An Attempt To Tip The Scales

歌手: Bright Eyes • 时间:

📝 纯歌词版本

Did you expect it all to stop
At the wave of your hand?
Like the sun is just going to drop
If it's night you demand
Well, in the dark we are just air
So the house might dissolve
But once we are gone, who is gonna care
If we were ever here at all?
Well, summer is going to come
It't gonna cloud our eyes again
There's no need to focus
When there is nothing that it worth seeing
So we trade liquor for blood in an attempt to tip the scales
I think you lost what you loved in that mess of details
They seemed so important at the time
But now you can't even recall
Any of the names, faces, or lines
It is more the feeling of it all
Well, winter is going to end
I'm going to clean these veins again
So close to dying that I finally can start living

Radio: Hi, we're back. This is Radio KX and we're here with Conor Oberst of the band Bright Eyes. How are you doing Conor?
Conor: Fine, thanks. Just a little wet
Radio: Oh yeah, it's still coming down out there
Conor: Yeah, I sort of had to run from the car
Radio: Well, we are glad you made it. Now your new album, Fevers and Mirrors. Tell us a little bit about the title.
I noticed there was a good deal of repeated imagery in the lyrics,fevers...mirrors, scales, clocks.
Could you discuss some of this?
Conor: Sure. Let's see, the fever is--
Radio: First let me say, that this is a brilliant record, man, we're all really into it here at the station.
We get lots of calls, it's really good stuff
Conor: Thanks, thanks a lot
Radio: So talk a little bit about some of the symbolism
Conor: The fever?
Radio: Sure
Conor: Well the fever is basically whatever ails you or oppresses you, it could be anything. In my case it's my neurosis, my depression, but I don't want to be limited to that.
It's certainly different for different people.It's whatever keeps you up at night
Radio: I see
Conor: And then the mirror is like, as you might have guessed, self-examination or reflection or whatever form.
This could be vanity or self-loathing. I don't know, I'm guilty of both
Radio: That's interesting. How about the scale?
Conor: The scale is essentially our attempt to solve our problems quantitatively through logic or rationalization.
In my opinion it's often fruitless, but always, well, not always.
And the clocks and calendars, etcetera, its just time, our little measurements.
It's like, it's always chasing after us
Radio: It is, it is. How about this Arienette, how does she fit in to all of this?
Conor: I'm prefer not talk about it, in case she's listening
Radio: Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize she was a real person
Conor: She's not, but I made her up
Radio: Oh, so she's not real?
Conor: Just as real as you or I
Radio: I don't think I understand
Conor: Neither do I, but after I grow up I will. I mean, you know what, a lot of things are really unclear for me right now
Radio: That's interesting. Now you mentioned your depression
Conor: No I didn't
Radio: You're from Nebraska, right?
Conor: Yeah, that's right
Radio: Now let me know if I'm getting to personal, but there seems to be a pretty dark past back there somewhere. What was it like for you growing up?
Conor: Dark? Not really. Actually I had a great childhood. My parents were wonderful.
I went to a Catholic school. They have, I had money, so it was all easy. I basically had everything that I wanted anytime
Radio: Really? So some of the references like babies in bathtubs are not biographical?
Conor: Well I did have a brother who died in a bathtub...he drowned.
Well actually I had five brothers that drowned
Radio: (Chuckle)
Conor: No, I'm serious. My mother drowned one every year for five consecutive years. They were all named Padraic, and that's why they only got one song.
It's kind of like walking out a door and discovering that it's a window
Radio: But your music is certainly very personal
Conor: Of course, I put a lot of myself into what I do. It's like being an author, you have to free yourself to use symbolism and allegory to meet your goal.
And part of that is compassion, empathy for other people and their situations.
Some of what I sing about comes from other people's experiences.
It shouldn't matter, the message is intended to be universal
Radio: I see what you mean
Conor: Could you make that sound stop, please?
Radio: Yes. And your goal?
Conor: I don't know. Create feelings I guess.
A song never ends up the way you planned it
Radio: That's funny you'd say that, do you think that--
Conor: Do you ever hear things that aren't really there?
Radio: I'm sorry, what?
Conor: Never mind. How long have you worked at this station?
Radio: Oh, just a few minutes. Now you mentioned empathy for others.
Would you say that that motivates you to make the music that you make?
Conor: No, not really. It's more a need for sympathy. I want people to feel sorry for me.
I like to feel the burn of the audience's eyes on me when I'm revealing all my darkest secrets into the microphone.
When I was a kid I used to carry a safety pin around with me every where I went in my pocket, and when people weren't paying enough attention to me, I'm dig it into my arm until I started crying.
Everyone would stop what they were doing and ask me what was the matter
I guess, I guess I kind of liked that
Radio: Really, you're telling me that you're doing all of this for attention?
Conor: No, I hate it when people look at me, I get nauseous.
In fact, I could care less what people think about me. Do you feel that?
Radio: No, I feeling sick
Conor: I really just want to be this warm yellow light that pours over everyone that I love
Radio: So you're going to play something for us now? Is this a new song?
Conor: Yeah, but I haven't written it yet. It's one I've been meaning to write called A Song To Pass The Time
Radio: Oh, that's a nice title
Conor: You should write your own scripts
Radio: Yeah, I know

