette is safe, Eponine dies saving the love of her life, Enjolras and the other students die fighting for their causes, and Valjean dies surrounded by the family he has created. Javert is the only one who dies alone and conflicted. -CuteQueenPika
conflicted.
* A Music/MyChemicalRomance example; Danger Days "Danger Days" is incredidably pop-based, which was a turn-off to some fans. I was However, If one of those fans, however, I decided decides to give the album a second listen before writing it off as crap, and found one will find it a lot more enjoyable the second time around. That's not the brilliance part. The next day, contemplating To contemplate how awesome the album was, something occured to me was -- the album is being broadcasted from a radio station. What does the radio play more than anything else? Pop. That was the brilliance part.
** Keeping in theme, the first half of the album is relatively upbeat and rebellious. Then, Dr. "Dr. Death Defying Defying" chimes in with a news report about the death of two killjoys. From that point forward, the album takes a much more serious tone, since it's no longer "just fun and games"games".



* This may in fact just be me reading too much into things in order to solve my own [[Headscratchers/HomePage headscratcher]], but... in {{Music/Nirvana}}'s "Sliver" the line "fell asleep and watched TV" always struck me as a LyricalShoehorn, and not even a particularly necessary one, because the more logical "watched TV and fell asleep" would have fit just as well. However, you sort of ''could'' sleep while watching TV - if you fall asleep with the TV on, for a little while you could still be just alert enough to sort of follow what's going on by hearing dialogue. - Tropers/MikeK
* I used to hate Lady Gaga's "Paparazzi," because I have done a lot of reading about true crime, I learned a lot about stalkers who act all romantic long enough to control a person, isolate them, and possibly kill them if the real person doesn't measure up with the image the stalker has invented to feel good about him/herself, so I hated listening to people singing "I'll follow you until you love me" as though that was romantic and loving when I knew how many people had died in situations like that, until I told my brother about this and he explained that, in the music video, people actually did die, so appearently Gaga knew what she was talking about, so now I love to listen to the song to mock the people who listen to the song.
** Second level of FB that just occurred to me reading my previous: people think the song is romantic, but it's actually about a type of psychopath that people think are romantics, so they fall for the fake romance in the song the way they would fall for it in real life
* "Tribute" by Tenacious D is a legendary story about two young rockers and their DealWithTheDevil (actually "a shiny demon") in a friendly music competition that results in them creating: "The Greatest Song in the World". The joke is, of course, that they couldn't remember the song that they ACTUALLY played that day, and that this song is "just a tribute". Then it occurred to me that any song worthy of the title: "Greatest Song in the World" could never actually be PLAYED. The moment that you HEAR a song, you automatically categorize it and compare it to every other song you've heard, which reduces its greatness. So the "Greatest" Song in the World would have to be the one that only exists in the listener's imagination. -- Draconius
** Also on Tenacious D is the subtle realization that everything J.B.'s father said to him in "Kickapoo" was correct. The Pick of Destiny, the source of all great rock musicians, was forged from the Devil's fang. Gaining its power cause J.B. to fall out with his best friend and lose direction in his life. Eventually, it causes them to deliver the Pick into the Devil's hands. His father had warned him that rock came from the Devil and would cause J.B. to lose his heart and become a puppet of the Devil. -- [=TSBasilisk=]
* At first I thought the Lupe Fiasco's "Dumb It Down" was just a bit of irony; the lyrics in the song are far from dumbed down, they're possibly the most complicated lyrics I've read. But when I saw the video for the song, which is in black and white, and only really features Lupe and a few other people, I realised how brilliant the song was. Everything has been dumbed down, EXCEPT the lyrics. The song also ends with 'but I flatly refuse I ain't dumb down nothing.' Which confused me until I realised that he hasnt dumbed down anything that matters. He's dumbed down everything but the lyrics, and uses just the lyrics themselves to show how much he doesnt need fancy videos and money etc. The lyrics are all that matter.
* Bush's "Glycerine" has a seemingly arbitrary Music/TheBeatles ShoutOut ("...when we rise it's like strawberry fields"), while "Everything Zen" has an equally arbitrary Music/DavidBowie ShoutOut ("Minnie Mouse has grown up a cow, Dave's on sale again"). The thing "Strawberry Fields" and "Life On Mars?" happen to have in common is WordSaladLyrics, something Bush themselves are also known for. Maybe those shout outs are their way of saying "Yeah, none of this makes any sense, but hey, you let The Beatles and David Bowie get away with it..." - Tropers/MikeK
* "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" by The Charlie Daniels Band seems to show Johnny victorious, but that's only in the short term. In beating the Devil, Johnny claimed a golden fiddle and mockingly declared his superiority, thus commiting two of the SevenDeadlySins: Greed and Pride. Not only that, but he did so in full knowledge that taking the bet was a sin. As such, he has committed at least one mortal sin, potentially ***ing his soul. So long as Johnny does not repent and gain forgiveness, the Devil was the real winner. - [=TSBasilisk=]

to:

* This may in fact just be me reading too much into things in order to solve my own [[Headscratchers/HomePage headscratcher]], but... in In {{Music/Nirvana}}'s "Sliver" the line "fell asleep and watched TV" always struck me strikes as a LyricalShoehorn, and not even a particularly necessary one, because the more logical "watched TV and fell asleep" would have fit just as well. However, you sort of ''could'' sleep while watching TV - if you fall asleep with the TV on, for a little while you could still be just alert enough to sort of follow what's going on by hearing dialogue. - Tropers/MikeK
dialogue.
* I used to hate Lady Gaga's On Music/LadyGaga's "Paparazzi," because I have done if one does a lot of reading about true crime, I learned one would learn a lot about stalkers who act all romantic long enough to control a person, isolate them, and possibly kill them if the real person doesn't measure up with the image the stalker has invented to feel good about him/herself, so I hated one would hate listening to people singing "I'll follow you until you love me" as though that was romantic and loving when I knew one should know how many people had died in situations like that, until I told my brother about this and he explained theres an explanation that, in the music video, people actually did die, so appearently Gaga knew what she was talking about, so now I love there's a new brilliance to listen to the song to mock the people who listen to the song.
** Second level of FB that just occurred to me reading my the previous: people think the song is romantic, but it's actually about a type of psychopath that people think are romantics, so they fall for the fake romance in the song the way they would fall for it in real life
life.
* "Tribute" by Tenacious D is a legendary story about two young rockers and their DealWithTheDevil (actually "a shiny demon") in a friendly music competition that results in them creating: "The Greatest Song in the World". The joke is, of course, that they couldn't remember the song that they ACTUALLY played that day, and that this song is "just a tribute". Then it occurred to me that any song worthy of the title: "Greatest Song in the World" could never actually be PLAYED. The moment that you HEAR a song, you automatically categorize it and compare it to every other song you've heard, which reduces its greatness. So the "Greatest" Song in the World would have to be the one that only exists in the listener's imagination. -- Draconius
imagination.
** Also on Tenacious D is the subtle realization that everything J.B.'s father said to him in "Kickapoo" was correct. The Pick of Destiny, the source of all great rock musicians, was forged from the Devil's fang. Gaining its power cause J.B. to fall out with his best friend and lose direction in his life. Eventually, it causes them to deliver the Pick into the Devil's hands. His father had warned him that rock came from the Devil and would cause J.B. to lose his heart and become a puppet of the Devil. -- [=TSBasilisk=]
Devil.
* At first I the thought the that Lupe Fiasco's "Dumb It Down" was just a bit of irony; the lyrics in the song are far from dumbed down, they're possibly the most complicated lyrics I've to be ever read. But when I saw seeing the video for the song, which is in black and white, and only really features Lupe and a few other people, I realised there's a realization on how brilliant the song was. Everything has been dumbed down, EXCEPT the lyrics. The song also ends with 'but I flatly refuse I ain't dumb down nothing.' Which confused me is confusing until I realised that there's another realization he hasnt dumbed down anything that matters. He's dumbed down everything but the lyrics, and uses just the lyrics themselves to show how much he doesnt need fancy videos and money etc. The lyrics are all that matter.
* Bush's "Glycerine" has a seemingly arbitrary Music/TheBeatles ShoutOut ("...when we rise it's like strawberry fields"), while "Everything Zen" has an equally arbitrary Music/DavidBowie ShoutOut ("Minnie Mouse has grown up a cow, Dave's on sale again"). The thing "Strawberry Fields" and "Life On Mars?" happen to have in common is WordSaladLyrics, something Bush themselves are also known for. Maybe those shout outs are their way of saying "Yeah, none of this makes any sense, but hey, you let The Beatles and David Bowie get away with it..." - Tropers/MikeK
"
* "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" by The Charlie Daniels Band seems to show Johnny victorious, but that's only in the short term. In beating the Devil, Johnny claimed a golden fiddle and mockingly declared his superiority, thus commiting two of the SevenDeadlySins: Greed and Pride. Not only that, but he did so in full knowledge that taking the bet was a sin. As such, he has committed at least one mortal sin, potentially ***ing his soul. So long as Johnny does not repent and gain forgiveness, the Devil was the real winner. - [=TSBasilisk=]



* It took me a while to appreciate "Your Ex-Lover is Dead" by the Canadian band Stars, and an even longer while wondering about the title, when the song clearly depicted both parties alive and well. I just thought the lyrics merely highlighted the fact that their breakup was mutual, and it was their relationship which was "dead." Eventually, it hit me: "ex-lover" refers to the person they once fell in love with, and now, seeing each other again after all that time, and declaring that they had no regrets concerning their relationship, that person is now "dead."
* I listened to a few Anarchy Club albums and thought they were good but slightly meh; they were just standard angry rock. Then I had one bad day and listened to their "The Way And It's Power" album. That's when it clicked: the songs weren't angry, they were bitter. "King of Everything" isn't an egotistical song about how cool the lead singer is; it's a mission statement about how much the lead singer isn't going to let himself be put-down by how much *** life and other people have served him. "Kill For You" isn't about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and thus is going to take it out on everyone else; it's about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and was left so depressed and desperate by it that he was left no other option but to take it out on others. When the album's tone was shifted from unneeded anger and violence to a highly bitter violent reaction to a highly bitter and violent world ("I'm sick and tired of the sick and tired..."), it went from meh and unneeded to something genuinely awe-inspiring and relevant. Now I love their work.
* Syndicate, by the Fray, has an interesting way of making the song related to the title. The beginning riff and the riff that plays throughout the song are in 3/4, as well as the bridge. The rest is in 4/4. Thus, the song is syndicating two different time signatures.
* The Linkin Park album, "A Thousand Suns", starts off with small portion of "The Catalyst", the penultimate track on said album, creating a sort of BookEnds effect. However, halfway through is a track called "Jornuda del Muerto", which is basically the words "Moshiagete, tokihanashite" ("Lift me up, Let me go") repeated a couple of times to a slower version of "The Catalyst"s melody. It seems as if the entire album actually slowly builds up tension and has its climax at "The Catalyst", the same way a movie would build up tension, while also foreshadowing both at the beginning and the middle.
* In the Complete History of the Soviet Union, Arranged to the Melody of Tetris, there is a bit which goes "what's the point of it all, when you're building a wall, and in front of your eyes it disappears". It first seemed to me like this was about the Berlin wall coming down very suddenly - but also when you complete one or more continuous layers in Tetris, the lines you have just made disappear.
* In the Genesis song Stagnation on their second album Trespass, there's a line that goes "I wanna sit down" repeated. The next line, also repeated, is "I wanna drink". This all fine and dandy at first, but in the album's liner notes, it says the song is about the last survivor of a nuclear apocalypse. It just turns out that fatigue and extreme thirst are the earliest symptoms of radiation poisoning.

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* It took me takes a while to appreciate "Your Ex-Lover is Dead" by the Canadian band Stars, and an even longer while wondering about the title, when the song clearly depicted both parties alive and well. I just thought There's an assumption that the lyrics merely highlighted the fact that their breakup was mutual, and it was their relationship which was "dead." Eventually, it hit me: strikes the thought: "ex-lover" refers to the person they once fell in love with, and now, seeing each other again after all that time, and declaring that they had no regrets concerning their relationship, that person is now "dead."
* I listened Listening to a few Anarchy Club albums and thought one might think they were are good but slightly meh; they were just standard angry rock. Then I had one bad day and listened rock. But when listening to their "The Way And It's Power" album. That's album, that's when it clicked: clicks: the songs weren't angry, they were bitter. "King of Everything" isn't an egotistical song about how cool the lead singer is; it's a mission statement about how much the lead singer isn't going to let himself be put-down by how much *** life and other people have served him. "Kill For You" isn't about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and thus is going to take it out on everyone else; it's about a man who was dumped by his girlfriend and was left so depressed and desperate by it that he was left no other option but to take it out on others. When the album's tone was shifted from unneeded anger and violence to a highly bitter violent reaction to a highly bitter and violent world ("I'm sick and tired of the sick and tired..."), it went from meh and unneeded to something genuinely awe-inspiring and relevant. Now I love their work.
relevant.
* Syndicate, "Syndicate", by the Fray, Music/TheFray, has an interesting way of making the song related to the title. The beginning riff and the riff that plays throughout the song are in 3/4, as well as the bridge. The rest is in 4/4. Thus, the song is syndicating two different time signatures.
* The Linkin Park Music/LinkinPark album, "A Thousand Suns", starts off with small portion of "The Catalyst", the penultimate track on said album, creating a sort of BookEnds effect. However, halfway through is a track called "Jornuda del Muerto", which is basically the words "Moshiagete, tokihanashite" ("Lift me up, Let me go") repeated a couple of times to a slower version of "The Catalyst"s melody. It seems as if the entire album actually slowly builds up tension and has its climax at "The Catalyst", the same way a movie would build up tension, while also foreshadowing both at the beginning and the middle.
* In the Complete "Complete History of the Soviet Union, Arranged to the Melody of Tetris, Tetris", there is a bit which goes "what's the point of it all, when you're building a wall, and in front of your eyes it disappears". It first seemed to me like this was about the Berlin wall coming down very suddenly - but also when you complete one or more continuous layers in Tetris, the lines you have just made disappear.
* In the Genesis Music/{{Genesis}} song Stagnation "Stagnation" on their second album Trespass, "Trespass", there's a line that goes "I wanna sit down" repeated. The next line, also repeated, is "I wanna drink". This all fine and dandy at first, but in the album's liner notes, it says the song is about the last survivor of a nuclear apocalypse. It just turns out that fatigue and extreme thirst are the earliest symptoms of radiation poisoning.



* Same goes for "Another One Bites The Dust" by Queen. Less appropriate, probably, but still has the correct number of BPM.
* While listening to the Katy Perry song "Circle the Drain", which was about a breakup caused by drug addiction, I never understood the dismal, ugly note at the end of the song. Then, I realized that it could very well symbolize the bitterness of the breakup, or the death of the singer at the hands of her drug addict boyfriend.

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* ** Same goes for "Another One Bites The Dust" by Queen.Music/{{Queen}}. Less appropriate, probably, but still has the correct number of BPM.
* While listening to the Katy Perry Music/KatyPerry song "Circle the Drain", which was about a breakup caused by drug addiction, I one might never understood understand the dismal, ugly note at the end of the song. Then, I realized one will realize that it could very well symbolize the bitterness of the breakup, or the death of the singer at the hands of her drug addict boyfriend.



* "Glass Sandwich" by {{Music/Primus}} is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable to me at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title.

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* "Glass Sandwich" by {{Music/Primus}} is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable to me at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title.



* Guns N' Roses's probably least popular album, "Chinese Democracy" has several examples of this. The final track on the album, "Prostitute" is probably the most brilliant example. It isn't a love song, it isn't about a prostitute or anything else you'd expect. Nope. It's a message from Axl to '''the fans'''! "If my affections are misunderstood, and you decide I'm up to no good, don't ask me to enjoy them just for you" at first sounds like he's referring to a someone a girlfriend knows (poosibly parents), but when you think about it, it's not. He is referring to the classic line-up (Slash, Izzy, Duff and Steve/Matt). Took forever to realize this. The last chorus is basically Axl saying he'll never make music for the money, if it means compromising his own enjoyment.
* In Aqualung by Music/JethroTull , the beginning and ending have hard guitars while the middle is more upbeat and uses folk guitars. The I realized: the harder parts tell how other people see Aqualung (a homeless guy), while the middle shows how Aqualung sees himself!

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* Guns N' Roses's Music/GunsNRoses's probably least popular album, "Chinese Democracy" has several examples of this. The final track on the album, "Prostitute" is probably the most brilliant example. It isn't a love song, it isn't about a prostitute or anything else you'd expect. Nope. It's a message from Axl to '''the fans'''! "If my affections are misunderstood, and you decide I'm up to no good, don't ask me to enjoy them just for you" at first sounds like he's referring to a someone a girlfriend knows (poosibly parents), but when you think about it, it's not. He is referring to the classic line-up (Slash, Izzy, Duff and Steve/Matt). Took forever to realize this. The last chorus is basically Axl saying he'll never make music for the money, if it means compromising his own enjoyment.
* In Aqualung by Music/JethroTull , the beginning and ending have hard guitars while the middle is more upbeat and uses folk guitars. The I realized: Then, realization: the harder parts tell how other people see Aqualung (a homeless guy), while the middle shows how Aqualung sees himself!



** "Glad To Be Here" sounds like someone who's suicidal, but really it's just how he sees Guns N' Roses. The constant chaos in GNR is driving him so crazy that he feels that between killing himself and dealing with Axl Rose's constant chaos, killing himself would be the ''preferable'' option. And yet, he's glad he's there because at least that way he can get out and play for more people than a small venue can hold. The fact that he had 3 weeks to learn the 12 songs from "Chinese Democracy" from start to finish and he only had time to hear each song once, only underscores how chaotic GNR was at that time. No wonder the guy became suicidal!
* In the children's song "Found A Peanut," I wondered why the singer needed an operation to cure a case of food poisoning. Then I realized, that's why the singer dies! Not from eating the rotten peanut, but because the doctor was incompetent enough to perform unnecessary surgery, since a rotten peanut isn't something you'd need to surgically remove from someone's body.

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** "Glad To Be Here" sounds like someone who's suicidal, but really it's just how he sees Guns N' Roses.Music/GunsNRoses. The constant chaos in GNR is driving him so crazy that he feels that between killing himself and dealing with Axl Rose's constant chaos, killing himself would be the ''preferable'' option. And yet, he's glad he's there because at least that way he can get out and play for more people than a small venue can hold. The fact that he had 3 weeks to learn the 12 songs from "Chinese Democracy" from start to finish and he only had time to hear each song once, only underscores how chaotic GNR was at that time. No wonder the guy became suicidal!
* In the children's song "Found A Peanut," I wondered one would wonder why the singer needed an operation to cure a case of food poisoning. Then I realized, one realizes something, that's why the singer dies! Not from eating the rotten peanut, but because the doctor was incompetent enough to perform unnecessary surgery, since a rotten peanut isn't something you'd need to surgically remove from someone's body.



