Music Banter - View Single Post - Young Despite the Years - Continuing Sonic Explorations by Your Friend Rickenbacker
View Single Post
Old 07-18-2009, 07:23 PM   #6 (permalink)
Gavin B.
Model Worker
 
Gavin B.'s Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,248
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rickenbacker View Post
Interesting points, but perhaps the idea of happiness as a lesser force in the creation of great art is misguided? It seems to me that we only hear and thus think about the art created by people in emotional or physical distress, along the lines of Joy Division, or as the bi-product of rebellion a la the Clash. However, maybe the idea of happiness creating great art isn't implausible, just never thought about. I'd point to a song like Waterloo Sunset, a great song by all means, and certainly not one written in sadness. I might just be thinking to myself and not making any sense.

My musical relationship with my parents has become interesting in the past few years as I've matured (slightly). As an essential conglomerate of their tastes, plus a lot of other stuff, I'm always asked to put on music for dinner parties and the like, you know, make a little playlist. I'll be talking to my dad about a song or artist that I recently got into, and he'll tell me how he loved them in college etc, and of course then I ask him why he didn't introduce me to them earlier. It's a good dynamic, being able to talk to someone (in real life) about music. Afternoons on the patio listening to a good record with a friend are really something special that everyone deserves to experience.
As I said in the previous post don't take me too seriously. My own philosophy is in constant fluctuation and I was yanking at your chain with my own personal history, all of which is true but not nearly as traumatic my own humorous accounts of it.

I do believe in karma and the rule of karma inevitably demands a payment of dues from those who want to sing the blues. Every artistic accomplishment is born in the state of sufferation. Sufferation is West Indian patios for the price one pays for their social station in life. Blues and jazz musicians believe that those who fear or avoid the pain of suffering don't have a soul, which is about the strongest statement you can make about someone's lack of spiritual status.

You're right about Waterloo Sunset it may be the greatest Kink's song and one of the most poetic songs of the rock and roll era. The song connected with me in a way the none of the Beatles songs did.

I beg to differ with your theory that Waterloo Sunset wasn't composed in a state of sadness. One of my passionate enterprises is uncovering the meanings of the popular songs that shaped my own worldview along with the worldview of my peer group. I can't help myself... I have a Bachelor degree in Critical Theory and an MEd in Clinical Psychology, so I'm always looking for the subtext beneath words the shape a great song.

I was always curious about the meaning of Waterloo Sunset until songwriter Ray Davies publicly commented on the song for the first time a few months ago. I'll get to his comments in a minute.

Ray Davies worked on the song for several years before the Kinks recorded it and spent a lot of the time reshaping the meaning of the song. Davies rarely writes a song that doesn't have a double edged meaning to it. For instance Victoria is a thinly veiled denunciation of British provincialism that initially sounds like an anthem in praise of the colonial age of Queen Victoria. Kinks fans know that Well Respected Man is a song about a man who is the pillar of conservative British society but beneath his veneer of respectability is a man who also has lecherous designs on the girl next door.

There is a melancholy message in the lyrics and Ray's vocal on Waterloo Sunset is a wee bit too somber to be simple song about a person claiming that he's in paradise when he gazes at the sunset over Waterloo Station in London. An urban subway station in the middle of London is hardly a tourist destination of those who love breathtaking sunsets.

Some people still think the two lovers in the song, named Julie and Terry were actors Julie Christie and Terrance Stamp and that Davies was concealing some sort of privileged information about a 1965 romantic tryst between them. The NNDB website which is an extensive and reliable source of biographical data still says the Christie/Stamp affair was the subject of Waterloo Sunset on Julie Christie's profile. Look toward the bottom of the page for the info.


My own idea was that Waterloo Sunset was a wry commentary on how the poisonous nitrogen gases from air pollution, mix with oxygen to create spectacular scarlet colored sunsets in the many polluted urban areas. That would explain the melancholy manner in which the song is sung. The lyrical content of the song matched up very closely to my harebrained theory, which turned out to be wrong.

Earlier this year, Davies finally settled the matter by revealing his inspiration for the song. Davies told Uncut magazine,
Quote:
Waterloo Station was a very significant place in my life. I was in St. Thomas' Hospital when I was really ill as a child, and I looked out on the river at the Waterloo Bridge.
Davies said the song's characters Terry and Julie are in fact Ray Davies' older sister and his boyfriend who are now married. Ray, himself, is the third character in the song, who is the narrator of the story. Ray is the one who gazes at this lover's rendezvous at Waterloo station while the world passes him by as he lies his hospital sick bed. His coping mechanism for his loneliness is sense of assurance that the Waterloo sunset is his own paradise and he doesn't need romantic relationships or friends like other people do.

John Donne said,” No man is an island unto himself" but Davies seems to be offering the counter argument which is, "John you idiot, all people are islands unto themselves, and creating a fantasy Waterloo sunset paradise may help human beings cope with the existential isolation confronts our lives."

At the end the song even Julie, her boyfriend Terry and the millions of people swarming like flies in the Waterloo Underground are just like him and being part of a crowd on the same island will never immunize people from the pain of isolation. The paradox is that loneliness is the universal bond that unites us all to the human condition. Man for all of his conceptual intelligence has created a social system that dehumanizes him on a daily basis.

What makes the song brilliant is Davies' talent for telling a very involving story with so few words, and ultimately he leaves it up to the listener to figure out the existential sadness of the story he's telling.

All of that being said I copied the lyrics to Waterloo Sunset for your further consideration:

Quote:
Dirty old river, must you keep rolling
Flowing into the night
People so busy, makes me feel dizzy
Taxi light shines so bright
But I don’t need no friends
As long as I gaze on waterloo sunset
I am in paradise

Every day I look at the world from my window
But chilly, chilly is the evening time
Waterloo sunsets fine

Terry meets Julie, waterloo station
Every Friday night
But I am so lazy, don’t want to wander
I stay at home at night
But I don’t feel afraid
As long as I gaze on waterloo sunset
I am in paradise

Every day I look at the world from my window
But chilly, chilly is the evening time
Waterloo sunsets fine

Millions of people swarming like flies round waterloo underground
But Terry and Julie cross over the river
Where they feel safe and sound
And they don’t need no friends
As long as they gaze on waterloo sunset
They are in paradise

Waterloo sunsets fine
__________________
There are two types of music: the first type is the blues and the second type is all the other stuff.
Townes Van Zandt
Gavin B. is offline   Reply With Quote