Birds in Hell wrote:Strat wrote:Birds in Hell wrote:Tuolumne wrote:scrub12 wrote:Matt said on IG it was written in 2018, so there may be some stuff left in the vault.
This pretty confirms for me that this is a paen to Chris Cornell.
And I think the fade out was extremely tastefully done.
Doughboy wrote:Apologies if covered:
I think:
"Weird voice" in Stone's new song is him doing a Chris Cornell impression.
This is such a weird lens through which to view everything the band does now.
I only mention this because it was such an often-referenced touchpoint, but how can anyone even be certain Comes Then Goes is about Chris?
Even if Ed came out and said "yup, that's one about Chris Cornell, every word" - how does that enrich (rather than limit) your appreciation of the song?
I don't know, maybe this is something of a personal bug bear, but trying to parse what a song is "about" seems like a really reductive, dull thing to do.
You had me until the last bit, spenno. Ill never fully understand you. You dont want to know what a ...song is about?
Maybe that wasn't the best way of expressing what I mean.
I guess I'm trying to say Comes Then Goes (for example) is a song about a lost relationship, and I'd prefer to find some meaning in the song itself than spend time wondering who Eddie Vedder was thinking about when he wrote it. Thinking about that actively reduces my enjoyment of the song.
These are not mutually exclusive options in the slightest, though. Comes Then Goes IS a song about a relationship. It was inspired by Ed's relationship with CC, but if it was only about that who could possibly care? If the song works for the listener it will be because they were able, from that starting point, to transport it to their own lives (although if they were particularly attached to CC that connection may already be there). I mean that's what empathy is. It is why some of Ed's oddly specific choices on Ten are still emotionally affecting.
Otherwise knowing this stuff is just trivia about a song you like. Knowing details about Matt's kit or Mike's guitar doesn't change how I hear a song, but if you are a musician it is probably fun to know. We all devoured production notes from the Gigaton sessions, but none of those things are relevant to the experience of the final album. And there are times they explain part of the HOW of a song. How was this musical moment captured. Or if you are trying to parse a set of lyrics:
High or low, try again
She fell off the altar
A vision you caught her but then
A woodcut in red
I wish it was not you that she had led
Selfish navigation with no end
Knowing that context may help understand the authorial intent, which you can take or leave.