* Creator/MarkPrindle's [[Music/HenryRollins Rollins Band]] page had [[http://markprindle.com/rollinsband.htm#weighting one for the song "Liar"]] that prompted one of my own: He pointed out how he thought the chorus was just poorly written, until he realized the guitar riff was meant to emulate the playground chant "liar, liar, pants on fire". This made me realize how the backing music is used to complement the lyrics: The verse sections are uncharacteristically mellow and jazzy because the narrator is trying to lull you into believing him, and the chorus is deliberately grating and childish-sounding because he's mocking you for falling for his lies.
* In "I Need a Doctor" by Dr. Dre (featuring Eminem and Skylar Gray), the chorus goes "I need a doctor, doctor, to bring me back to life". The first time Gray sings it, you hear the sound of a heart rate monitor that starts beeping, then flatlines. Two choruses later, at probably the most dramatic point in the song, the heart rate monitor sound comes back, first a flatline, then it starts beeping. Immediately afterwards Dre comes in for his verse. It took me five years to realize what they did with the heart rate monitor sounds: the doctor brought her back to life. That's genius.

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* Creator/MarkPrindle's [[Music/HenryRollins Rollins Band]] page had [[http://markprindle.com/rollinsband.htm#weighting one for the song "Liar"]] that prompted one of my own: fridge moment: He pointed out how he thought the chorus was just poorly written, until he realized the guitar riff was meant to emulate the playground chant "liar, liar, pants on fire". This made me realize realization on how the backing music is used to complement the lyrics: The verse sections are uncharacteristically mellow and jazzy because the narrator is trying to lull you into believing him, and the chorus is deliberately grating and childish-sounding because he's mocking you for falling for his lies.
* In "I Need a Doctor" by Dr. Dre Music/DrDre (featuring Eminem and Skylar Gray), the chorus goes "I need a doctor, doctor, to bring me back to life". The first time Gray sings it, you hear the sound of a heart rate monitor that starts beeping, then flatlines. Two choruses later, at probably the most dramatic point in the song, the heart rate monitor sound comes back, first a flatline, then it starts beeping. Immediately afterwards Dre comes in for his verse. It took me five may take years to realize what they did with the heart rate monitor sounds: the doctor brought her back to life. That's genius.



** There's a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim who tries to escape from or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, I thought of something: what if the wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the victim was her abusive husband?

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** There's a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim who tries to escape from or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, I a thought of something: what if the wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the victim was her abusive husband?



* I already liked Music/JonathanCoulton 's song "Code Monkey", but I like it even more now that I realise exactly why he hates his job so much. He's bad at it. His code doesn't necessarily have to be elegant, but it should at least be functional, when he's depressed he pretends to work and he'd rather be jobless and mooching around. - TheGerkuman

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* I already liked One would like Music/JonathanCoulton 's song "Code Monkey", but I one would like it even more now that I realise the realization on exactly why he hates his job so much. He's bad at it. His code doesn't necessarily have to be elegant, but it should at least be functional, when he's depressed he pretends to work and he'd rather be jobless and mooching around. - TheGerkuman



* “I was lost without you” on the mass effect 3 soundtrack, it’s the romance theme and you have to find and save your squad members in the game, they are the ones who are lost without you
* I always thought it was weird that "Dark Horse" by Music/KatyPerry contains the lyrics "Make me your Aphrodite", because the music video takes place in Ancient Egypt and Aphrodite is an Ancient Greek goddess. But then I remembered that Alexander the Great, who was Greek, conquered Egypt and brought Greek culture to Egypt. After Alexander's death, one of his generals named Ptolemy became pharaoh, and all of the Ptolemy pharoahs (who were descended from him2 were also Greek. Because Alexander brought Greek culture to all the lands he conquered and the Greek Ptolemys worshipped their gods while they ruled Egypt, Aphrodite would have been worshipped in Ancient Egypt under the Ptolemys. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting That probably wasn't intentional by the songwriters, but the video makes more sense now.]]

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* “I was lost without you” on the mass effect 3 ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'' soundtrack, it’s the romance theme and you have to find and save your squad members in the game, they are the ones who are lost without you
you.
* I always thought it was It would be weird that "Dark Horse" by Music/KatyPerry contains the lyrics "Make me your Aphrodite", because the music video takes place in Ancient Egypt and Aphrodite is an Ancient Greek goddess. But then I remembered you'll remember that Alexander the Great, who was Greek, conquered Egypt and brought Greek culture to Egypt. After Alexander's death, one of his generals named Ptolemy became pharaoh, Pharaoh, and all of the Ptolemy pharoahs (who were descended Ptolemies became pharaohs (whoses descendants from him2 him were also Greek.Greek). Because Alexander brought Greek culture to all the lands he conquered and the Greek Ptolemys worshipped their gods while they ruled Egypt, Aphrodite would have been worshipped in Ancient Egypt under the Ptolemys. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting That probably wasn't intentional by the songwriters, but the video makes more sense now.]]



* I totally dismissed Music/twentyonepilots' "Car Radio" when I first heard it. A few months later, it came up on a playlist one day as I was listening to music in my car. About a minute into the song, I said, out loud, "Is this about Kierkegaard?!" The rest of the song confirmed my suspicions. Now, "Car Radio" is one of my favorite songs. -TheFunkyMan
* The first time I heard Nightwish's "Passion and the Opera", I liked it well enough, but felt that Tarja's OneWomanWail at the end [[EndingFatigue went on longer than it probably should have]]. Then I actually paid attention to [[IntercourseWithYou the lyrics]], and I was in church of all places when it finally hit me [[TheImmodestOrgasm what the ending was]]. - Mattthelurker

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* I totally dismissed Music/twentyonepilots' "Car Radio" when I first heard it. A few months later, it came up on a playlist one day as I was listening to music in my car. About a minute into the song, I said, out loud, "Is this about Kierkegaard?!" The rest of the song confirmed my suspicions. Now, "Car Radio" is one of my favorite songs. -TheFunkyMan
* The first time I heard Nightwish's hearing Music/{{Nightwish}}'s "Passion and the Opera", I liked one would like it well enough, but felt would feel that Tarja's OneWomanWail at the end [[EndingFatigue went on longer than it probably should have]]. Then I if one actually paid attention to [[IntercourseWithYou the lyrics]], and I was in church of all places when it finally hit me hits on [[TheImmodestOrgasm what the ending was]]. - Mattthelurker%% The writer, Mattthelurker, was at church, of all places, when he realized this.



* I must have listened to Jackson Browne's "Rosie" a few dozen times before realizing that what sounds like a tender love ballad is a song about masturbation. When you realize that "Rosie" is a reference to "Rosie palm and her five lovely daughters," the chorus makes prefect sense:
** Rosie you're all right./ You wear my ring./ When you hold me tight,/ Rosie, that's my thing./ When I turn out the light,/ I got to hand it to me./ Looks like its you and me again tonight, Rosie.--Barcdog

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* I must have listened Listening to Jackson Browne's "Rosie" a few dozen times before realizing would realize that what sounds like a tender love ballad is a song about masturbation.[[ADateWithRosiePalms masturbation]]. When you realize that "Rosie" is a reference to "Rosie palm and her five lovely daughters," the chorus makes prefect sense:
** Rosie you're all right./ You wear my ring./ When you hold me tight,/ Rosie, that's my thing./ When I turn out the light,/ I got to hand it to me./ Looks like its you and me again tonight, Rosie.--Barcdog
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Renamed Head Turning Beauty by TRS


* Sometime around my fifteenth viewing of Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boo2Zm69fhY&feature=related "Drumming Song"]], I stopped [[HelloNurse staring at her fantastic legs]] long enough to realize that the backup dancers didn't really exist. Florence is just imagining them. She might be [[AllJustADream imagining the whole video]], which explains why said dancers go from angels, to devils, to representations of her mental state. Sometimes more than one at once.

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* Sometime around my fifteenth viewing of Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boo2Zm69fhY&feature=related "Drumming Song"]], I stopped [[HelloNurse staring at her fantastic legs]] legs long enough to realize that the backup dancers didn't really exist. Florence is just imagining them. She might be [[AllJustADream imagining the whole video]], which explains why said dancers go from angels, to devils, to representations of her mental state. Sometimes more than one at once.
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** Oddly enough, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zxj7gUtq6Ck this parody]] made me start thinking the original would also make more sense if it was from the point of view of ''[[SuperMarioBros Mario]]'', or really any protagonist of a video game series known for constantly reusing the SaveThePrincess plot - Tropers/MikeK

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** Oddly enough, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zxj7gUtq6Ck this parody]] made me start thinking the original would also make more sense if it was from the point of view of ''[[SuperMarioBros ''[[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]]'', or really any protagonist of a video game series known for constantly reusing the SaveThePrincess plot - Tropers/MikeK
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moderator restored to earlier version
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None


* Sometime around my fifteenth viewing of Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boo2Zm69fhY&feature=related "Drumming Song"]], I stopped [[HelloNurse staring at her fantastic legs]] long enough to realize that the backup dancers didn't really exist. Florence is just imagining them. She might be [[AllJustADream imagining the whole video]], which explains why said dancers go from angels, to devils, to representations of her mental state. Sometimes more than one at once.

to:

* Sometime around my fifteenth viewing of Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boo2Zm69fhY&feature=related "Drumming Song"]], I stopped [[HelloNurse staring [[EatingTheEyeCandy staring]] at her [[ShesGotLegs fantastic legs]] long enough to realize that the backup dancers didn't really exist. Florence is just imagining them. She might be [[AllJustADream imagining the whole video]], which explains why said dancers go from angels, to devils, to representations of her mental state. Sometimes more than one at once.
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no signing entries


** More "Adam's Song" related brilliance - at first, while I thought it was a good pop-punk tune, I didn't catch the significance of the changes in the instrumentation during the chorus. The first half is similar to the verses, while the second sounds much fuller. Then I realized that the fuller instrumentation indicates that ''the narrator doesn't really want to die''. This is supported by [[LyricSwap the more idealistic final chorus]] having the fuller sound throughout. -Mattthelurker
* If you know Hebrew, the song "Misparim" (Numbers) by HaDag Nachash is a rap about the status of Israel's economy. The last line is "and the last number, the one that represents hope but also tragedy, is one that makes every man stand still...six million." I always thought it was just 6 million Israeli Jews but then I realized it was the ''six million that died in the Holocaust''. -NewMexico
* When I started listening to Music/{{Deadmau5}}, the first song I listened to was ''Animal Rights'', which featured Wolfgang Gartner. It took me a couple of listens to realize the significance of the title - deadmau5 is an artist who constantly wears a giant mouse head, and he owns two, well-known cats. - IkuMasamune

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** More "Adam's Song" related brilliance - at first, while I thought it was a good pop-punk tune, I didn't catch the significance of the changes in the instrumentation during the chorus. The first half is similar to the verses, while the second sounds much fuller. Then I realized that the fuller instrumentation indicates that ''the narrator doesn't really want to die''. This is supported by [[LyricSwap the more idealistic final chorus]] having the fuller sound throughout. -Mattthelurker\n
* If you know Hebrew, the song "Misparim" (Numbers) by HaDag Nachash is a rap about the status of Israel's economy. The last line is "and the last number, the one that represents hope but also tragedy, is one that makes every man stand still...six million." I always thought it was just 6 million Israeli Jews but then I realized it was the ''six million that died in the Holocaust''. -NewMexico\n
* When I started listening to Music/{{Deadmau5}}, the first song I listened to was ''Animal Rights'', which featured Wolfgang Gartner. It took me a couple of listens to realize the significance of the title - deadmau5 is an artist who constantly wears a giant mouse head, and he owns two, well-known cats. - IkuMasamune



* I sing the song ''Poor Wayfaring Stranger'' for music lessons and love it. But I didn't get the fact that he kept on saying that he was going "home" (heaven). Why was he walking around saying he was going to Heaven soon when he is still alive? Then my music instructor said that maybe he realized that we're all going to die, and traveled around, not doing anything, waiting for death to come. Put it in a new light.- DogLover
* Funny how Summer of 69 by Brian Adams isn't REALLY about the Summerof 1969, eh?-- FlawedDesign
* Tracy Chapman's song ''Fast Car'' drove me bonkers when I first heard it. The verse was just so monotonous and repetitive, and the only part that seemed free and light and airy was the chorus. Then I got it. -- PANTS
* The song Right Where it Belongs by Nine Inch Nails attests to Trent Reznor's talent as a songwriter. Since I like sadder songs, I always did like it, but only recently did I realize that every detail of the song is meant to mirror the lyrics- the song opens with deep, echoing white noise in the background, sounding almost as if you are inside a cage. This is said as Trent Reznor sings "See the animal in his cage that you built, are you sure what side of the glass you are on?". The chorus, "What if everything around you isn't quite as it seems? What if all the world you think you know is an elaborate dream? And if you look at your reflection, is that all you want to be? What if you could look right through the cracks, would you find yourself, find yourself afraid to see?" is, as the rest of the song, sung very softly and quietly. It isn't until the last chorus that suddenly everything becomes crystal clear. I always just saw it as a way to get attention for the last verse, but that isn't it. It was a filter. Removing it is meant to show what would happen if the world wasn't, in fact, quite as it seems. It seems as if he opened your eyes and ears, and suddenly you hear an entire realm of new detail. This revelation made Trent Reznor my favorite songwriter. -Mitch1224
* "What's Up People?!" by Maximum the Hormone struck me at first as the usual spot of death metal; death metal in general and the song in particular certainly isn't without its share of talent in places, but it's not my usual cup of tea. The fact that they were using it to intro the second half of a [[Manga/DeathNote smooth, cerebral detective show]] didn't help matters. Then, I thought about it a little, and then realized just how fitting it was for the series. The first intro involved [[WellIntentionedExtremist the main character's]] [[UtopiaJustifiestheMeans ideals and choices]], while the second was a comment on his mental state. Taken together, the statement is that while Light earnestly wishes for a better world and [[IDidWhatIHadtoDo does what he does]] [[KnightTemplar with a perfectly clear conscience]]...he's still completely out of his mind. As a result of this analysis (or over-analysis, whichever), the song's become a small favorite of mine. - [=TClaymore=]

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* I sing the song ''Poor Wayfaring Stranger'' for music lessons and love it. But I didn't get the fact that he kept on saying that he was going "home" (heaven). Why was he walking around saying he was going to Heaven soon when he is still alive? Then my music instructor said that maybe he realized that we're all going to die, and traveled around, not doing anything, waiting for death to come. Put it in a new light.- DogLover
light.
* Funny how Summer of 69 by Brian Adams isn't REALLY about the Summerof 1969, eh?-- FlawedDesign
eh?
* Tracy Chapman's song ''Fast Car'' drove me bonkers when I first heard it. The verse was just so monotonous and repetitive, and the only part that seemed free and light and airy was the chorus. Then I got it. -- PANTS
it.
* The song Right Where it Belongs by Nine Inch Nails attests to Trent Reznor's talent as a songwriter. Since I like sadder songs, I always did like it, but only recently did I realize that every detail of the song is meant to mirror the lyrics- the song opens with deep, echoing white noise in the background, sounding almost as if you are inside a cage. This is said as Trent Reznor sings "See the animal in his cage that you built, are you sure what side of the glass you are on?". The chorus, "What if everything around you isn't quite as it seems? What if all the world you think you know is an elaborate dream? And if you look at your reflection, is that all you want to be? What if you could look right through the cracks, would you find yourself, find yourself afraid to see?" is, as the rest of the song, sung very softly and quietly. It isn't until the last chorus that suddenly everything becomes crystal clear. I always just saw it as a way to get attention for the last verse, but that isn't it. It was a filter. Removing it is meant to show what would happen if the world wasn't, in fact, quite as it seems. It seems as if he opened your eyes and ears, and suddenly you hear an entire realm of new detail. This revelation made Trent Reznor my favorite songwriter. -Mitch1224\n
* "What's Up People?!" by Maximum the Hormone struck me at first as the usual spot of death metal; death metal in general and the song in particular certainly isn't without its share of talent in places, but it's not my usual cup of tea. The fact that they were using it to intro the second half of a [[Manga/DeathNote smooth, cerebral detective show]] didn't help matters. Then, I thought about it a little, and then realized just how fitting it was for the series. The first intro involved [[WellIntentionedExtremist the main character's]] [[UtopiaJustifiestheMeans ideals and choices]], while the second was a comment on his mental state. Taken together, the statement is that while Light earnestly wishes for a better world and [[IDidWhatIHadtoDo does what he does]] [[KnightTemplar with a perfectly clear conscience]]...he's still completely out of his mind. As a result of this analysis (or over-analysis, whichever), the song's become a small favorite of mine. - [=TClaymore=]



*** There are other songs that are accidentally good for Death Note. the only one I can remember at the moment is "Peacemaker" by Green Day. --Case
* Iron Maiden end their album "Somewhere in Time" with Alexander The Great. Think about it. The album has a futuristic sound and theme, and then they end it with Ancient History. Pretty cool!-- FlawedDesign

to:

*** There are other songs that are accidentally good for Death Note. the only one I can remember at the moment is "Peacemaker" by Green Day. --Case
Day.
* Iron Maiden end their album "Somewhere in Time" with Alexander The Great. Think about it. The album has a futuristic sound and theme, and then they end it with Ancient History. Pretty cool!-- FlawedDesigncool!



