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Post subject: Re: What's the best opening lyric to open an album
Posted: Thu May 05, 2022 4:29 pm
She / Her
Joined: Sun January 26, 2020 12:10 pm Posts: 12127 Location: Warwickshire, UK
epilogue wrote:
tragabigzanda wrote:
epilogue wrote:
washing machine wrote:
I wanna leave this mind and shout sets the stage for Riot Act and is also a pretty universal feeling for the time it was made. Clearly the best opening line for a Pearl Jam album.
+1
I also think it’s the strongest opening lyric relative to the time of its release. We knew the album would be about Bush and the Iraq war, we had seen the album cover…A conceptual picture was starting to emerge. But that opening drum beat was new territory for them, and that lyrics was in immediate invitation to Ed’s experience during a time that felt pretty raw for everyone.
Contest that with Breakerfall, which is a fine opening lyrics, but didn’t take on some larger immediate context, IMO.
Well said. Though, I might be even lower on the opening Breakerfall lyric. I think it's pretty dopey. It's one of the reasons I had such a hard time finding my way to Binaural as a record.
And I guess to go even further with the Can't Keep line, I think they work far beyond their context, too. I think outside of Riot Act, just as words on a page, as an independent thought/expression, the lines are so fucking moving and potent.
I agree with you about Breakerfall, I think its lyrics might have been my very first Pearl Jam cringe; overall the song's grown on me a lot though
I wanna leave this mind and shout sets the stage for Riot Act and is also a pretty universal feeling for the time it was made. Clearly the best opening line for a Pearl Jam album.
+1
I also think it’s the strongest opening lyric relative to the time of its release. We knew the album would be about Bush and the Iraq war, we had seen the album cover…A conceptual picture was starting to emerge. But that opening drum beat was new territory for them, and that lyrics was in immediate invitation to Ed’s experience during a time that felt pretty raw for everyone.
Contest that with Breakerfall, which is a fine opening lyrics, but didn’t take on some larger immediate context, IMO.
Well said. Though, I might be even lower on the opening Breakerfall lyric. I think it's pretty dopey. It's one of the reasons I had such a hard time finding my way to Binaural as a record.
And I guess to go even further with the Can't Keep line, I think they work far beyond their context, too. I think outside of Riot Act, just as words on a page, as an independent thought/expression, the lines are so fucking moving and potent.
I agree with you about Breakerfall, I think its lyrics might have been my very first Pearl Jam cringe; overall the song's grown on me a lot though
Thoughts? I was thinking about this a bit this afternoon (some of these lyrics get better if they play out a little further)
I admit it, what's to say? I'll relive it, without pain Please don't go out on me, don't go on me now? Lives opened and trashed, look ma watch me crash Large fingers pushing paint. you're god and you've got big hands Whose got the brain of JFK? What's it mean to us now? There's a girl on a ledge, she's got nowhere to turn I wanna shake, I wanna wind out, I wanna leave this mind and shout You're always saying that there's something wrong Do you wanna here something sick, we are but victims of desire Everyone's a critic looking back up the river. Every boat is sinking in this town. Drowning in their dissertations, random speakers in my mind
It's clearly Last Exit, right? Though the Brain of J lyric is fun, and drowning in their dissertations is a good phrase
Last Exit for sure, although the openings to No Code and Gigaton also really hit me in a good way.
I wanna leave this mind and shout sets the stage for Riot Act and is also a pretty universal feeling for the time it was made. Clearly the best opening line for a Pearl Jam album.
+1
I also think it’s the strongest opening lyric relative to the time of its release. We knew the album would be about Bush and the Iraq war, we had seen the album cover…A conceptual picture was starting to emerge. But that opening drum beat was new territory for them, and that lyrics was in immediate invitation to Ed’s experience during a time that felt pretty raw for everyone. .
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