* I always wondered why Genghis Khan by Music/IronMaiden was so musically inconsistent- until I realized it's musically supposed to resemble the chaos of a battle.- TheSexiestNerdEver
* I used to think metal was just loud and abrasive rock. However, I bought ''Megadeth's Greatest Hits'' at the urging of various internet users. I figured out that Dave Mustaine was talking about the modern world with all of his songs, taking whatever power he had to tear down the arbitrary rules of the world bureaucracy. Plus, the riffs grew on me, and the lyrics gained true deep meaning. - [[GolemTheTroper Golem]]

to:

* I always wondered why Genghis Khan by Music/IronMaiden was so musically inconsistent- until I realized it's musically supposed to resemble the chaos of a battle.- TheSexiestNerdEver
battle.
* I used to think metal was just loud and abrasive rock. However, I bought ''Megadeth's Greatest Hits'' at the urging of various internet users. I figured out that Dave Mustaine was talking about the modern world with all of his songs, taking whatever power he had to tear down the arbitrary rules of the world bureaucracy. Plus, the riffs grew on me, and the lyrics gained true deep meaning. - [[GolemTheTroper Golem]]



* I used to absolutely ''hate'' the Pussycat Dolls, considering their songs to be vapid, insipid things with over-sexualized videos. Then I realised "What are the Pussycat Doll? A burlesque group. What is burlesque? ''Erotic parody!''" Suddenly, it all made sense that the Pussycat Dolls parodied songs with those kind of problems. I think much better of them now. -- Levi

to:

* I used to absolutely ''hate'' the Pussycat Dolls, considering their songs to be vapid, insipid things with over-sexualized videos. Then I realised "What are the Pussycat Doll? A burlesque group. What is burlesque? ''Erotic parody!''" Suddenly, it all made sense that the Pussycat Dolls parodied songs with those kind of problems. I think much better of them now. -- Levi



* The Music/ManicStreetPreachers have a song called "4st 7lb", about an anorexic teenager. It starts out fairly fast and with lots of guitars, then for the last few verses switches to a much slower tempo with more minimalist accompaniment and a slightly altered melody. This never made me dislike it, but it did seem odd - until one day it occurred to me that the slower tempo and starker sound could be seen as a metaphor for the girl's metabolism and physical functions slowing down as she starves to death and her body shuts down. (Yeah, it's cheerful stuff.) -- {{Calla}}
** I chuckled when I realized the title was an abbreviation for "Four Stone, Seven Pounds" -- or 63 pounds, which would be a very anorexic weight indeed. -- MrBadAxe

to:

* The Music/ManicStreetPreachers have a song called "4st 7lb", about an anorexic teenager. It starts out fairly fast and with lots of guitars, then for the last few verses switches to a much slower tempo with more minimalist accompaniment and a slightly altered melody. This never made me dislike it, but it did seem odd - until one day it occurred to me that the slower tempo and starker sound could be seen as a metaphor for the girl's metabolism and physical functions slowing down as she starves to death and her body shuts down. (Yeah, it's cheerful stuff.) -- {{Calla}}
)
** I chuckled when I realized the title was an abbreviation for "Four Stone, Seven Pounds" -- or 63 pounds, which would be a very anorexic weight indeed. -- MrBadAxe



*** The term "pound" has the same meaning in Britain as it does in North America. The use of "pound" for currency stems from pre-Norman times when a Pound Sterling was ''literally'' a pound of silver. --Yun

to:

*** The term "pound" has the same meaning in Britain as it does in North America. The use of "pound" for currency stems from pre-Norman times when a Pound Sterling was ''literally'' a pound of silver. --Yun



* Lemon Demon's little-known but still vaguely popular song "Without My Tonsils" used to be my absolute least favorite song he's ever written. The melody was slow and boring, and the narrator was whiney and seemingly crazy. The strange slow shift from 7/4 to 4/4 really got to me, too. Then one day, I looked up the lyrics and realized that the entire song is actually some pretty brilliant meta-parody, pointing out things like the key it's sung in, the boring fade-out, and the annoying record-scratchy segue halfway through the song. As for the whiney narrator, I think he's actually parodying the whole "whiney song" thing, as bemoaning the loss of fangs and the central nervous system is NOT the usual subject matter. - BLT
* The first time I heard "You Could Drive A Person Crazy" from the musical ''Company'', it was ripped out of context and I found it weird and annoying (why were they singing so fast? and what was with the "do-do-do"s?). Years later, having heard some of the Andrews Sisters songs [[Music/StephenSondheim Sondheim]] was pastiching, and having had a chance to understand the lyrics and the place the song has in the show, I realised what a brilliant piece of work it was: using a bright, cheerful style of music, previously associated with inane, dippy lyrics, to deliver a scathing and rather bitter smackdown to an unresponsive boyfriend. - puritybrown
* Many people have wondered why the Wu-Tang Clan's 'Protect Ya Neck' remains censored in all incarnations, considering that all other songs on the album and the Wu's catalogue are uncensored. Then it hit me: The skit introducing the song is a man calling into a radio station, requesting them to play the song. The track itself is the song being played on the radio, so it's censored! - Cunny
* I used to love the song "Endlessly" purely for the sound of it. I did listen to the music, but never really understood what it meant, thinking it to be some kind of love song. It hit me half-way through a youtube comment. The song is actually refering to love itself. How you can love love endlessly, and no matter what, you always will, but at the same time, love will never love you back. Only people can do that. - Moo
* Originally I thought P!nk's song 'Long Way To Happy' from the "I'm Not Dead" album was about a relationship break-up, as is standard in pop music. Then I listened to it again and actually listened to the lyrics and realised it was actually a rape recovery song - making it instantly quite a creepy thing to find yourself singing along to. - DerekDesAnges
* I had been listening to Music/TheBeatles since I was a small illiterate child, so the spelling of the name didn't mean much to me. It wasn't until I was in my early teens that I realized it was a pun, and not the insect, and I thought it was just about the most brilliant thing ever. - Revolos55

to:

* Lemon Demon's little-known but still vaguely popular song "Without My Tonsils" used to be my absolute least favorite song he's ever written. The melody was slow and boring, and the narrator was whiney and seemingly crazy. The strange slow shift from 7/4 to 4/4 really got to me, too. Then one day, I looked up the lyrics and realized that the entire song is actually some pretty brilliant meta-parody, pointing out things like the key it's sung in, the boring fade-out, and the annoying record-scratchy segue halfway through the song. As for the whiney narrator, I think he's actually parodying the whole "whiney song" thing, as bemoaning the loss of fangs and the central nervous system is NOT the usual subject matter. - BLT\n
* The first time I heard "You Could Drive A Person Crazy" from the musical ''Company'', it was ripped out of context and I found it weird and annoying (why were they singing so fast? and what was with the "do-do-do"s?). Years later, having heard some of the Andrews Sisters songs [[Music/StephenSondheim Sondheim]] was pastiching, and having had a chance to understand the lyrics and the place the song has in the show, I realised what a brilliant piece of work it was: using a bright, cheerful style of music, previously associated with inane, dippy lyrics, to deliver a scathing and rather bitter smackdown to an unresponsive boyfriend. - puritybrown\n
* Many people have wondered why the Wu-Tang Clan's 'Protect Ya Neck' remains censored in all incarnations, considering that all other songs on the album and the Wu's catalogue are uncensored. Then it hit me: The skit introducing the song is a man calling into a radio station, requesting them to play the song. The track itself is the song being played on the radio, so it's censored! - Cunny
censored!
* I used to love the song "Endlessly" purely for the sound of it. I did listen to the music, but never really understood what it meant, thinking it to be some kind of love song. It hit me half-way through a youtube comment. The song is actually refering to love itself. How you can love love endlessly, and no matter what, you always will, but at the same time, love will never love you back. Only people can do that. - Moo\n
* Originally I thought P!nk's song 'Long Way To Happy' from the "I'm Not Dead" album was about a relationship break-up, as is standard in pop music. Then I listened to it again and actually listened to the lyrics and realised it was actually a rape recovery song - making it instantly quite a creepy thing to find yourself singing along to. - DerekDesAnges\n
* I had been listening to Music/TheBeatles since I was a small illiterate child, so the spelling of the name didn't mean much to me. It wasn't until I was in my early teens that I realized it was a pun, and not the insect, and I thought it was just about the most brilliant thing ever. - Revolos55



* When I was young, I was initially forced into a negative impression of the song ''Colors Of The Wind'' by a relative who thought it was all a bunch of new age treehugger hoo-ha. When I was old enough to think for myself, I listened to the song again and realized it was ''brilliant.'' Remember the lyrics ''How high does the sycamore grow?/If you cut it down, then you'll never know''? She wasn't singing about deforestation! That sycamore is the native Americans, whose people and cultures were "cut down" by European settlers. Now we can never know what they might have become if we hadn't oppressed them. -Syera
** Same! I also thought the "How can there be so much you don't know/You don't know" was repetition...then it hit me. -Tropers/RedWren
* It took me until about age 14 to figure out what the running baseball commentary was doing in the middle of Meat Loaf's "Paradise By The Dashboard Light." A definite "you're not a kid anymore" moment. -- MonsterDog
* I ''just'' realized that "Gollum's Song" from [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers the soundtrack to the Two Towers]], isn't sung ''about'' Gollum, it's sung ''by'' Gollum. - Jarl
** I just recently spotted a moment of sheer brilliance in [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing the soundtrack to the Return of the King]]. Six triumphant, joyous notes ring out as the good guys win. They are the opening bars of Mordor's theme, rewritten. This is exactly what happens to [[spoiler:the music of Sauron's boss Morgoth in ''The Silmarillion.'']] In fact, the major themes of the soundtrack for all three movies are as described by the late J.R.R. Tolkien in that book! Somewhere in Heaven there is a pub, and in that pub there is very good beer, and Professor Tolkien is sipping it and humming (probably badly) all of the best bits. - Jenny Islander

to:

* When I was young, I was initially forced into a negative impression of the song ''Colors Of The Wind'' by a relative who thought it was all a bunch of new age treehugger hoo-ha. When I was old enough to think for myself, I listened to the song again and realized it was ''brilliant.'' Remember the lyrics ''How high does the sycamore grow?/If you cut it down, then you'll never know''? She wasn't singing about deforestation! That sycamore is the native Americans, whose people and cultures were "cut down" by European settlers. Now we can never know what they might have become if we hadn't oppressed them. -Syera\n
** Same! I also thought the "How can there be so much you don't know/You don't know" was repetition...then it hit me. -Tropers/RedWren
me.
* It took me until about age 14 to figure out what the running baseball commentary was doing in the middle of Meat Loaf's "Paradise By The Dashboard Light." A definite "you're not a kid anymore" moment. -- MonsterDog\n
* I ''just'' realized that "Gollum's Song" from [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers the soundtrack to the Two Towers]], isn't sung ''about'' Gollum, it's sung ''by'' Gollum. - Jarl\n
** I just recently spotted a moment of sheer brilliance in [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing the soundtrack to the Return of the King]]. Six triumphant, joyous notes ring out as the good guys win. They are the opening bars of Mordor's theme, rewritten. This is exactly what happens to [[spoiler:the music of Sauron's boss Morgoth in ''The Silmarillion.'']] In fact, the major themes of the soundtrack for all three movies are as described by the late J.R.R. Tolkien in that book! Somewhere in Heaven there is a pub, and in that pub there is very good beer, and Professor Tolkien is sipping it and humming (probably badly) all of the best bits. - Jenny Islander



* Long ago (about 6 years ago, give or take), when I first heard Interpol's "Turn On the Bright Lights," I thought it was a sweet album, but I felt that there was nothing more to it other than being a great entrance album for people who didn't understand what indie rock was. As I've lived in a city for the better part of 4 years now, elements from that album popped into my head here and there, but I couldn't understand. Now, as a music journalist, a few weeks ago (in April 2009), it all came to me: The album wasn't a random meshing of 90's indie-rock atrophy. It was a band making an image of New York City, the New York City outside of a few blocks that had everyone's attention because some buildings blew up, the New York City that existed and lived as though September 11, 2001 was really just another day in the grand scheme of all things. And it was prolly NYC at its best: Before the security lockdowns, before clean-up and glamour went into overdrive, before Williamsburg became gentrified and created a cancer that is killing Brooklyn, before the hipsters were identified as the new counterculture, cannibalized, and commodified. A New York City that was, in many ways, '''''real.''''' But more importantly, because of this imagery, it was the last great album to symbolize a regional sound outside of hip hop, just before Website/MySpace decimated the concept of regional music. It was, very much, an album that was perfect for its time, like Michael Jackson's ''Thriller.'' -- brokenwit
* A little more of a lighthearted example to follow: The first time I saw the skit Space Olympics on SNL, I hated it. It was boring. It was stupid. There was autotune. It seemed like a dumbass excuse to put Andy Samberg in a wig and have shiny costumes. I have no idea what changed when I heard it again on Incredibad, but for some reason, it became my favorite song on the album. So delightfully stupid! -- tibieryo
* [[Music/The Move]] I loved "Walk upon the Water" but I took it at first as a warning against drunk swimming. Analyzing the lyrics, a few years later, I realized it was a warning against immersing your self in psychotropic drugs, and the possible tragic death of those who indulge in said drugs. As an added bonus, listen to "Cherry Blossom Clinic" straight afterwards and you'll find out what happened to one of the psychotropic drugtakers that managed to avoid drowning. Then again, it still is a pretty good warning against drunk swimming too...-- Dutch
* Yet another Move related Fridge moment - the tale of "Curly" looking for his girlfriend all over Liverpool? - well, why is "Curly", well, curly? Because Curly is mixed-race and his girlfriend is white - and his girlfriend's parents are racists who want their little girl to have nothing to do with him. Probably counts as Fridge Sadness. -- Dutch
* [[{{randomfanboy}} I]] hated [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants The Statue Got Me High]] the first few times I heard it. It sounded like TMBG at their worst, with lyrics that sounded vaguely meaningful without it actually meaning much. After listening to it a bit more ([[GenreSavvy due to having lived this trope before]]), I realised it was ''very deliberately'' meaningless - unlike most of their songs, it's just a song about a guy whose head blows up because of a statue. I love it now.

to:

* Long ago (about 6 years ago, give or take), when I first heard Interpol's "Turn On the Bright Lights," I thought it was a sweet album, but I felt that there was nothing more to it other than being a great entrance album for people who didn't understand what indie rock was. As I've lived in a city for the better part of 4 years now, elements from that album popped into my head here and there, but I couldn't understand. Now, as a music journalist, a few weeks ago (in April 2009), it all came to me: The album wasn't a random meshing of 90's indie-rock atrophy. It was a band making an image of New York City, the New York City outside of a few blocks that had everyone's attention because some buildings blew up, the New York City that existed and lived as though September 11, 2001 was really just another day in the grand scheme of all things. And it was prolly NYC at its best: Before the security lockdowns, before clean-up and glamour went into overdrive, before Williamsburg became gentrified and created a cancer that is killing Brooklyn, before the hipsters were identified as the new counterculture, cannibalized, and commodified. A New York City that was, in many ways, '''''real.''''' But more importantly, because of this imagery, it was the last great album to symbolize a regional sound outside of hip hop, just before Website/MySpace decimated the concept of regional music. It was, very much, an album that was perfect for its time, like Michael Jackson's ''Thriller.'' -- brokenwit
''
* A little more of a lighthearted example to follow: The first time I saw the skit Space Olympics on SNL, I hated it. It was boring. It was stupid. There was autotune. It seemed like a dumbass excuse to put Andy Samberg in a wig and have shiny costumes. I have no idea what changed when I heard it again on Incredibad, but for some reason, it became my favorite song on the album. So delightfully stupid! -- tibieryo
stupid!
* [[Music/The Move]] I loved "Walk upon the Water" but I took it at first as a warning against drunk swimming. Analyzing the lyrics, a few years later, I realized it was a warning against immersing your self in psychotropic drugs, and the possible tragic death of those who indulge in said drugs. As an added bonus, listen to "Cherry Blossom Clinic" straight afterwards and you'll find out what happened to one of the psychotropic drugtakers that managed to avoid drowning. Then again, it still is a pretty good warning against drunk swimming too...-- Dutch
too...
* Yet another Move related Fridge moment - the tale of "Curly" looking for his girlfriend all over Liverpool? - well, why is "Curly", well, curly? Because Curly is mixed-race and his girlfriend is white - and his girlfriend's parents are racists who want their little girl to have nothing to do with him. Probably counts as Fridge Sadness. -- Dutch \n
* [[{{randomfanboy}} I]] I hated [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants The Statue Got Me High]] the first few times I heard it. It sounded like TMBG at their worst, with lyrics that sounded vaguely meaningful without it actually meaning much. After listening to it a bit more ([[GenreSavvy due to having lived this trope before]]), I realised it was ''very deliberately'' meaningless - unlike most of their songs, it's just a song about a guy whose head blows up because of a statue. I love it now.



** It gets better. I didn't like [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants Apollo 18]] at all -- until I realized that its songs were all references to bad SF/Fantasy movie tropes. ''The Statue Got Me High'' is all about the black monolith at the start of ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey'', and referenced in other Creator/ArthurCClarke's works. -- zenfrodo
* "Self Inflicted" (by Kevin O'Donnell's Quality Six) seems to have a title completely at odds with its lyrics, which are specifically about how the singer ''didn't'' bring his suffering on himself, ''isn't'' melodramatically exaggerating or wallowing in it, and would do anything to be rid of it if only he could. Eventually it hit me that the title refers to something never explicitly mentioned in the song: [[spoiler:the fatal wound]]. - Tropers/MasoTey
* The intro the song YYZ by Rush always bothered me. It seemed irregular and out of place. Ever since I found out the intro was, in fact, the phrase "YYZ" in morse code, repeated several times, it's fascinated me. - Neopolis
** I read somewhere about how airport regulations require that there be a transmitter broadcasting the airport's IATA code nonstop for the purposes of navigation. YYZ is the IATA code for Toronto, Ontario - The band's hometown. - Tropers/MrBadAxe

to:

** It gets better. I didn't like [[Music/TheyMightBeGiants Apollo 18]] at all -- until I realized that its songs were all references to bad SF/Fantasy movie tropes. ''The Statue Got Me High'' is all about the black monolith at the start of ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey'', and referenced in other Creator/ArthurCClarke's works. -- zenfrodo\n
* "Self Inflicted" (by Kevin O'Donnell's Quality Six) seems to have a title completely at odds with its lyrics, which are specifically about how the singer ''didn't'' bring his suffering on himself, ''isn't'' melodramatically exaggerating or wallowing in it, and would do anything to be rid of it if only he could. Eventually it hit me that the title refers to something never explicitly mentioned in the song: [[spoiler:the fatal wound]]. - Tropers/MasoTey\n
* The intro the song YYZ by Rush always bothered me. It seemed irregular and out of place. Ever since I found out the intro was, in fact, the phrase "YYZ" in morse code, repeated several times, it's fascinated me. - Neopolis\n
** I read somewhere about how airport regulations require that there be a transmitter broadcasting the airport's IATA code nonstop for the purposes of navigation. YYZ is the IATA code for Toronto, Ontario - The band's hometown. - Tropers/MrBadAxe



* After listening to the Vocaloid song "Dark Woods Circus" a few times, and deciding that I liked it, I decided to show a fanvid of it to a friend who I thought would also enjoy it. She pointed out that the song sounded cheerful, but had depressing lyrics, something I had noticed but not really paid attention to. And then I thought about it for a minute. Though most of the song describes just how miserable the freaks are, there's a part towards the beginning that states "All of the cast is jolly". And then I realized the reason behind the LyricalDissonance. It represents how the circus freaks act happy to please their audience, despite being anything but. I enjoyed the song before, but that realization makes it that much better. - {{Umbee}}

to:

* After listening to the Vocaloid song "Dark Woods Circus" a few times, and deciding that I liked it, I decided to show a fanvid of it to a friend who I thought would also enjoy it. She pointed out that the song sounded cheerful, but had depressing lyrics, something I had noticed but not really paid attention to. And then I thought about it for a minute. Though most of the song describes just how miserable the freaks are, there's a part towards the beginning that states "All of the cast is jolly". And then I realized the reason behind the LyricalDissonance. It represents how the circus freaks act happy to please their audience, despite being anything but. I enjoyed the song before, but that realization makes it that much better. - {{Umbee}}



* I realised soon after I heard the ballad ''Honest Questions'' by Daniel Bedingfield: to my mind the narrator could be singing to God (with the chorus as God's response). I'm an atheist, and a Christian friend with whom I discussed it never thought of that interpretation, so perhaps I'm wrong, but it gives the song (otherwise a generic ballad) an interesting twist. --Herm
* I didn't really like Jonathan Coulton's song "I'm Your Moon" the first time I heard it...I thought it was a really forced love-song metaphor that didn't even make sense. I mean, "I'm your moon, you're my moon"? How can it go both ways? But about the second or third time I heard it, I realized that it wasn't a metaphor at all! It was entirely literal: the two "moons" are Pluto and Charon, which are close to the same size. Charon is singing to Pluto, telling it not to feel bad about being demoted to subplanetary status. Brilliant! ~Tail-Kinker

to:

* I realised soon after I heard the ballad ''Honest Questions'' by Daniel Bedingfield: to my mind the narrator could be singing to God (with the chorus as God's response). I'm an atheist, and a Christian friend with whom I discussed it never thought of that interpretation, so perhaps I'm wrong, but it gives the song (otherwise a generic ballad) an interesting twist. --Herm\n
* I didn't really like Jonathan Coulton's song "I'm Your Moon" the first time I heard it...I thought it was a really forced love-song metaphor that didn't even make sense. I mean, "I'm your moon, you're my moon"? How can it go both ways? But about the second or third time I heard it, I realized that it wasn't a metaphor at all! It was entirely literal: the two "moons" are Pluto and Charon, which are close to the same size. Charon is singing to Pluto, telling it not to feel bad about being demoted to subplanetary status. Brilliant! ~Tail-Kinker



* I'd been exposed to Music/TheGratefulDead since childhood, but hadn't really gotten into them on my own despite many attempts. It wasn't until I listened to [[http://www.archive.org/details/gd1968-05-18.aud.jorma.gmb.sbeok.94591.flac16 this]] in my 20s that the whole thing clicked for me, and it pretty much blew my face off. Now they're one of my favorite bands. -Tomapella
* The entirety of Music/TheDecemberists' album [[ConceptAlbum The Hazards of Love]]. At first glance (or listen, as it were), it comes off as a pretty stock-standard StarCrossedLovers story with just a bit of woodland fantasy mixed in, incredibly well written, and a joy to listen to, but cliche all the same. When I started listening to individual songs, characters, and delving deeper into the story, it started to actually ''unravel'', there are character traits that seem... slightly off, as if the characters were not as fleshed out as the songs make them seem. Then, it hit me, the album isn't telling a cliche story, it's telling a story ''about'' a cliche story. As in: The characters, plot, settings, etc. are all taking place ''as part of a play''. The characters that aren't human but appear as such because ''they're actually actors playing non-human characters''. Actually, it's probably just me applying copious amounts of FanWank, but hey, it killed a couple of hours - TheRealCJ
** Dude, I had the same idea! When the Rake refers to himself as 'your humble narrator' and the random interludes explaining the story, I instantly thought- "this is a play/pantomine in album form!" -UncleTyki
* I only started listening to 3OH!3 because my friends listened to them a lot and I somewhat reluctantly developed a taste for their music, even if the attitude behind the lyrics didn't always sit well with me. Then when I became a fan of them on Facebook and actually saw them for the first time, I realized it was all a satire and I like their music a lot more. -AkatsukiDaybreak
** the 3Oh!3 song ''Richman'' has a line in it that goes 'I've got 200 seconds and I'm ready to go'. This seemed really strange and and excuse to rhyme with the previous line, until you look at the length of the song: 3:20, or ''two hundred seconds''. - AliasM
* Despite loving the song ''Cry Little Sister'', I always found myself confused by the lyrics - they seemed to run in random directions and never made a lot of sense. Until I realized that the narrator was telling the song from his prison cell, and the "Blue Masquerade" refers to the police. -JMorgan

to:

* I'd been exposed to Music/TheGratefulDead since childhood, but hadn't really gotten into them on my own despite many attempts. It wasn't until I listened to [[http://www.archive.org/details/gd1968-05-18.aud.jorma.gmb.sbeok.94591.flac16 this]] in my 20s that the whole thing clicked for me, and it pretty much blew my face off. Now they're one of my favorite bands. -Tomapella\n
* The entirety of Music/TheDecemberists' album [[ConceptAlbum The Hazards of Love]]. At first glance (or listen, as it were), it comes off as a pretty stock-standard StarCrossedLovers story with just a bit of woodland fantasy mixed in, incredibly well written, and a joy to listen to, but cliche all the same. When I started listening to individual songs, characters, and delving deeper into the story, it started to actually ''unravel'', there are character traits that seem... slightly off, as if the characters were not as fleshed out as the songs make them seem. Then, it hit me, the album isn't telling a cliche story, it's telling a story ''about'' a cliche story. As in: The characters, plot, settings, etc. are all taking place ''as part of a play''. The characters that aren't human but appear as such because ''they're actually actors playing non-human characters''. Actually, it's probably just me applying copious amounts of FanWank, but hey, it killed a couple of hours - TheRealCJ
hours
** Dude, I had the same idea! When the Rake refers to himself as 'your humble narrator' and the random interludes explaining the story, I instantly thought- "this is a play/pantomine in album form!" -UncleTyki
form!"
* I only started listening to 3OH!3 because my friends listened to them a lot and I somewhat reluctantly developed a taste for their music, even if the attitude behind the lyrics didn't always sit well with me. Then when I became a fan of them on Facebook and actually saw them for the first time, I realized it was all a satire and I like their music a lot more. -AkatsukiDaybreak\n
** the 3Oh!3 song ''Richman'' has a line in it that goes 'I've got 200 seconds and I'm ready to go'. This seemed really strange and and excuse to rhyme with the previous line, until you look at the length of the song: 3:20, or ''two hundred seconds''. - AliasM\n
* Despite loving the song ''Cry Little Sister'', I always found myself confused by the lyrics - they seemed to run in random directions and never made a lot of sense. Until I realized that the narrator was telling the song from his prison cell, and the "Blue Masquerade" refers to the police. -JMorgan



* I had listened to Dave Matthew's Band's 'Typical Situation' from the 'Live at Red Rocks' album maybe 70 times before I realized that it was just Dave in that particular performance. Made me appreciate how intensity and fullness(?) the man could generate with just his vocals and guitar. -Mookmaster
* "Why Don't You Get a Job?" by Music/TheOffspring sounds very similar to "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" by Music/TheBeatles. While I thought it was another example of an artist stealing from another, it all makes sense when you remember that the song is about mooching off others. - hrdcrnwo
** Another Offspring example: their song "Staring At the Sun" contains a lot of lyrics that seem really random at first. Then I gave a crack at interpreting them... and actually got into a small argument on Website/YouTube about what we each thought they meant. The song suddenly seemed a lot more like the pieces of poetry I read in English class, which are open to multiple interpretations. So it's really a complex poem. - 2writeis2life
* 'Shasta' by Vienna Teng sounds like a getting over a breakup song. Listening intently to the lyrics reveals it's about a woman who decides to not get an abortion. - killerlynnja
* "Crownless" by Nightwish is a song about arrogance, but it didn't seem to make a lot of sense, lyric wise, until I thought about it in the context of 'Macbeth.' The first two stanzas are the people of Scotland talking about Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, the refrain is always Macbeth himself, the bridge is Lady Macbeth, the first two lines of the last stanza is also Macbeth, and the last three lines of the last stanza is the ghost of Macdonwald. - Kintatsu
* "In A Lonely Place", the main character's theme from ''Film/{{Oldboy 2003}}'', is atmospheric and appropriate and awesome. But there's more. In the movie, the main character Oh Dae-Su is imprisoned for fifteen years in a room where the only wall decoration is a rather horrifying picture of Jesus Man of Sorrows, complemented by the first line from Ella Wheeler Wilcox' poem ''Solitude'': "Laugh and the world laughs with you / Weep and you weep alone." On the soundtrack, the song is preceded by Oh Dae-Su reading the line from the poem out loud in Korean. Now listen to the song with the poem next to it. Count the first line as read. Count the number of times the piano theme recurs. Not only does it fit the number of lines in the poem, it also breaks when the poem does, and rises and falls like the lines in the poem do. Yes. Oh Dae-Su's theme is ''Solitude'' set to music. Brilliant. - Dessek
* A lot of songs by ''Pulp'' passed me by when they first came out, being dismissed as just more of the usual "Britpop" of the era. Then, revisiting the songs about ten years later and actually ''listening'' to the lyrics really brought home the incisive and vicious wit behind the songs. To this day I am convinced that the version of Common People I heard was an emasculated radio edit that took out all the bile and barbed turns. And talking of lyrics, Me and Mia by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists at first appeared to be an incredibly catchy power pop song - then you realise Anna and Mia are shorthand for Anorexia and Bulimia, and it's suddenly the most compassionate song written for a sufferer of eating disorders ever - Slave
** It probably ''was'' an emasculated radio edit. The version played on radio was cut down by about half. - Q4

to:

* I had listened to Dave Matthew's Band's 'Typical Situation' from the 'Live at Red Rocks' album maybe 70 times before I realized that it was just Dave in that particular performance. Made me appreciate how intensity and fullness(?) the man could generate with just his vocals and guitar. -Mookmaster\n
* "Why Don't You Get a Job?" by Music/TheOffspring sounds very similar to "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" by Music/TheBeatles. While I thought it was another example of an artist stealing from another, it all makes sense when you remember that the song is about mooching off others. - hrdcrnwo\n
** Another Offspring example: their song "Staring At the Sun" contains a lot of lyrics that seem really random at first. Then I gave a crack at interpreting them... and actually got into a small argument on Website/YouTube about what we each thought they meant. The song suddenly seemed a lot more like the pieces of poetry I read in English class, which are open to multiple interpretations. So it's really a complex poem. - 2writeis2life\n
* 'Shasta' by Vienna Teng sounds like a getting over a breakup song. Listening intently to the lyrics reveals it's about a woman who decides to not get an abortion. - killerlynnja
abortion.
* "Crownless" by Nightwish is a song about arrogance, but it didn't seem to make a lot of sense, lyric wise, until I thought about it in the context of 'Macbeth.' The first two stanzas are the people of Scotland talking about Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, the refrain is always Macbeth himself, the bridge is Lady Macbeth, the first two lines of the last stanza is also Macbeth, and the last three lines of the last stanza is the ghost of Macdonwald. - Kintatsu\n
* "In A Lonely Place", the main character's theme from ''Film/{{Oldboy 2003}}'', is atmospheric and appropriate and awesome. But there's more. In the movie, the main character Oh Dae-Su is imprisoned for fifteen years in a room where the only wall decoration is a rather horrifying picture of Jesus Man of Sorrows, complemented by the first line from Ella Wheeler Wilcox' poem ''Solitude'': "Laugh and the world laughs with you / Weep and you weep alone." On the soundtrack, the song is preceded by Oh Dae-Su reading the line from the poem out loud in Korean. Now listen to the song with the poem next to it. Count the first line as read. Count the number of times the piano theme recurs. Not only does it fit the number of lines in the poem, it also breaks when the poem does, and rises and falls like the lines in the poem do. Yes. Oh Dae-Su's theme is ''Solitude'' set to music. Brilliant. - Dessek\n
* A lot of songs by ''Pulp'' passed me by when they first came out, being dismissed as just more of the usual "Britpop" of the era. Then, revisiting the songs about ten years later and actually ''listening'' to the lyrics really brought home the incisive and vicious wit behind the songs. To this day I am convinced that the version of Common People I heard was an emasculated radio edit that took out all the bile and barbed turns. And talking of lyrics, Me and Mia by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists at first appeared to be an incredibly catchy power pop song - then you realise Anna and Mia are shorthand for Anorexia and Bulimia, and it's suddenly the most compassionate song written for a sufferer of eating disorders ever - Slave
ever.
** It probably ''was'' an emasculated radio edit. The version played on radio was cut down by about half. - Q4



** Bonus points for actually emphasizing seem for completely reasonable rhyme scheme reasons, in context. - Tropers/RedWren
* Music/TheSmashingPumpkins album title ''Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness'' just clicked with me. Mellon Collie. Melancholy. It blew my mind. How did I miss that? - c
* When I first listened to Hüsker Dü's album Zen Arcade, it seemed like a messy collage of violent noise with very little going for it. How people fell in love with the album baffled me. And then I read that the album had a story to it. A young boy disappointed with his family life, runs away from home, and then discovers that the world outside is colder and harder than the world he used to know. And then it hit me: this is exactly the type of music that someone in those circumstances would make. It's loud, angry, angsty, full of guitar distortion and screaming, and ballsy. Awesome. - Riosan
* I'd always thought it was ironic that the most well known piece of circus music is called "Entrance of the Gladiators," as gladiators were men who violently fought to the death, and the circus is a silly spectacle. It wasn't until just the other day that I made the connection that gladiator fights were the main attraction of Roman circuses. -Tatterdemalion
** Also, it was originally a military march - {{Medinoc}}
* For the longest time, I never understood "Thumb Cinema" by Music/TheWorldInfernoFriendshipSociety. I got that it was a rant about consumerism, materialism and excess, but it didn't seem to fit with the rest of the songs on "Addicted to Bad Ideas", which is about Creator/PeterLorre's life and generally narrated from his point of view. Suddenly, a year and a half later, it occured to me that since the album was heavily based on a recent biography which elaborates more on Lorre's friendship with BertholtBrecht, the song might be from Brecht's point of view instead. After three songs where Lorre rants about his career decline while deciding to just give in, Brecht criticizes the excesses of Hollywood and how they've damaged Lorre, and begs him to return to postwar Germany with him: "You're not happy, well, no one gives a ***/ This is a game and you're part of it/ Maybe it's time for you to quit." It would fit the album's timeline as well with the next song, "Addicted to Bad Ideas", being about Lorre's growing addiction and despair after returning to Hollywood when his German comeback film flops. - Tropers.TechnicolorPachyderm
* Music/{{Rammstein}}'s song "Benzin" is about someone who ''really'' likes petrol. The line "''Brauch keine Frau, nur Vaselin"'' very roughly translates to, 'I don't need a woman, just Vaseline'. The reference to masturbation was obvious; it wasn't until much later that I remembered what Vaseline is made from. - Dane900
** I got one while watching the ''Haifisch'' video. "Haifisch" is German for shark. During the video, Richard and Paul (I think, it's been a bit since I've seen the video) got into an arguement that devolved into the five remaining members fighting. The fight started when one of them got punched in the nose, drawing blood...which attracts sharks. - {{Kazokuhouou}}

to:

** Bonus points for actually emphasizing seem for completely reasonable rhyme scheme reasons, in context. - Tropers/RedWren
context.
* Music/TheSmashingPumpkins album title ''Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness'' just clicked with me. Mellon Collie. Melancholy. It blew my mind. How did I miss that? - c
that?
* When I first listened to Hüsker Dü's album Zen Arcade, it seemed like a messy collage of violent noise with very little going for it. How people fell in love with the album baffled me. And then I read that the album had a story to it. A young boy disappointed with his family life, runs away from home, and then discovers that the world outside is colder and harder than the world he used to know. And then it hit me: this is exactly the type of music that someone in those circumstances would make. It's loud, angry, angsty, full of guitar distortion and screaming, and ballsy. Awesome. - Riosan\n
* I'd always thought it was ironic that the most well known piece of circus music is called "Entrance of the Gladiators," as gladiators were men who violently fought to the death, and the circus is a silly spectacle. It wasn't until just the other day that I made the connection that gladiator fights were the main attraction of Roman circuses. -Tatterdemalion
circuses.
** Also, it was originally a military march - {{Medinoc}}
march.
* For the longest time, I never understood "Thumb Cinema" by Music/TheWorldInfernoFriendshipSociety. I got that it was a rant about consumerism, materialism and excess, but it didn't seem to fit with the rest of the songs on "Addicted to Bad Ideas", which is about Creator/PeterLorre's life and generally narrated from his point of view. Suddenly, a year and a half later, it occured to me that since the album was heavily based on a recent biography which elaborates more on Lorre's friendship with BertholtBrecht, the song might be from Brecht's point of view instead. After three songs where Lorre rants about his career decline while deciding to just give in, Brecht criticizes the excesses of Hollywood and how they've damaged Lorre, and begs him to return to postwar Germany with him: "You're not happy, well, no one gives a ***/ This is a game and you're part of it/ Maybe it's time for you to quit." It would fit the album's timeline as well with the next song, "Addicted to Bad Ideas", being about Lorre's growing addiction and despair after returning to Hollywood when his German comeback film flops. - Tropers.TechnicolorPachyderm\n
* Music/{{Rammstein}}'s song "Benzin" is about someone who ''really'' likes petrol. The line "''Brauch keine Frau, nur Vaselin"'' very roughly translates to, 'I don't need a woman, just Vaseline'. The reference to masturbation was obvious; it wasn't until much later that I remembered what Vaseline is made from. - Dane900\n
** I got one while watching the ''Haifisch'' video. "Haifisch" is German for shark. During the video, Richard and Paul (I think, it's been a bit since I've seen the video) got into an arguement that devolved into the five remaining members fighting. The fight started when one of them got punched in the nose, drawing blood...which attracts sharks. - {{Kazokuhouou}}



* The song "Hella Good" by No Doubt is actually about sex not dancing. What she really wants him to do is keep on screwing not dancing. This explains why the waves keep on crashing on her and why his love keeps on coming like a thunderbolt. It also explains why she keeps gasping as she sings the song. - MKing49001

to:

* The song "Hella Good" by No Doubt is actually about sex not dancing. What she really wants him to do is keep on screwing not dancing. This explains why the waves keep on crashing on her and why his love keeps on coming like a thunderbolt. It also explains why she keeps gasping as she sings the song. - MKing49001



* In classic FridgeBrilliance style, I liked the music video to ''In Bloom'' by Nirvana, but didn't really understand why they were referencing the Beatles, who didn't seem to have anything to do with the song at all. Then later I learned that the Beatles occasionally shouted Nazi slogans into crowds because they knew that nobody was actually listening to them, or could even hear them over the roar - which basically sums up the song ''In Bloom''. - {{randomfanboy}}
** I took it more as a general sarcastic comparison of the band's sudden rise in popularity to Beatlemania, but come to think of it that ''also'' fits into the meaning of the song a little bit. - MikeK

to:

* In classic FridgeBrilliance style, I liked the music video to ''In Bloom'' by Nirvana, but didn't really understand why they were referencing the Beatles, who didn't seem to have anything to do with the song at all. Then later I learned that the Beatles occasionally shouted Nazi slogans into crowds because they knew that nobody was actually listening to them, or could even hear them over the roar - which basically sums up the song ''In Bloom''. - {{randomfanboy}}
Bloom''.
** I took it more as a general sarcastic comparison of the band's sudden rise in popularity to Beatlemania, but come to think of it that ''also'' fits into the meaning of the song a little bit. - MikeK



* I was recently listening to the song Wander, by Kamelot, and something occured to me. The lyrics in the first half of the chorus isn't just Ariel reflecting on how much he misses Helena. It's an eerie character-doesn't-realize-it foreshadowing towards the events that occur later on. -themagicdance

to:

* I was recently listening to the song Wander, by Kamelot, and something occured to me. The lyrics in the first half of the chorus isn't just Ariel reflecting on how much he misses Helena. It's an eerie character-doesn't-realize-it foreshadowing towards the events that occur later on. -themagicdance



* It took me several listens before I fully figured out that Music/FleetwoodMac's "Tusk" is about the ElephantInTheLivingRoom, in the form of a dying relationship (and various infidelities) neither partner wants to discuss. - Carty
* In the song Every dog has it's day by Toby Keith I thought the line "when the big dog throws him a bone," was just a random line to set up the next rhyme. It wasn't until later that I realized "The Big Dog" is Toby Keith's nickname. He's talking about himself. -- {{Windweaver19}}
* I always thought Billy Joel's "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" was about two old friends in the eponymous restaurant reminiscing about a couple they happened to know years ago in high school, but what if they themselves are Brenda and Eddie? -- RichardAK
** When I first heard it, I didn't like the song "She's Always a Woman" because it seemed to paint the subject in a very negative light. A little while later, it finally hit me that the narrator isn't bad-mouthing her at all. He's merely acknowledging her flaws, and saying that he loves her anyways. D'awww. - PingoTBest
*** I listened to Billy Joel's own explanation of this song and then re-listened. Notice how all the negative characteristics are nearly all in the second person "She can ruin ''your'' faith", 'She can lead ''you'' to love" but the key phrase is 'She's always a woman to ''me'' '. And the penultimate line is 'Blame it all on ''yourself'' '. Its a man defending his love to an ex-partner and saying that all her supposedly negative characteristics were down to the way he treated her. {{Culfy}}
** I always liked "You're only human (Second Wind)" for being a really upbeat and helpful song. It wasn't until very recently that I realized that Billy himself made a mistake in the recording of it, and kept it in with an ad-libbed laugh, to cement the message of living with your mistakes. - Lumino
* I never understood or fully appreciated the song "Hole Hearted" by Extreme until I realized that it was not a love song but a hymn to God. (Apparently there is even some linguistic support for this: someone here told me before someone inexplicably erased the previous version of this entry that the literal meaning of the Hebrew word "sin" is "to fall short".) -ZiggyZag
* It took me a while listening to the Ludo song ''Lake Pontchartrain'' before I realized the significance of the line "They both had crawfish, strictly chicken for me." Before, the song had a b-movie horror vibe, but that shifted it straight into the [[Creator/HPLovecraft Lovecraft]] zone.- Shinyfox

to:

* It took me several listens before I fully figured out that Music/FleetwoodMac's "Tusk" is about the ElephantInTheLivingRoom, in the form of a dying relationship (and various infidelities) neither partner wants to discuss. - Carty\n
* In the song Every dog has it's day by Toby Keith I thought the line "when the big dog throws him a bone," was just a random line to set up the next rhyme. It wasn't until later that I realized "The Big Dog" is Toby Keith's nickname. He's talking about himself. -- {{Windweaver19}}
himself.
* I always thought Billy Joel's "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" was about two old friends in the eponymous restaurant reminiscing about a couple they happened to know years ago in high school, but what if they themselves are Brenda and Eddie? -- RichardAK
Eddie?
** When I first heard it, I didn't like the song "She's Always a Woman" because it seemed to paint the subject in a very negative light. A little while later, it finally hit me that the narrator isn't bad-mouthing her at all. He's merely acknowledging her flaws, and saying that he loves her anyways. D'awww. - PingoTBest
D'awww.
*** I listened to Billy Joel's own explanation of this song and then re-listened. Notice how all the negative characteristics are nearly all in the second person "She can ruin ''your'' faith", 'She can lead ''you'' to love" but the key phrase is 'She's always a woman to ''me'' '. And the penultimate line is 'Blame it all on ''yourself'' '. Its a man defending his love to an ex-partner and saying that all her supposedly negative characteristics were down to the way he treated her. {{Culfy}}\n
** I always liked "You're only human (Second Wind)" for being a really upbeat and helpful song. It wasn't until very recently that I realized that Billy himself made a mistake in the recording of it, and kept it in with an ad-libbed laugh, to cement the message of living with your mistakes. - Lumino
mistakes.
* I never understood or fully appreciated the song "Hole Hearted" by Extreme until I realized that it was not a love song but a hymn to God. (Apparently there is even some linguistic support for this: someone here told me before someone inexplicably erased the previous version of this entry that the literal meaning of the Hebrew word "sin" is "to fall short".) -ZiggyZag
)
* It took me a while listening to the Ludo song ''Lake Pontchartrain'' before I realized the significance of the line "They both had crawfish, strictly chicken for me." Before, the song had a b-movie horror vibe, but that shifted it straight into the [[Creator/HPLovecraft Lovecraft]] zone.- Shinyfox



* The titles of albums (that aren't collaborations) by Finnish experimental electronic duo Pan Sonic mostly consist of single Finnish words, so their 1999 album called simply ''A'' may seem merely a weird exception from this rule. Not quite... Pan Sonic first named themselves after a certain well-known electronics corporation, and were forced to drop one letter from their name to prevent having further action taken against them. Guess what ''A'''s album title most probably pays tribute to. -Litis

to:

* The titles of albums (that aren't collaborations) by Finnish experimental electronic duo Pan Sonic mostly consist of single Finnish words, so their 1999 album called simply ''A'' may seem merely a weird exception from this rule. Not quite... Pan Sonic first named themselves after a certain well-known electronics corporation, and were forced to drop one letter from their name to prevent having further action taken against them. Guess what ''A'''s album title most probably pays tribute to. -Litis



* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ik_ghfvFJzs In Noctem]]", from the ''[[Film/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince Half-Blood Prince]]'' soundtrack, just sounds like your typical (if hauntingly beautiful) OminousLatinChanting... Until you take a good, hard look at [[http://harrypotter.wikia.com/wiki/In_Noctem the lyrics]] (which are the same in English as they are in Latin). It's the "Love Conquers All" message of the entire series in two minutes, ''and'' it underscores the parallels between Harry and [[spoiler: Snape]]. TenderLumpling
* When I first listened to ''Music/TheWall'''s opening track (In The Flesh?), I didn't understand why it started with a man saying "We came in." (a seeming non-sequitur). Then, listening to the final track (Outside the Wall) end with 'Isn't this where-?', it occurred to me; it was to connect the beginning of the album to the end (Isn't this where...we came in?), turning the album into one big cycle to recommend that what happened to [[spoiler: Pink in the course of [[Music/TheWall two vinyl discs]] could very well happen to someone else (or to put it differently, one wall comes up as another one goes down)]]. My god! =Roger Waters was creative! -Antoine

to:

* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ik_ghfvFJzs In Noctem]]", from the ''[[Film/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince Half-Blood Prince]]'' soundtrack, just sounds like your typical (if hauntingly beautiful) OminousLatinChanting... Until you take a good, hard look at [[http://harrypotter.wikia.com/wiki/In_Noctem the lyrics]] (which are the same in English as they are in Latin). It's the "Love Conquers All" message of the entire series in two minutes, ''and'' it underscores the parallels between Harry and [[spoiler: Snape]]. TenderLumpling\n
* When I first listened to ''Music/TheWall'''s opening track (In The Flesh?), I didn't understand why it started with a man saying "We came in." (a seeming non-sequitur). Then, listening to the final track (Outside the Wall) end with 'Isn't this where-?', it occurred to me; it was to connect the beginning of the album to the end (Isn't this where...we came in?), turning the album into one big cycle to recommend that what happened to [[spoiler: Pink in the course of [[Music/TheWall two vinyl discs]] could very well happen to someone else (or to put it differently, one wall comes up as another one goes down)]]. My god! =Roger Waters was creative! -Antoine



* For years, I thought the Music/SteelyDan song "Deacon Blues" was about an ultra-hip jazz musician who's had some hard knocks, but he's still the shiznit and he knows it. "They're singing about the coolest person in the world," I thought. Then I read where it's actually about a wannabe who fantasizes about being this hip jazz cat but doesn't have the guts to go out and make it happen. The more I think about the lyrics, it makes sense: "I'll make it this time/I'm ready to cross that fine line," turns to "A world of my own/I'll make it my home sweet home." --RAFritz
* The 2010 Eurovision winner, "Satellite" sounds like yet another pathetic love song at first listen, but then, when you start thinking about the lyrics, you realise that the song really is about a half-psychotic stalker probably halfway to a complete postal spree already. - Belrondis

to:

* For years, I thought the Music/SteelyDan song "Deacon Blues" was about an ultra-hip jazz musician who's had some hard knocks, but he's still the shiznit and he knows it. "They're singing about the coolest person in the world," I thought. Then I read where it's actually about a wannabe who fantasizes about being this hip jazz cat but doesn't have the guts to go out and make it happen. The more I think about the lyrics, it makes sense: "I'll make it this time/I'm ready to cross that fine line," turns to "A world of my own/I'll make it my home sweet home." --RAFritz
"
* The 2010 Eurovision winner, "Satellite" sounds like yet another pathetic love song at first listen, but then, when you start thinking about the lyrics, you realise that the song really is about a half-psychotic stalker probably halfway to a complete postal spree already. - Belrondis



** Have you not read the poem of the same title? I don't recall offhand who wrote it, but it's rather nice iambic pentameter. . .(Hakeber)

to:

** Have you not read the poem of the same title? I don't recall offhand who wrote it, but it's rather nice iambic pentameter. . .(Hakeber)



* Not necessarily Fridge-y for everyone, but: I was listening to "Total Eclipse of the Heart" for the singer's emotional delivery and tune, because the lyrics just seemed sort of...eh. I still picked up "Total Eclipse of the Heart," because [[TitleDrop you have to.]] I figured it was talking about how she was without his love, her heart was in total darkness ([[MeaninglessMeaningfulWords whatever that means...]]), and then another line made its way in: ''Your love is like a shadow on me all of the time.'' She is in complete darkness because he loves her that much. And suddenly it fit much better with, "Turn around, bright eyes." She knows he loves her, and ''that's'' what the song is about, not how "every now and then [she] fall[s] apart." When she asks him to hold her, ''he's there''. And then it went from weepy to dramatic expression of love. --@/RedWren
** Weeellll, yes, the imagery and metaphors are all there and well and good and all... but the song is actually about vampires. No, I'm not joking. --@/DangerSwan333
* When first listening to the Therapy? song ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNdTs9Ar3h4 Polar Bear]]'', the song seemed very simple and the lyrics monotonous. However, think about what the lyrics say about being a polar bear in a zoo. Out of all of the zoo animals, the polar bear is not only one of the the most potentially vicious (there have been several past cases of suicide by polar bear) but also one of the most out of place and out of its natural environment. Add that to the fact that the music gets slowly more out of control, going from tight basslines to the messy pick scrapes and strings being caught on the guitar to the final bludgeoning outro. It's lyrically and musically a journal of being alienated and completely out of place and becoming more and more agitated to the point of losing control - Slave

to:

* Not necessarily Fridge-y for everyone, but: I was listening to "Total Eclipse of the Heart" for the singer's emotional delivery and tune, because the lyrics just seemed sort of...eh. I still picked up "Total Eclipse of the Heart," because [[TitleDrop you have to.]] I figured it was talking about how she was without his love, her heart was in total darkness ([[MeaninglessMeaningfulWords whatever that means...]]), and then another line made its way in: ''Your love is like a shadow on me all of the time.'' She is in complete darkness because he loves her that much. And suddenly it fit much better with, "Turn around, bright eyes." She knows he loves her, and ''that's'' what the song is about, not how "every now and then [she] fall[s] apart." When she asks him to hold her, ''he's there''. And then it went from weepy to dramatic expression of love. --@/RedWren\n
** Weeellll, yes, the imagery and metaphors are all there and well and good and all... but the song is actually about vampires. No, I'm not joking. --@/DangerSwan333\n
* When first listening to the Therapy? song ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNdTs9Ar3h4 Polar Bear]]'', the song seemed very simple and the lyrics monotonous. However, think about what the lyrics say about being a polar bear in a zoo. Out of all of the zoo animals, the polar bear is not only one of the the most potentially vicious (there have been several past cases of suicide by polar bear) but also one of the most out of place and out of its natural environment. Add that to the fact that the music gets slowly more out of control, going from tight basslines to the messy pick scrapes and strings being caught on the guitar to the final bludgeoning outro. It's lyrically and musically a journal of being alienated and completely out of place and becoming more and more agitated to the point of losing control - Slavecontrol



* Why do so many Japanese songs have upbeat melodies but depressing lyrics? It's because it's an "in the moment" song. The times between the people mentioned in this song are good, but there are also bad times, and even with those still going on, it makes the good times even sweeter. Even if there's a melancholy to the lyrics, the song stays upbeat because the "memories" that come with them are worth it. (originally by Tropers/{{anelaidlives}})
* "Love (Can Make You Happy)", a big hit ballad for the OneHitWonder band Mercy in 1969, is one of the sappiest songs of all time. The whole thing seems like a banal celebration of how wonderful it is to be in love. Until you look at the lyrics a little more closely. Most of the lyrics are written in a conditional tense: "love ''CAN'' make you happy/''IF'' you find someone who cares.." or "''IF'' you ''THINK'' you've found someone you'll love forevermore." The narrator isn't saying "love has made me happy", so odds are they aren't currently in love, but they're trying to distract themselves from thinking about their current lonely state by imagining a perfect romance. Or, they've just suffered a horrible breakup and are pondering how elusive true love can be. Love can make you happy if you find someone who cares, but when you don't it's a living hell. Or the narrator is going through unrequited love: "Your mind is filled with the thoughts of a certain someone that you love/your life is filled with joy when she is there." It doesn't say anything about her reciprocating those feelings. Also, the song is sung as a male-female duet, so maybe it's about ''mutually'' unrequited love. - Ezclee4050

to:

* Why do so many Japanese songs have upbeat melodies but depressing lyrics? It's because it's an "in the moment" song. The times between the people mentioned in this song are good, but there are also bad times, and even with those still going on, it makes the good times even sweeter. Even if there's a melancholy to the lyrics, the song stays upbeat because the "memories" that come with them are worth it. (originally by Tropers/{{anelaidlives}})\n
* "Love (Can Make You Happy)", a big hit ballad for the OneHitWonder band Mercy in 1969, is one of the sappiest songs of all time. The whole thing seems like a banal celebration of how wonderful it is to be in love. Until you look at the lyrics a little more closely. Most of the lyrics are written in a conditional tense: "love ''CAN'' make you happy/''IF'' you find someone who cares.." or "''IF'' you ''THINK'' you've found someone you'll love forevermore." The narrator isn't saying "love has made me happy", so odds are they aren't currently in love, but they're trying to distract themselves from thinking about their current lonely state by imagining a perfect romance. Or, they've just suffered a horrible breakup and are pondering how elusive true love can be. Love can make you happy if you find someone who cares, but when you don't it's a living hell. Or the narrator is going through unrequited love: "Your mind is filled with the thoughts of a certain someone that you love/your life is filled with joy when she is there." It doesn't say anything about her reciprocating those feelings. Also, the song is sung as a male-female duet, so maybe it's about ''mutually'' unrequited love. - Ezclee4050



* "Absolutely ([[RefrainFromAssuming Story of a Girl]]), or, as you may know it, TropeNamer for WhenSheSmiles: At first I thought that, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her WhenSheSmiles," being shortened and, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her," was just a cut off, the sort of thing you end with a dash. Then I realized, no, that's a complete sentence. [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments And the, "aw..." factor went way up.]] --@/RedWren
* This is probably an obvious one, but... I enjoyed the song "High School Never Ends" by Music/BowlingForSoup, but I thought it was a bit repetitive. Then I realized the song was all about how when you leave high school you think things will be different, but they're not. The entire world is filled with people who are "just as obsessed with who's the best dressed and who's having sex". So, it makes perfect sense for a song about how nothing changes anywhere to be repetitive! - HackeySack
* "Fantastic Rose" by Geoff Smith. I was listening to it with a FanVid to ''Series/DoctorWho'', and it was surrounding the Doctor and Rose's relationship. I thought it was a love song, and there was just a nod to her leaving at the end...then I realized, no. It's an upbeat song, yes, but it's and upbeat song about a good breakup. It might have been IJustWantMyBelovedToBeHappy, it might have been them realizing they were BetterAsFriends, regardless, it was a (bad) breakup that he's good with now. But they're not together anymore, and you know what? That's okay. It's a love song about how it's okay to break up with someone and then move on without leaving the person you broke up with in the dust. It's...it's a happy breakup song for ''both'' parties. This was the first song I'd ever seen with that as the message. And it was ''perfect'' for the Doctor and Rose. ''Addendum: I just found out he wrote it about Rose Tyler. Win.'' --@/RedWren

to:

* "Absolutely ([[RefrainFromAssuming Story of a Girl]]), or, as you may know it, TropeNamer for WhenSheSmiles: At first I thought that, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her WhenSheSmiles," being shortened and, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her," was just a cut off, the sort of thing you end with a dash. Then I realized, no, that's a complete sentence. [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments And the, "aw..." factor went way up.]] --@/RedWren
]]
* This is probably an obvious one, but... I enjoyed the song "High School Never Ends" by Music/BowlingForSoup, but I thought it was a bit repetitive. Then I realized the song was all about how when you leave high school you think things will be different, but they're not. The entire world is filled with people who are "just as obsessed with who's the best dressed and who's having sex". So, it makes perfect sense for a song about how nothing changes anywhere to be repetitive! - HackeySack
repetitive!
* "Fantastic Rose" by Geoff Smith. I was listening to it with a FanVid to ''Series/DoctorWho'', and it was surrounding the Doctor and Rose's relationship. I thought it was a love song, and there was just a nod to her leaving at the end...then I realized, no. It's an upbeat song, yes, but it's and upbeat song about a good breakup. It might have been IJustWantMyBelovedToBeHappy, it might have been them realizing they were BetterAsFriends, regardless, it was a (bad) breakup that he's good with now. But they're not together anymore, and you know what? That's okay. It's a love song about how it's okay to break up with someone and then move on without leaving the person you broke up with in the dust. It's...it's a happy breakup song for ''both'' parties. This was the first song I'd ever seen with that as the message. And it was ''perfect'' for the Doctor and Rose. ''Addendum: I just found out he wrote it about Rose Tyler. Win.'' --@/RedWren''



* The album False Priest by Of Montreal seemed a bit weird to me- not musicwise, bit the way the songs were structured. The two albums up to this one, Hissing Fauna Are You The Destroyer and Skeletal Lamping, both had a long epic mood-changing song in the middle of them, which False Priest doesn't have. But the real FridgeLogic moment came about when I realized that False Priest has absolutely no mention of Georgie Fruit, Kevin Barnes' alter-ego, in the lyrics. So that's why it sounded so weird... --{brosandi}
* I have always been a fan of one specific song by The Police, "Synchronicity II", but the lyrics always seemed a little odd to me, in that these two events described in the lyrics have no relation to one another. Recently I listened to "Synchronicity I" from the same album, and it suddenly hit me. In the lyrics of the latter the singer explains the concept of synchronicity, seemingly defined as an intangible, almost imperceptible link. Then I listened to the former again and realized it was presented as an example of the previously defined concept. Now it makes so much more sense to me! -Araneas
* For a while the lyrics to "The Sharpest Lives" left me rather confused, until I realised that they aren't suposed to make sense,the narrator is drunk and the lyrics are his drunken ramblings.- Galen Lionheart.
* [[{{JHM}} I]] have had a few moments of musical Fridge Brilliance in my life, but perhaps the most satisfying was that which accompanied figuring out ''exactly'' what Wire's (utterly baffling) B-side "Former Airline" was about. Then I lost it. I'm still trying to recover my wee epiphany... That said, unraveling the lyrics to the same band's "Silk Skin Paws" comes ***ably close. In short, they are from the perspective of a ManipulativeBastard banker watching the stock market implode, realizing what he has done/become, and finally snapping under the pressure and committing suicide. It's so subtly written, so insidious and sardonic that you don't quite get the full picture until the last lines:

to:

* The album False Priest by Of Montreal seemed a bit weird to me- not musicwise, bit the way the songs were structured. The two albums up to this one, Hissing Fauna Are You The Destroyer and Skeletal Lamping, both had a long epic mood-changing song in the middle of them, which False Priest doesn't have. But the real FridgeLogic moment came about when I realized that False Priest has absolutely no mention of Georgie Fruit, Kevin Barnes' alter-ego, in the lyrics. So that's why it sounded so weird... --{brosandi}\n
* I have always been a fan of one specific song by The Police, "Synchronicity II", but the lyrics always seemed a little odd to me, in that these two events described in the lyrics have no relation to one another. Recently I listened to "Synchronicity I" from the same album, and it suddenly hit me. In the lyrics of the latter the singer explains the concept of synchronicity, seemingly defined as an intangible, almost imperceptible link. Then I listened to the former again and realized it was presented as an example of the previously defined concept. Now it makes so much more sense to me! -Araneas
me!
* For a while the lyrics to "The Sharpest Lives" left me rather confused, until I realised that they aren't suposed to make sense,the narrator is drunk and the lyrics are his drunken ramblings.- Galen Lionheart.
ramblings.
* [[{{JHM}} I]] I have had a few moments of musical Fridge Brilliance in my life, but perhaps the most satisfying was that which accompanied figuring out ''exactly'' what Wire's (utterly baffling) B-side "Former Airline" was about. Then I lost it. I'm still trying to recover my wee epiphany... That said, unraveling the lyrics to the same band's "Silk Skin Paws" comes ***ably close. In short, they are from the perspective of a ManipulativeBastard banker watching the stock market implode, realizing what he has done/become, and finally snapping under the pressure and committing suicide. It's so subtly written, so insidious and sardonic that you don't quite get the full picture until the last lines:



* I had a fridge brilliance for Techno (this stripped-down, dark and robotic subgenre of electronic music) recently: why was there no melodies, cool fat synths like in Electro-House? 'Cause it's made for live performance. Live, cool synths often get completely squashed: only remains the drums and the bassline, which are THE elements that will make a human dance. Since that, I love techno. -Stay'n Alive
* The first time I heard The Vaselines' "I Hate The 80's", I liked it, but also thought the verse riff was too much of a Psychedelic Furs rip-off. Then it occurred to me they were likely going for deliberate irony by de-romanticizing TheEighties while borrowing from a song best known as the theme song to [[Film/PrettyInPink a John Hughes movie]] - Tropers/MikeK

to:

* I had a fridge brilliance for Techno (this stripped-down, dark and robotic subgenre of electronic music) recently: why was there no melodies, cool fat synths like in Electro-House? 'Cause it's made for live performance. Live, cool synths often get completely squashed: only remains the drums and the bassline, which are THE elements that will make a human dance. Since that, I love techno. -Stay'n Alive\n
* The first time I heard The Vaselines' "I Hate The 80's", I liked it, but also thought the verse riff was too much of a Psychedelic Furs rip-off. Then it occurred to me they were likely going for deliberate irony by de-romanticizing TheEighties while borrowing from a song best known as the theme song to [[Film/PrettyInPink a John Hughes movie]] - Tropers/MikeKmovie]].



* I was listening to "Happy Birthday" by Music/TheBirthdayMassacre again, and it hit me: in the chorus, when she sings "'You're a murder tramp, murder tramp'/I think he said/'You're a murder boy, birthday boy'/I think I said", he's not repeating 'murder tramp', it's what he's ''calling her by'', just like how she's calling him 'birthday boy'. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}
* A trademark of The Melvins is to put the track-list on the front of their cd's and what would normally be considered the "cover art" on the back (while the vinyl versions of their albums are oriented the normal way). I initially thought this was just done for the sake of being weird, but there sort of is a practical reason for designing it that way: the back cover of a cd is a little bit wider than the front, so they get to have a slightly larger cover image by putting it on the back insert instead of on the front of the booklet. - Tropers/MikeK
* A while ago, I was listening to Music/LadyGaga's "So Happy I Could Die" and I realised something: there's more than a few references to masturbation in there, along with the repeated line 'So happy I could die'... and 'die' was repeatedly used by Shakespeare to mean orgasm. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}

to:

* I was listening to "Happy Birthday" by Music/TheBirthdayMassacre again, and it hit me: in the chorus, when she sings "'You're a murder tramp, murder tramp'/I think he said/'You're a murder boy, birthday boy'/I think I said", he's not repeating 'murder tramp', it's what he's ''calling her by'', just like how she's calling him 'birthday boy'. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}
boy'.
* A trademark of The Melvins is to put the track-list on the front of their cd's and what would normally be considered the "cover art" on the back (while the vinyl versions of their albums are oriented the normal way). I initially thought this was just done for the sake of being weird, but there sort of is a practical reason for designing it that way: the back cover of a cd is a little bit wider than the front, so they get to have a slightly larger cover image by putting it on the back insert instead of on the front of the booklet. - Tropers/MikeK\n
* A while ago, I was listening to Music/LadyGaga's "So Happy I Could Die" and I realised something: there's more than a few references to masturbation in there, along with the repeated line 'So happy I could die'... and 'die' was repeatedly used by Shakespeare to mean orgasm. - Tropers/{{Zadia}}



** I think "heel" was used in common language to mean an unpleasant person well before it was adopted into use in professional wrestling. - Tropers/DevilsAdvocate

to:

** I think "heel" was used in common language to mean an unpleasant person well before it was adopted into use in professional wrestling. - Tropers/DevilsAdvocate



* In the song "The Fear" by Music/LilyAllen, there's the line "I'll look at the sun and I'll look in the mirror". The song is about trying to become famous, so I always thought that it was "look at the sun" (symbolizing hope) and "look in the mirror" (vanity). I just got that there are two meanings to that line: She'll also look at The Sun and The Mirror (the tabloids) to see what she needs to do to be famous. To be fair, I'm American, so even though I like British shows and music, I'm not part of the culture. -- animeHrmIne
* While reading about Elizabeth Kubler-Ross' model of the Five Stages of Grief, it suddenly hit me, after years of assuming it to be drug-inspired randomness, that THAT is what Bohemian Rhapsody is all about (through the eyes of a man on death row). {{mariposa}}

to:

* In the song "The Fear" by Music/LilyAllen, there's the line "I'll look at the sun and I'll look in the mirror". The song is about trying to become famous, so I always thought that it was "look at the sun" (symbolizing hope) and "look in the mirror" (vanity). I just got that there are two meanings to that line: She'll also look at The Sun and The Mirror (the tabloids) to see what she needs to do to be famous. To be fair, I'm American, so even though I like British shows and music, I'm not part of the culture. -- animeHrmIne
culture.
* While reading about Elizabeth Kubler-Ross' model of the Five Stages of Grief, it suddenly hit me, after years of assuming it to be drug-inspired randomness, that THAT is what Bohemian Rhapsody is all about (through the eyes of a man on death row). {{mariposa}}



* The line "Put on your ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Shoes_(fairy_tale) red shoes]]'' and dance the blues" immediately makes Music/DavidBowie's "Let's Dance" darker than most dance tunes of the early [[Main/TheEighties 1980s]] if you know your Creator/HansChristianAndersen. -- Sapphire Redux
* One More Minute by Weird Al Yankovic is the most accurate description of putting on a brave face when confronted with heartbreak ever written. He's telling her "Psh; you're no big deal, I'd rather jump into a thumbtack pile than spend time with you," but every painful thing he describes is how living without her and watching her dating someone else feels. The only thing in the world he wants is to spend one more minute with her. I've never been able to hear the humor in that song; I love it but it's absolutely heartwrenching. - @/BreakfastFish

to:

* The line "Put on your ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Shoes_(fairy_tale) red shoes]]'' and dance the blues" immediately makes Music/DavidBowie's "Let's Dance" darker than most dance tunes of the early [[Main/TheEighties [[TheEighties 1980s]] if you know your Creator/HansChristianAndersen. -- Sapphire Redux
Creator/HansChristianAndersen.
* One More Minute by Weird Al Yankovic is the most accurate description of putting on a brave face when confronted with heartbreak ever written. He's telling her "Psh; you're no big deal, I'd rather jump into a thumbtack pile than spend time with you," but every painful thing he describes is how living without her and watching her dating someone else feels. The only thing in the world he wants is to spend one more minute with her. I've never been able to hear the humor in that song; I love it but it's absolutely heartwrenching. - @/BreakfastFish



* On first listen Tim Minchin's ''You Grew On Me'' is a funny song that just can't be taken as a serious love song. But then I realised that all of it is one deep, intelligent love simile/metaphor. It's really quite beautiful. - BladeSatoshiX
* I first heard Music/TheBlackEyedPeas song "Imma Be" during the WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows review, and agreed with him that the title sounds entirely too much like "I'm a bee", and the single's cover itself admits it. Upon reflection, that may have been the entire point of the title. The video is apparently about the evils of assimilation and the whole idea of producing music mechanically, with visuals involving robots and being literally stuck in a rut. In essence, creating a hive mind. In fact, the repetition of the line throughout the first part can only be described as [[StealthPun droning]]. Then you add in the actual verses about standing out from the crowd, and the term "Imma be" is now a positive message about having aspirations and personal interests. While sounding exactly the same as the previous term with the opposite meaning. -Tropers/FalconPain

to:

* On first listen Tim Minchin's ''You Grew On Me'' is a funny song that just can't be taken as a serious love song. But then I realised that all of it is one deep, intelligent love simile/metaphor. It's really quite beautiful. - BladeSatoshiX
beautiful.
* I first heard Music/TheBlackEyedPeas song "Imma Be" during the WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows review, and agreed with him that the title sounds entirely too much like "I'm a bee", and the single's cover itself admits it. Upon reflection, that may have been the entire point of the title. The video is apparently about the evils of assimilation and the whole idea of producing music mechanically, with visuals involving robots and being literally stuck in a rut. In essence, creating a hive mind. In fact, the repetition of the line throughout the first part can only be described as [[StealthPun droning]]. Then you add in the actual verses about standing out from the crowd, and the term "Imma be" is now a positive message about having aspirations and personal interests. While sounding exactly the same as the previous term with the opposite meaning. -Tropers/FalconPain



* "NTF" by illScarlet: The other day I was listening to this, and in an instant, the meaning dawned on me. Initially, I just assumed it was a generic break up song. But then I realized it was actually about get repeatedly rejected by a girl, and trying to move past his feelings for her. Not an amazing epiphany, but it hit me right where it hurts, because I've been there before. -Tropers/TheGreatCoolEnergy
* When I first heard 'Dog Days Are Over' by Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine I merely thought it was about how everything was "looking up". Then I read the lyrics and watched the video (the 2008 version) and realized that perhaps she is trying avoid being that happy. -Tropers/RuffleMyFeathers

to:

* "NTF" by illScarlet: The other day I was listening to this, and in an instant, the meaning dawned on me. Initially, I just assumed it was a generic break up song. But then I realized it was actually about get repeatedly rejected by a girl, and trying to move past his feelings for her. Not an amazing epiphany, but it hit me right where it hurts, because I've been there before. -Tropers/TheGreatCoolEnergy\n
* When I first heard 'Dog Days Are Over' by Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine I merely thought it was about how everything was "looking up". Then I read the lyrics and watched the video (the 2008 version) and realized that perhaps she is trying avoid being that happy. -Tropers/RuffleMyFeathers



* The Minutemen included a live version of their cover of "Don't Look Now" by Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival on ''Double Nickels On The Dime'', which is otherwise entirely a studio album. I had always wondered why this was, especially since it's not a very clear recording of the song, and you can hear the audience talking over most of it. I figured maybe they really wanted the song to be on the album, but couldn't seem to do a good studio performance of it, so they just grabbed the best live recording they happened to have of it. Then I read the book from the 33 1/3 series on the album, and it was noted that a friend of the band had made the recording from the audience, and convinced them to use it because he thought the audience chatter actually added something to the song. It suddenly started to make sense: "Don't Look Now" is sort of about taking conveniences for granted (and more specifically the hard work that goes into those conveniences), so using a live recording where the audience seems to be too busy talking among themselves to hear the message of the song adds a level of irony. -Tropers/MikeK

to:

* The Minutemen included a live version of their cover of "Don't Look Now" by Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival on ''Double Nickels On The Dime'', which is otherwise entirely a studio album. I had always wondered why this was, especially since it's not a very clear recording of the song, and you can hear the audience talking over most of it. I figured maybe they really wanted the song to be on the album, but couldn't seem to do a good studio performance of it, so they just grabbed the best live recording they happened to have of it. Then I read the book from the 33 1/3 series on the album, and it was noted that a friend of the band had made the recording from the audience, and convinced them to use it because he thought the audience chatter actually added something to the song. It suddenly started to make sense: "Don't Look Now" is sort of about taking conveniences for granted (and more specifically the hard work that goes into those conveniences), so using a live recording where the audience seems to be too busy talking among themselves to hear the message of the song adds a level of irony. -Tropers/MikeK



* George Michaels song "Father figure" has squicked a few of my friends who think it is a paedophile singing to his next victim. I think its perspective of older man - younger partner stems from the narrator being a vampire. When he says he'll love his baby to the end of time, he ''really'' means it. -HQ42
* "Dirty Water" by The Standells has a couple of seemingly throwaway lyrics at the end that actually change the meaning of the whole song: "Have you heard about [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Strangler the strangler?]]\ I'm the man, I'm the man!". Unless those two lines are actually meant to be unconnected, that means it's actually a VillainSong from the point of view of an infamous serial killer. Definitely puts a creepier spin on lines like "But I'm wishin' and a-hopin' that just once those doors weren't locked". -Tropers/MikeK
* Hate to do another one of these so soon, but: There's a line in The Wrens' "Everyone Choose Sides" that makes much more sense when you know a bit of the backstory to ''The Meadowlands''. The Wrens put out their first two albums on an independent label called Grass Records. After this, the label was bought out and the new owner wanted the band to sign a bigger contract and record more radio-friendly songs. When they refused, they were dropped and their albums were pulled out of print. Grass Records subsequently became Wind-Up Records (whose most successful act was Music/{{Creed}}, by the way), and The Wrens were left quietly working on new material while simultaneously looking for a new label, which they eventually found 6 years later. Thus the somewhat punny TakeThat "Greener grasses fade from where you wind up". -Tropers/MikeK
* In Ana Ng by Music/TheyMightBeGiants there is the line "I saw this painted on a BRIDGE, "I don't want the world I just want your half." Guess what section of the song it happens in? Here's a hint, it's not in the verse, chorus, intro, or outro... also the answer is in caps. - {{brainlesswonder}}
* "Hey Ya!" by Music/{{Outkast}} was/is very popular and very catchy, yet has the culturally unpopular message that love fades. I always found it funny that no-one ever talks about the lyrics, then realized that the line 'Y'all don't want me here you just wanna dance' after a verse shows that the band predicted this phenomenon. After this, I've noticed many Outkast songs have lines that seem to bash mainstream music and ways of thinking, while remaining pop songs themselves. - {{Littleloup}}
* I was just listening to Music/SteelyDan's song "Black Friday", and the first line is "When Black Friday comes, I'll stand down by the door, and watch the gray men when they dive from the fourteenth floor." It just hit me: Many buildings don't have a thirteenth floor; they go straight from twelve to fourteen, so ''technically'' the fourteenth floor is actually the thirteenth. - Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
* For a while, I've been wondering why Music/{{Angelspit}} named a song "Homo-Machinery", as I was thinking of the name as the insult. Several months, many Biology lessons and another look at the lyrics later and it hit me... their point is that by following constant routines, we are becoming humanoid machines, or Homo machinery- Homo as in the genus. God, I'm an idiot sometimes...- @/{{Zadia}}
* I kept misreading the song on Music/ThemCrookedVultures self-titled as 'Interlude with Lutes', which made no sense but I figured it was just another WordSaladTitle that Josh Homme appears so fond. When I actually looked and saw it was 'Interlude with LUDES', the reason why it seemed so psychadelic compared to the rest of the album was suddenly so obvious - [[spoiler:the 'Ludes' of the title refer to Quaaludes.]] - {{Be}}
* "Grenade" by Bruno Mars would make so much more sense when viewed as being from a bodyguard's point of view. The bodyguard gets into a brief affair with his client, who decides to toy with his feelings. And although it hurts him, he's got no choice but to keep protecting her because it's his *** job. -- Tropers/MiraShio
** Oddly enough, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zxj7gUtq6Ck this parody]] made me start thinking the original would also make more sense if it was from the point of view of ''[[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]]'', or really any protagonist of a video game series known for constantly reusing the SaveThePrincess plot - Tropers/MikeK
** I recently had a case of FridgeBrilliance with this song. The reason why the singer's "this is what I'd do for you" bits are describing things that would cause immense pain or death? It's the "I don't want to live after this girl dumped me" kind of song fused with the "I would do anything for you" kind of song. The whole thing is a collision of the "I love you" and "I hate you" kind of songs that are filled with hyperbole. This revalation made this song a whole lot deeper to me. Oh, and for WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows' confusion about the "Should've known you were trouble from the first kiss, had your eyes wide open" lyric? Maybe the first kiss happened when other people were around and the singer's knowledge of here eyes being open came from the other people who were there. - Tropers/{{Bobpiecheese}}

to:

* George Michaels song "Father figure" has squicked a few of my friends who think it is a paedophile singing to his next victim. I think its perspective of older man - younger partner stems from the narrator being a vampire. When he says he'll love his baby to the end of time, he ''really'' means it. -HQ42\n
* "Dirty Water" by The Standells has a couple of seemingly throwaway lyrics at the end that actually change the meaning of the whole song: "Have you heard about [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Strangler the strangler?]]\ I'm the man, I'm the man!". Unless those two lines are actually meant to be unconnected, that means it's actually a VillainSong from the point of view of an infamous serial killer. Definitely puts a creepier spin on lines like "But I'm wishin' and a-hopin' that just once those doors weren't locked". -Tropers/MikeK\n
* Hate to do another one of these so soon, but: There's a line in The Wrens' "Everyone Choose Sides" that makes much more sense when you know a bit of the backstory to ''The Meadowlands''. The Wrens put out their first two albums on an independent label called Grass Records. After this, the label was bought out and the new owner wanted the band to sign a bigger contract and record more radio-friendly songs. When they refused, they were dropped and their albums were pulled out of print. Grass Records subsequently became Wind-Up Records (whose most successful act was Music/{{Creed}}, by the way), and The Wrens were left quietly working on new material while simultaneously looking for a new label, which they eventually found 6 years later. Thus the somewhat punny TakeThat "Greener grasses fade from where you wind up". -Tropers/MikeK\n
* In Ana Ng by Music/TheyMightBeGiants there is the line "I saw this painted on a BRIDGE, "I don't want the world I just want your half." Guess what section of the song it happens in? Here's a hint, it's not in the verse, chorus, intro, or outro... also the answer is in caps. - {{brainlesswonder}}\n
* "Hey Ya!" by Music/{{Outkast}} was/is very popular and very catchy, yet has the culturally unpopular message that love fades. I always found it funny that no-one ever talks about the lyrics, then realized that the line 'Y'all don't want me here you just wanna dance' after a verse shows that the band predicted this phenomenon. After this, I've noticed many Outkast songs have lines that seem to bash mainstream music and ways of thinking, while remaining pop songs themselves. - {{Littleloup}}
themselves.
* I was just listening to Music/SteelyDan's song "Black Friday", and the first line is "When Black Friday comes, I'll stand down by the door, and watch the gray men when they dive from the fourteenth floor." It just hit me: Many buildings don't have a thirteenth floor; they go straight from twelve to fourteen, so ''technically'' the fourteenth floor is actually the thirteenth. - Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
thirteenth.
* For a while, I've been wondering why Music/{{Angelspit}} named a song "Homo-Machinery", as I was thinking of the name as the insult. Several months, many Biology lessons and another look at the lyrics later and it hit me... their point is that by following constant routines, we are becoming humanoid machines, or Homo machinery- Homo as in the genus. God, I'm an idiot sometimes...- @/{{Zadia}}
sometimes...
* I kept misreading the song on Music/ThemCrookedVultures self-titled as 'Interlude with Lutes', which made no sense but I figured it was just another WordSaladTitle that Josh Homme appears so fond. When I actually looked and saw it was 'Interlude with LUDES', the reason why it seemed so psychadelic compared to the rest of the album was suddenly so obvious - [[spoiler:the 'Ludes' of the title refer to Quaaludes.]] - {{Be}}
]]
* "Grenade" by Bruno Mars would make so much more sense when viewed as being from a bodyguard's point of view. The bodyguard gets into a brief affair with his client, who decides to toy with his feelings. And although it hurts him, he's got no choice but to keep protecting her because it's his *** job. -- Tropers/MiraShio\n
** Oddly enough, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zxj7gUtq6Ck this parody]] made me start thinking the original would also make more sense if it was from the point of view of ''[[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]]'', or really any protagonist of a video game series known for constantly reusing the SaveThePrincess plot - Tropers/MikeK
plot
** I recently had a case of FridgeBrilliance with this song. The reason why the singer's "this is what I'd do for you" bits are describing things that would cause immense pain or death? It's the "I don't want to live after this girl dumped me" kind of song fused with the "I would do anything for you" kind of song. The whole thing is a collision of the "I love you" and "I hate you" kind of songs that are filled with hyperbole. This revalation made this song a whole lot deeper to me. Oh, and for WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows' confusion about the "Should've known you were trouble from the first kiss, had your eyes wide open" lyric? Maybe the first kiss happened when other people were around and the singer's knowledge of here eyes being open came from the other people who were there. - Tropers/{{Bobpiecheese}}



* In Music/TheyMightBeGiants' "Weep Day", there are the lines "I didn't write the words you hear me singing \ I didn't sing the line before this one", which fits in perfectly with the MindScrew self-contradiction of the rest of the lyrics. But John Flansburgh repeats those lyrics right after John Linnell sings them, and when ''he'' sings them, they're both true: Flansburgh didn't write the lyrics and didn't sing the previous line. - Tropers/MikeK
* I fell in love with 'Wedding Song' (the first track) from "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadestown Hadestown]]" by Anais Mitchell almost the first time I heard it. For those of you who don't know, the whole album is a "folk opera" based on the Greek myth [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orpheus Orpheus and Eurydice]], which is about a husband who goes down to Hell to bring his wife back to life. Originally I could only think about how sweet and romantic it was. Then after hearing 'Hey Little Songbird' all the way through a couple of times, I realised: 'Wedding Song' ''is'' sweet, but it's what brings Eurydice into this mess. She's freaking out about the wedding and he's all "don't worry about it, my natural talent will bring everything about because I am totally awesome", leaning on his voice to bring them all they'll ever need. And then when she sees Hadestown and meets Hades, he tempts her with riches and things that her husband isn't willing to work for to provide, leading to their eventual downfall. - Tropers/{{sadiebird}}
* Because it was sold out, I have Act II of Music/TheProtomen, but not Act I. So after hearing act II multiple times, I decided to go back to Act I. That's where I remember Proto Man's last lines, which serve as the overarchng theme to the opera: "A Hero's just a man who knows he's free." This is a BrokenAesop in Act I though, because the good guys are higher spec robots than their foes. Then Act II comes. One of the heroes is a guy named Joe, who is a norma member of Wily's society, except he realizes that something is wrong. Later he beats a Sniper Robot, before helping Light in his attempt to take Wily down. It is this act - this proof that humans ''can'' beat Wily's robots - is what turns an Average Joe into Sniper Joe. - {{Stinkoman87}}

to:

* In Music/TheyMightBeGiants' "Weep Day", there are the lines "I didn't write the words you hear me singing \ I didn't sing the line before this one", which fits in perfectly with the MindScrew self-contradiction of the rest of the lyrics. But John Flansburgh repeats those lyrics right after John Linnell sings them, and when ''he'' sings them, they're both true: Flansburgh didn't write the lyrics and didn't sing the previous line. - Tropers/MikeK
line.
* I fell in love with 'Wedding Song' (the first track) from "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadestown Hadestown]]" by Anais Mitchell almost the first time I heard it. For those of you who don't know, the whole album is a "folk opera" based on the Greek myth [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orpheus Orpheus and Eurydice]], which is about a husband who goes down to Hell to bring his wife back to life. Originally I could only think about how sweet and romantic it was. Then after hearing 'Hey Little Songbird' all the way through a couple of times, I realised: 'Wedding Song' ''is'' sweet, but it's what brings Eurydice into this mess. She's freaking out about the wedding and he's all "don't worry about it, my natural talent will bring everything about because I am totally awesome", leaning on his voice to bring them all they'll ever need. And then when she sees Hadestown and meets Hades, he tempts her with riches and things that her husband isn't willing to work for to provide, leading to their eventual downfall. - Tropers/{{sadiebird}}\n
* Because it was sold out, I have Act II of Music/TheProtomen, but not Act I. So after hearing act II multiple times, I decided to go back to Act I. That's where I remember Proto Man's last lines, which serve as the overarchng theme to the opera: "A Hero's just a man who knows he's free." This is a BrokenAesop in Act I though, because the good guys are higher spec robots than their foes. Then Act II comes. One of the heroes is a guy named Joe, who is a norma member of Wily's society, except he realizes that something is wrong. Later he beats a Sniper Robot, before helping Light in his attempt to take Wily down. It is this act - this proof that humans ''can'' beat Wily's robots - is what turns an Average Joe into Sniper Joe. - {{Stinkoman87}}



** '(Nothing but) Flowers': is a inversion of the classic 'Big Yellow Taxi' and its lyric "They paved paradise and put in a parking lot" - when society fails (apocalypse?, end of gasoline reserves?), nature will reclaim the parking lot and other symbols of modernity. - {{Kpriv}}
*** 'And She Was' could alternately be about an affair. The lines about her moving above the earth could be an allegory to her graceful movements, 'She isn't sure just what she's done, no time to think about what to tell them, no time to think about what she's done' Them being her husband and children. - DrFlesh
* What was originally one of the more puzzling lines in "Intergalactic" is now one of my favorite examples of the Music/BeastieBoys' tendency towards intentionally silly BoastfulRap. The line in question is "Got an A from Moe Dee for sticking to themes". As it turns out this refers to Kool Moe Dee, who infamously published "report cards" for other rappers in his album liner notes: He did in fact give the Beastie Boys an A for "sticking to themes"... and straight C's for everything else. That's sort of like a high school kid bragging about the A they got in Phys. Ed when they're otherwise a straight C student, and knowing their humor, that's probably the joke - Tropers/MikeK
* The Music/PinkFloyd GreatestHitsAlbum ''Echoes'' has a few examples of deliberately placing songs from different eras of the band with similar lyrical themes next to each other. One such case took a while to fully creep up on me, namely following "Wish You Were Here" with "Jugband Blues". I knew enough about the background of both songs to get the most obvious significance of this: The former is often interpreted to be about original lead singer Syd Barrett's mental breakdown, and the latter is the last song Barrett wrote with the band (and can be viewed as a SanitySlippageSong). But why put "Wish You Were Here" first then? Well, because it makes "Jugband Blues" seem like an AnswerSong to "Wish You Were Here" despite being recorded first. Especially because of the first few lines: "It's awfully considerate of you to think of me here / and I'm much obliged to you for making it clear / that I'm not here" - Tropers/MikeK

to:

** '(Nothing but) Flowers': is a inversion of the classic 'Big Yellow Taxi' and its lyric "They paved paradise and put in a parking lot" - when society fails (apocalypse?, end of gasoline reserves?), nature will reclaim the parking lot and other symbols of modernity. - {{Kpriv}}\n
*** 'And She Was' could alternately be about an affair. The lines about her moving above the earth could be an allegory to her graceful movements, 'She isn't sure just what she's done, no time to think about what to tell them, no time to think about what she's done' Them being her husband and children. - DrFlesh\n
* What was originally one of the more puzzling lines in "Intergalactic" is now one of my favorite examples of the Music/BeastieBoys' tendency towards intentionally silly BoastfulRap. The line in question is "Got an A from Moe Dee for sticking to themes". As it turns out this refers to Kool Moe Dee, who infamously published "report cards" for other rappers in his album liner notes: He did in fact give the Beastie Boys an A for "sticking to themes"... and straight C's for everything else. That's sort of like a high school kid bragging about the A they got in Phys. Ed when they're otherwise a straight C student, and knowing their humor, that's probably the joke - Tropers/MikeK
joke.
* The Music/PinkFloyd GreatestHitsAlbum ''Echoes'' has a few examples of deliberately placing songs from different eras of the band with similar lyrical themes next to each other. One such case took a while to fully creep up on me, namely following "Wish You Were Here" with "Jugband Blues". I knew enough about the background of both songs to get the most obvious significance of this: The former is often interpreted to be about original lead singer Syd Barrett's mental breakdown, and the latter is the last song Barrett wrote with the band (and can be viewed as a SanitySlippageSong). But why put "Wish You Were Here" first then? Well, because it makes "Jugband Blues" seem like an AnswerSong to "Wish You Were Here" despite being recorded first. Especially because of the first few lines: "It's awfully considerate of you to think of me here / and I'm much obliged to you for making it clear / that I'm not here" - Tropers/MikeKhere".



* Not exactly a moment regarding lyrical content, but of compositional brilliance: I have been working on arranging [[Music/{{Tool}} Lateralus]] for SATB performance, and as I listened, I realized--Tool used two major themes the whole time, but broke them down and made little alterations to it so you heard what sounded like totally different movements. There is the 9-8-7/8 of the main riff, and then the softer riff heard in the intro and middle section. It blew my mind when I realized it. This is coming from a (hopeful) future major in Music Theory & Composition. - Valbinooo
** It goes much [[http://www.peteofthestreet.net/sayz/C1151806467/E1494764863/ MUCH deeper than that.]] -DangerSwan333
* The song "Homecoming" off the Kanye West album ''Graduation'' (also released as "Home" on a previous mixtape) at first seems like a love song about a girl named Wendy. It isn't until hearing the last line "If you ain't know by now, I'm talkin' 'bout Chi-town" that you realize the girl he was talking about was actually West's hometown of Chicago. - Tropers/JesusByArmbar

to:

* Not exactly a moment regarding lyrical content, but of compositional brilliance: I have been working on arranging [[Music/{{Tool}} Lateralus]] for SATB performance, and as I listened, I realized--Tool used two major themes the whole time, but broke them down and made little alterations to it so you heard what sounded like totally different movements. There is the 9-8-7/8 of the main riff, and then the softer riff heard in the intro and middle section. It blew my mind when I realized it. This is coming from a (hopeful) future major in Music Theory & Composition. - Valbinooo\n
** It goes much [[http://www.peteofthestreet.net/sayz/C1151806467/E1494764863/ MUCH deeper than that.]] -DangerSwan333
]]
* The song "Homecoming" off the Kanye West album ''Graduation'' (also released as "Home" on a previous mixtape) at first seems like a love song about a girl named Wendy. It isn't until hearing the last line "If you ain't know by now, I'm talkin' 'bout Chi-town" that you realize the girl he was talking about was actually West's hometown of Chicago. - Tropers/JesusByArmbar



* In Music/{{Pink}}'s music video for "Raise Your Glass", it bothered me that the non-outcasts were being treated like...um. Outcasts. Then came the prom scene: ''everybody's'' having fun; it's not the closer-to-average people who are being treated like that, just bullies. --@/RedWren

to:

* In Music/{{Pink}}'s music video for "Raise Your Glass", it bothered me that the non-outcasts were being treated like...um. Outcasts. Then came the prom scene: ''everybody's'' having fun; it's not the closer-to-average people who are being treated like that, just bullies. --@/RedWren



* Music/FrankZappa's "Why Does It Hurt When I Pee" is obviously a parody of over-dramatic rock opera songs, and based on some crude humor, but consider this: What can be more heartbreaking than contracting an [=STD=] from someone you love and trust implicitly? -Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
* The video for Music/{{Iamamiwhoami}}'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VduvB5xY2L0 "Clump"]] alternates between a static shot of Jonna Lee from the neck up lip-synching while laying on a toilet paper bed and bobbing up and down rather suggestively, and outdoor scenes in a thicket of tall grass and reeds. Sometimes the latter shots only occur for half a second. It took someone's youtube comment to make me realize that they cut to the outdoor shots every time Jonna closes her eyes, and cut back to her on the bed every time she opens them again. Thus, those scenes are apparently what she sees when her eyes are closed, or just what she's imagining. Tropers/MikeK
* The classic '80s song "867-5309/Jenny" by Music/TommyTutone contains the lines "Jenny, Jenny, you're the girl for me/You don't know me but you make me so happy." That rhyme is a bit of a stretch. Can you think of a different word that starts with H and rhymes better with "for me"? — Tropers/{{Skagway}}
* Marilyn Manson's song "Kaboom Kaboom". The lyrics in one part is "I hope this hook gets caught in your mouth." When I was younger (15 or so), my mind always went to someone with a fishhook in their mouth. Okay, typical Marilyn Manson imagery. It was only until just recently (I'm 20 now) that I realized it's also a bit of Fridge Brilliance/Logic: The part of the song that line is in IS the hook! He's saying "I hope this song sticks with you, long enough for you to start singing it." -N37
* The line "kick out the jams" among the rebel slogans in Music/DavidBowie's "Cygnet Committee" seems like {{Narm}} born of ignorance with the knowledge that "kick out the jams" wasn't meant to be anything subversive or countercultural, as many theories had it, but just a way of telling the audience "do I look like [[Music/TheGratefulDead Jerry Garcia]] to you?!" However, recall that the song was inspired by the creative bankruptcy Bowie saw in the Arts Lab he had been trying to set up, when people would go for his performances, contributing nothing, a kind of dynamic being not only endorsed but ''enforced'' by [=MC5=] - he knew ''exactly'' what it meant, tying the two "acts" together. - Tropers/TwinBird
* Exist Trace: An all female VisualKei metal band 4/5 of whom are {{Bifauxnen}}... in a genre where pretty much the same proportion of ''men'' are WholesomeCrossdressers! -Yun
* Self's "Trunk Full Of Amps" would practically be a SingleStanzaSong if not for the fact that every verse namechecks a different rock band or vocalist ("Got a trunk full of amps, mother***er / like (insert musician here), mother***er!"). What do all the acts mentioned have in common beyond being famous rock musicians? They all have songs prominently featuring the word "mother" (or "mama") in their titles or lyrics! Lenny Kravitz's "Mama Said", Music/ElectricLightOrchestra's "Mama" (or possibly "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle"), Music/{{Queen}}'s "Tie Your Mother Down" (or less obviously "Bohemian Rhapsody") and of course Music/{{Danzig}}'s "Mother". - Tropers/MikeK

to:

* Music/FrankZappa's "Why Does It Hurt When I Pee" is obviously a parody of over-dramatic rock opera songs, and based on some crude humor, but consider this: What can be more heartbreaking than contracting an [=STD=] from someone you love and trust implicitly? -Tropers/{{Cuchulainn}}
implicitly?
* The video for Music/{{Iamamiwhoami}}'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VduvB5xY2L0 "Clump"]] alternates between a static shot of Jonna Lee from the neck up lip-synching while laying on a toilet paper bed and bobbing up and down rather suggestively, and outdoor scenes in a thicket of tall grass and reeds. Sometimes the latter shots only occur for half a second. It took someone's youtube comment to make me realize that they cut to the outdoor shots every time Jonna closes her eyes, and cut back to her on the bed every time she opens them again. Thus, those scenes are apparently what she sees when her eyes are closed, or just what she's imagining. Tropers/MikeK\n
* The classic '80s song "867-5309/Jenny" by Music/TommyTutone contains the lines "Jenny, Jenny, you're the girl for me/You don't know me but you make me so happy." That rhyme is a bit of a stretch. Can you think of a different word that starts with H and rhymes better with "for me"? — Tropers/{{Skagway}}
me"?
* Marilyn Manson's song "Kaboom Kaboom". The lyrics in one part is "I hope this hook gets caught in your mouth." When I was younger (15 or so), my mind always went to someone with a fishhook in their mouth. Okay, typical Marilyn Manson imagery. It was only until just recently (I'm 20 now) that I realized it's also a bit of Fridge Brilliance/Logic: The part of the song that line is in IS the hook! He's saying "I hope this song sticks with you, long enough for you to start singing it." -N37
"
* The line "kick out the jams" among the rebel slogans in Music/DavidBowie's "Cygnet Committee" seems like {{Narm}} born of ignorance with the knowledge that "kick out the jams" wasn't meant to be anything subversive or countercultural, as many theories had it, but just a way of telling the audience "do I look like [[Music/TheGratefulDead Jerry Garcia]] to you?!" However, recall that the song was inspired by the creative bankruptcy Bowie saw in the Arts Lab he had been trying to set up, when people would go for his performances, contributing nothing, a kind of dynamic being not only endorsed but ''enforced'' by [=MC5=] - he knew ''exactly'' what it meant, tying the two "acts" together. - Tropers/TwinBird\n
* Exist Trace: An all female VisualKei metal band 4/5 of whom are {{Bifauxnen}}... in a genre where pretty much the same proportion of ''men'' are WholesomeCrossdressers! -Yun
WholesomeCrossdressers!
* Self's "Trunk Full Of Amps" would practically be a SingleStanzaSong if not for the fact that every verse namechecks a different rock band or vocalist ("Got a trunk full of amps, mother***er / like (insert musician here), mother***er!"). What do all the acts mentioned have in common beyond being famous rock musicians? They all have songs prominently featuring the word "mother" (or "mama") in their titles or lyrics! Lenny Kravitz's "Mama Said", Music/ElectricLightOrchestra's "Mama" (or possibly "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle"), Music/{{Queen}}'s "Tie Your Mother Down" (or less obviously "Bohemian Rhapsody") and of course Music/{{Danzig}}'s "Mother". - Tropers/MikeK



* When I first heard Music/BadBrains' "Sacred Love", I thought it was a good song somewhat ruined by a gratuitous vocal effect that made H.R. sound like he was singing through a telephone... Then I found out he ''was'' singing through a telephone - he was doing jail time for marijuana distribution while the album was still being finished, so the producer suggested he finish the vocals for that song by phone. Given the circumstances, it's an extremely good vocal performance. - Tropers/MikeK
* I've listened to ''Les Miserables'' for years, since I was too little to understand it. Recently I realized how "What Have I Done" (Jean Valjean's epiphany from Act One) and "Javert's Suicide" (Javert's epiphany from Act Two) basically mirror each other musically - except for the ending. Valjean, having been shown true Christian kindness by the Bishop, sees an opportunity to become a new man and make up for the time he has lost. Javert, on the other hand, is shown Christian kindness by Valjean and is forced to see what ''he'' has done to himself by doggedly pursuing Valjean, and sees no other way out except to kill himself. -CuteQueenPika
** On a related note, Javert is the only character in ''Les Miserables'' who actually dies ''miserable.'' Think about it: Fantine dies knowing Cosette is safe, Eponine dies saving the love of her life, Enjolras and the other students die fighting for their causes, and Valjean dies surrounded by the family he has created. Javert is the only one who dies alone and conflicted. -CuteQueenPika

to:

* When I first heard Music/BadBrains' "Sacred Love", I thought it was a good song somewhat ruined by a gratuitous vocal effect that made H.R. sound like he was singing through a telephone... Then I found out he ''was'' singing through a telephone - he was doing jail time for marijuana distribution while the album was still being finished, so the producer suggested he finish the vocals for that song by phone. Given the circumstances, it's an extremely good vocal performance. - Tropers/MikeK\n
* I've listened to ''Les Miserables'' for years, since I was too little to understand it. Recently I realized how "What Have I Done" (Jean Valjean's epiphany from Act One) and "Javert's Suicide" (Javert's epiphany from Act Two) basically mirror each other musically - except for the ending. Valjean, having been shown true Christian kindness by the Bishop, sees an opportunity to become a new man and make up for the time he has lost. Javert, on the other hand, is shown Christian kindness by Valjean and is forced to see what ''he'' has done to himself by doggedly pursuing Valjean, and sees no other way out except to kill himself. -CuteQueenPika\n
** On a related note, Javert is the only character in ''Les Miserables'' who actually dies ''miserable.'' Think about it: Fantine dies knowing Cosette is safe, Eponine dies saving the love of her life, Enjolras and the other students die fighting for their causes, and Valjean dies surrounded by the family he has created. Javert is the only one who dies alone and conflicted. -CuteQueenPika



* This may in fact just be me reading too much into things in order to solve my own [[Headscratchers/HomePage headscratcher]], but... in {{Music/Nirvana}}'s "Sliver" the line "fell asleep and watched TV" always struck me as a LyricalShoehorn, and not even a particularly necessary one, because the more logical "watched TV and fell asleep" would have fit just as well. However, you sort of ''could'' sleep while watching TV - if you fall asleep with the TV on, for a little while you could still be just alert enough to sort of follow what's going on by hearing dialogue. - Tropers/MikeK

to:

* This may in fact just be me reading too much into things in order to solve my own [[Headscratchers/HomePage headscratcher]], but... in {{Music/Nirvana}}'s "Sliver" the line "fell asleep and watched TV" always struck me as a LyricalShoehorn, and not even a particularly necessary one, because the more logical "watched TV and fell asleep" would have fit just as well. However, you sort of ''could'' sleep while watching TV - if you fall asleep with the TV on, for a little while you could still be just alert enough to sort of follow what's going on by hearing dialogue. - Tropers/MikeK



* "Tribute" by Tenacious D is a legendary story about two young rockers and their DealWithTheDevil (actually "a shiny demon") in a friendly music competition that results in them creating: "The Greatest Song in the World". The joke is, of course, that they couldn't remember the song that they ACTUALLY played that day, and that this song is "just a tribute". Then it occurred to me that any song worthy of the title: "Greatest Song in the World" could never actually be PLAYED. The moment that you HEAR a song, you automatically categorize it and compare it to every other song you've heard, which reduces its greatness. So the "Greatest" Song in the World would have to be the one that only exists in the listener's imagination. -- Draconius
** Also on Tenacious D is the subtle realization that everything J.B.'s father said to him in "Kickapoo" was correct. The Pick of Destiny, the source of all great rock musicians, was forged from the Devil's fang. Gaining its power cause J.B. to fall out with his best friend and lose direction in his life. Eventually, it causes them to deliver the Pick into the Devil's hands. His father had warned him that rock came from the Devil and would cause J.B. to lose his heart and become a puppet of the Devil. -- [=TSBasilisk=]

to:

* "Tribute" by Tenacious D is a legendary story about two young rockers and their DealWithTheDevil (actually "a shiny demon") in a friendly music competition that results in them creating: "The Greatest Song in the World". The joke is, of course, that they couldn't remember the song that they ACTUALLY played that day, and that this song is "just a tribute". Then it occurred to me that any song worthy of the title: "Greatest Song in the World" could never actually be PLAYED. The moment that you HEAR a song, you automatically categorize it and compare it to every other song you've heard, which reduces its greatness. So the "Greatest" Song in the World would have to be the one that only exists in the listener's imagination. -- Draconius\n
** Also on Tenacious D is the subtle realization that everything J.B.'s father said to him in "Kickapoo" was correct. The Pick of Destiny, the source of all great rock musicians, was forged from the Devil's fang. Gaining its power cause J.B. to fall out with his best friend and lose direction in his life. Eventually, it causes them to deliver the Pick into the Devil's hands. His father had warned him that rock came from the Devil and would cause J.B. to lose his heart and become a puppet of the Devil. -- [=TSBasilisk=]



* Bush's "Glycerine" has a seemingly arbitrary Music/TheBeatles ShoutOut ("...when we rise it's like strawberry fields"), while "Everything Zen" has an equally arbitrary Music/DavidBowie ShoutOut ("Minnie Mouse has grown up a cow, Dave's on sale again"). The thing "Strawberry Fields" and "Life On Mars?" happen to have in common is WordSaladLyrics, something Bush themselves are also known for. Maybe those shout outs are their way of saying "Yeah, none of this makes any sense, but hey, you let The Beatles and David Bowie get away with it..." - Tropers/MikeK
* "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" by The Charlie Daniels Band seems to show Johnny victorious, but that's only in the short term. In beating the Devil, Johnny claimed a golden fiddle and mockingly declared his superiority, thus commiting two of the SevenDeadlySins: Greed and Pride. Not only that, but he did so in full knowledge that taking the bet was a sin. As such, he has committed at least one mortal sin, potentially ***ing his soul. So long as Johnny does not repent and gain forgiveness, the Devil was the real winner. - [=TSBasilisk=]

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* Bush's "Glycerine" has a seemingly arbitrary Music/TheBeatles ShoutOut ("...when we rise it's like strawberry fields"), while "Everything Zen" has an equally arbitrary Music/DavidBowie ShoutOut ("Minnie Mouse has grown up a cow, Dave's on sale again"). The thing "Strawberry Fields" and "Life On Mars?" happen to have in common is WordSaladLyrics, something Bush themselves are also known for. Maybe those shout outs are their way of saying "Yeah, none of this makes any sense, but hey, you let The Beatles and David Bowie get away with it..." - Tropers/MikeK
"
* "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" by The Charlie Daniels Band seems to show Johnny victorious, but that's only in the short term. In beating the Devil, Johnny claimed a golden fiddle and mockingly declared his superiority, thus commiting two of the SevenDeadlySins: Greed and Pride. Not only that, but he did so in full knowledge that taking the bet was a sin. As such, he has committed at least one mortal sin, potentially ***ing his soul. So long as Johnny does not repent and gain forgiveness, the Devil was the real winner. - [=TSBasilisk=]
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** Oddly enough, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zxj7gUtq6Ck this parody]] made me start thinking the original would also make more sense if it was from the point of view of ''[[SuperMarioBros Mario]]'', or really any protagonist of a video game series known for constantly reusing the SaveThePrincess plot - Tropers/MikeK

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** Oddly enough, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zxj7gUtq6Ck this parody]] made me start thinking the original would also make more sense if it was from the point of view of ''[[SuperMarioBros ''[[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]]'', or really any protagonist of a video game series known for constantly reusing the SaveThePrincess plot - Tropers/MikeK

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* A lot of songs by ''Pulp'' passed me by when they first came out, being dismissed as just more of the usual "Britpop" of the era. Then, revisiting the songs about ten years later and actually ''listening'' to the lyrics really brought home the incisive and vicious wit behind the songs. To this day I am convinced that the version of Common People I heard was an emasculated radio edit that took out all the bile and barbed turns. And talking of lyrics, Me and Mia by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists at first appeared to be an [[EarWorm incredibly catchy]] power pop song - then you realise Anna and Mia are shorthand for Anorexia and Bulimia, and it's suddenly the most compassionate song written for a sufferer of eating disorders ever - Slave

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* A lot of songs by ''Pulp'' passed me by when they first came out, being dismissed as just more of the usual "Britpop" of the era. Then, revisiting the songs about ten years later and actually ''listening'' to the lyrics really brought home the incisive and vicious wit behind the songs. To this day I am convinced that the version of Common People I heard was an emasculated radio edit that took out all the bile and barbed turns. And talking of lyrics, Me and Mia by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists at first appeared to be an [[EarWorm incredibly catchy]] catchy power pop song - then you realise Anna and Mia are shorthand for Anorexia and Bulimia, and it's suddenly the most compassionate song written for a sufferer of eating disorders ever - Slave



* While listening to the Katy Perry song "Circle the Drain", which was about a breakup caused by drug addiction, I never understood the dismal, ugly note at the end of the song. Then, I realized that it could very well symbolize the bitterness of the breakup, or the death of the singer at the hands of her drug addict boyfriend.~Slenderstalker
* {{Music/MaryJBlige}} has the song "No More Drama" which samples "Nadia's Theme" from [[{{Series/TheYoungAndTheRestless}} Young and the Restless]]. When I first saw the very [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=em328ua_Lo8 moving video]], I wondered why she chose to sample that song. Later it hit me: No more '''Drama''', like a bad soap opera. She wants the drama to ''end''. Brilliant when you stop and think about the catchy {{earworm}}! ~{{Tropers/TairaMai}}
* As noted on their works page, Music/TheB52s deliberately filled the song "Mesopotamia" with [[ArtisticLicenseHistory incorrect information about Mesopotamia itself]] for the sake of humor. The chorus includes the lines "I ain't no student of ancient culture / before I talk I should read a book", which would probably be a LampshadeHanging. - Tropers/MikeK
* "Glass Sandwich" by {{Music/Primus}} is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable to me at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title. - Tropers/MikeK

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* While listening to the Katy Perry song "Circle the Drain", which was about a breakup caused by drug addiction, I never understood the dismal, ugly note at the end of the song. Then, I realized that it could very well symbolize the bitterness of the breakup, or the death of the singer at the hands of her drug addict boyfriend.~Slenderstalker
boyfriend.
* {{Music/MaryJBlige}} Music/MaryJBlige has the song "No More Drama" which samples "Nadia's Theme" from [[{{Series/TheYoungAndTheRestless}} Young and the Restless]]. When I first saw the very ''Series/TheYoungAndTheRestless''. Why did she choose to sample that song in her [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=em328ua_Lo8 moving video]], I wondered why she chose to sample that song. Later it hit me: video]]? No more '''Drama''', like a bad soap opera. She wants the drama to ''end''. Brilliant when you stop and think about the catchy {{earworm}}! ~{{Tropers/TairaMai}}
it.
* As noted on their works page, Music/TheB52s deliberately filled the song "Mesopotamia" with [[ArtisticLicenseHistory incorrect information about Mesopotamia itself]] for the sake of humor. The chorus includes the lines "I ain't no student of ancient culture / before I talk I should read a book", which would probably be a LampshadeHanging. - Tropers/MikeK
LampshadeHanging.
* "Glass Sandwich" by {{Music/Primus}} is about a man going to a peep show [[spoiler: and finding out that the dancer he's watching is his ex-girlfriend]], which made the NonAppearingTitle seem inexplicable to me at first: However, the man is separated from the dancer by a glass window, and thus the two of them make up the "glass sandwich" of the title. - Tropers/MikeK
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* On the topic of movie soundtracks... I just realized that "Across the Stars", Anakin and Padmé's sweeping love theme from ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'', is in fact a [[ShoutOut reference]] to the phrase "StarCrossedLovers". Sheer genius! ...[[{{Foreshadowing}} This works]] [[{{Tragedy}} from any]] [[RomeoAndJuliet number]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin of different]] [[LongDistanceRelationship angles.]] Hell, it's even mentioned on that trope's page!

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* On the topic of movie soundtracks... I just realized that "Across the Stars", Anakin and Padmé's sweeping love theme from ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'', is in fact a [[ShoutOut reference]] to the phrase "StarCrossedLovers". Sheer genius! ...[[{{Foreshadowing}} This works]] [[{{Tragedy}} from any]] [[RomeoAndJuliet [[Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet number]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin of different]] [[LongDistanceRelationship angles.]] Hell, it's even mentioned on that trope's page!
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* I ''just'' realized that "Gollum's Song" from [[LordOfTheRings the soundtrack to the Two Towers]], isn't sung ''about'' Gollum, it's sung ''by'' Gollum. - Jarl
** I just recently spotted a moment of sheer brilliance in [[LordOfTheRings the soundtrack to the Return of the King]]. Six triumphant, joyous notes ring out as the good guys win. They are the opening bars of Mordor's theme, rewritten. This is exactly what happens to [[spoiler:the music of Sauron's boss Morgoth in ''The Silmarillion.'']] In fact, the major themes of the soundtrack for all three movies are as described by the late J.R.R. Tolkien in that book! Somewhere in Heaven there is a pub, and in that pub there is very good beer, and Professor Tolkien is sipping it and humming (probably badly) all of the best bits. - Jenny Islander

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* I ''just'' realized that "Gollum's Song" from [[LordOfTheRings [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers the soundtrack to the Two Towers]], isn't sung ''about'' Gollum, it's sung ''by'' Gollum. - Jarl
** I just recently spotted a moment of sheer brilliance in [[LordOfTheRings [[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing the soundtrack to the Return of the King]]. Six triumphant, joyous notes ring out as the good guys win. They are the opening bars of Mordor's theme, rewritten. This is exactly what happens to [[spoiler:the music of Sauron's boss Morgoth in ''The Silmarillion.'']] In fact, the major themes of the soundtrack for all three movies are as described by the late J.R.R. Tolkien in that book! Somewhere in Heaven there is a pub, and in that pub there is very good beer, and Professor Tolkien is sipping it and humming (probably badly) all of the best bits. - Jenny Islander
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* Yet another Move related Fridge moment - the tale of "Curly" looking for his girlfriend all over Liverpool? - well, why is "Curly", well, curly? Because Curly is mixed-race and his girlfriend is white - and his girlfriend's parents are racists who want their little girl to have nothing to do with him. Probably counts as Fridge Sadness. -- Dutch
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* [[Music/The Move]] I loved "Walk upon the Water" but I took it at first as a warning against drunk swimming. Analyzing the lyrics, a few years later, I realized it was a warning against immersing your self in psychotropic drugs, and the possible tragic death of those who indulge in said drugs. As an added bonus, listen to "Cherry Blossom Clinic" straight afterwards and you'll find out what happened to one of the psychotropic drugtakers that managed to avoid drowning. Then again, it still is a pretty good warning against drunk swimming too...-- Dutch
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** Rosie you're all right./ You wear my ring./ When you hold me tight,/ Rosie, that's my thing./ When I turn out the light,/ I got to hand it to me./ Looks like its you and me again tonight, Rosie.--Barcdog

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** Rosie you're all right./ You wear my ring./ When you hold me tight,/ Rosie, that's my thing./ When I turn out the light,/ I got to hand it to me./ Looks like its you and me again tonight, Rosie.--Barcdog--Barcdog
* [[WebVideo/FilthyFrank Pink Guy's]] ''Small Dick'' abruptly ends as the singer utters "I only watch porno where the black ma-". Ironic how a song about short assets is too short in itself.

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adding information


* Fridge/WeirdAlYankovic



* Music/BetterThanEzra has a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim who tries to escape from or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, I thought of something: what if the wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the victim was her abusive husband?

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* Music/BetterThanEzra has Music/BetterThanEzra:
** There's
a couple of songs on their ''Deluxe'' album: "Rosealia", a song about a DomesticAbuse victim who tries to escape from or fight back against her abusive husband, and "Summerhouse", a MurderBallad about an AssholeVictim who's so despised that not even his wife is really upset at his murder. Then, I thought of something: what if the wife from "Summerhouse" was Rosealia and the victim was her abusive husband?husband?
** Then there's "Desperately Wanting". The first verse almost sounds like Kevin alone, then the second verse really kicks into gear about halfway through when Tom and Travis join in. It's almost like a reunion of friends...which is alluded to in the lyrics.
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* Music/SufjanStevens' ''Illinois'' originally featured an image of Superman in its album artwork; His label subsequently realized they never got permission from Creator/DCComics to use Superman's image, and subsequent copies either replaced him with a string of balloons, {{Creator/Marvel}}'s Chicago-based superhero The Blue Marvel, or just an empty sky. The balloon version of the cover can still be considered an abstract representation of Superman: The balloons match the red and blue color scheme of his clothing, the positions of the three balloons sort of resembles his head and arms in his trademark flying pose, and the balloons' strings are flowing behind them like a "cape".

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* Music/SufjanStevens' ''Illinois'' originally featured an image of Superman in its album artwork; His label subsequently realized they never got permission from Creator/DCComics to use Superman's image, and subsequent copies either replaced him with a string of balloons, {{Creator/Marvel}}'s Chicago-based superhero The Blue Marvel, or just an empty sky. The balloon version of the cover can still be considered an abstract representation of Superman: The balloons match the red and blue color scheme of his clothing, the positions of the three balloons sort of resembles his head and arms in his trademark flying pose, and the balloons' strings are flowing behind them like a "cape"."cape".
* I must have listened to Jackson Browne's "Rosie" a few dozen times before realizing that what sounds like a tender love ballad is a song about masturbation. When you realize that "Rosie" is a reference to "Rosie palm and her five lovely daughters," the chorus makes prefect sense:
**Rosie you're all right./ You wear my ring./ When you hold me tight,/ Rosie, that's my thing./ When I turn out the light,/ I got to hand it to me./ Looks like its you and me again tonight, Rosie.--Barcdog
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* "Absolutely ([[RefrainFromAssuming Story of a Girl]]), or, as you may know it, TropeNamer for WhenSheSmiles: At first I thought that, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her WhenSheSmiles," being shortened and, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her," was just a cut off, the sort of thing you end with a dash. Then I realized, no, that's a complete sentence. [[HeartwarmingMoments And the, "aw..." factor went way up.]] --@/RedWren

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* "Absolutely ([[RefrainFromAssuming Story of a Girl]]), or, as you may know it, TropeNamer for WhenSheSmiles: At first I thought that, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her WhenSheSmiles," being shortened and, "And though she looks so sad in photographs, I absolutely love her," was just a cut off, the sort of thing you end with a dash. Then I realized, no, that's a complete sentence. [[HeartwarmingMoments [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments And the, "aw..." factor went way up.]] --@/RedWren
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red link


This is a personal moment for the viewer, but follows the same rules as normal pages, meaning no first person or natter. If you start off with "ThisTroper", really, you have no excuse. We're going to hit you on the head.

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This is a personal moment for the viewer, but follows the same rules as normal pages, meaning no first person or natter. If you start off with "ThisTroper", "This Troper", really, you have no excuse. We're going to hit you on the head.
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* Fridge/{{Eminem}}

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