🎵 LRC歌词版本

[00:11.74]Did you expect it all to stop
[00:16.58]At the wave of your hand?
[00:20.37]Like the sun is just going to drop
[00:25.24]If it's night you demand
[00:28.63]Well, in the dark we are just air
[00:33.63]So the house might dissolve
[00:37.52]But once we are gone, who is gonna care
[00:41.73]If we were ever here at all?
[00:46.39]Well, summer is going to come
[00:48.51]It't gonna cloud our eyes again
[00:51.78]There's no need to focus
[00:53.15]When there is nothing that it worth seeing
[00:58.76]So we trade liquor for blood in an attempt to tip the scales
[01:07.16]I think you lost what you loved in that mess of details
[01:15.35]They seemed so important at the time
[01:20.06]But now you can't even recall
[01:24.27]Any of the names, faces, or lines
[01:28.31]It is more the feeling of it all
[01:33.11]Well, winter is going to end
[01:35.05]I'm going to clean these veins again
[01:37.93]So close to dying that I finally can start living
[02:14.67]
[02:32.56]Radio: Hi, we're back. This is Radio KX and we're here with Conor Oberst of the band Bright Eyes. How are you doing Conor?
[02:39.46]Conor: Fine, thanks. Just a little wet
[02:42.14]Radio: Oh yeah, it's still coming down out there
[02:44.92]Conor: Yeah, I sort of had to run from the car
[02:47.18]Radio: Well, we are glad you made it. Now your new album, Fevers and Mirrors. Tell us a little bit about the title.
[02:52.78]I noticed there was a good deal of repeated imagery in the lyrics,fevers...mirrors, scales, clocks.
[02:59.25]Could you discuss some of this?
[03:01.73]Conor: Sure. Let's see, the fever is--
[03:04.95]Radio: First let me say, that this is a brilliant record, man, we're all really into it here at the station.
[03:09.77]We get lots of calls, it's really good stuff
[03:12.77]Conor: Thanks, thanks a lot
[03:14.69]Radio: So talk a little bit about some of the symbolism
[03:17.22]Conor: The fever?
[03:18.64]Radio: Sure
[03:19.55]Conor: Well the fever is basically whatever ails you or oppresses you, it could be anything. In my case it's my neurosis, my depression, but I don't want to be limited to that.
[03:32.72]It's certainly different for different people.It's whatever keeps you up at night
[03:36.74]Radio: I see
[03:38.92]Conor: And then the mirror is like, as you might have guessed, self-examination or reflection or whatever form.
[03:46.02]This could be vanity or self-loathing. I don't know, I'm guilty of both
[03:52.24]Radio: That's interesting. How about the scale?
[03:55.02]Conor: The scale is essentially our attempt to solve our problems quantitatively through logic or rationalization.
[04:04.62]In my opinion it's often fruitless, but always, well, not always.
[04:12.73]And the clocks and calendars, etcetera, its just time, our little measurements.
[04:19.18]It's like, it's always chasing after us
[04:22.79]Radio: It is, it is. How about this Arienette, how does she fit in to all of this?
[04:28.76]Conor: I'm prefer not talk about it, in case she's listening
[04:33.51]Radio: Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize she was a real person
[04:35.85]Conor: She's not, but I made her up
[04:40.05]Radio: Oh, so she's not real?
[04:41.83]Conor: Just as real as you or I
[04:44.42]Radio: I don't think I understand
[04:46.78]Conor: Neither do I, but after I grow up I will. I mean, you know what, a lot of things are really unclear for me right now
[04:54.93]Radio: That's interesting. Now you mentioned your depression
[04:58.58]Conor: No I didn't
[04:59.71]Radio: You're from Nebraska, right?
[05:01.06]Conor: Yeah, that's right
[05:02.28]Radio: Now let me know if I'm getting to personal, but there seems to be a pretty dark past back there somewhere. What was it like for you growing up?
[05:08.72]Conor: Dark? Not really. Actually I had a great childhood. My parents were wonderful.
[05:16.51]I went to a Catholic school. They have, I had money, so it was all easy. I basically had everything that I wanted anytime
[05:28.25]Radio: Really? So some of the references like babies in bathtubs are not biographical?
[05:33.69]Conor: Well I did have a brother who died in a bathtub...he drowned.
[05:39.10]Well actually I had five brothers that drowned
[05:41.03]Radio: (Chuckle)
[05:42.41]Conor: No, I'm serious. My mother drowned one every year for five consecutive years. They were all named Padraic, and that's why they only got one song.
[05:56.37]It's kind of like walking out a door and discovering that it's a window
[05:59.90]Radio: But your music is certainly very personal
[06:02.87]Conor: Of course, I put a lot of myself into what I do. It's like being an author, you have to free yourself to use symbolism and allegory to meet your goal.
[06:12.35]And part of that is compassion, empathy for other people and their situations.
[06:18.33]Some of what I sing about comes from other people's experiences.
[06:24.13]It shouldn't matter, the message is intended to be universal
[06:27.93]Radio: I see what you mean
[06:30.46]Conor: Could you make that sound stop, please?
[06:32.39]Radio: Yes. And your goal?
[06:37.64]Conor: I don't know. Create feelings I guess.
[06:41.33]A song never ends up the way you planned it
[06:44.80]Radio: That's funny you'd say that, do you think that--
[06:46.92]Conor: Do you ever hear things that aren't really there?
[06:49.09]Radio: I'm sorry, what?
[06:51.42]Conor: Never mind. How long have you worked at this station?
[06:54.71]Radio: Oh, just a few minutes. Now you mentioned empathy for others.
[06:57.93]Would you say that that motivates you to make the music that you make?
[07:02.06]Conor: No, not really. It's more a need for sympathy. I want people to feel sorry for me.
[07:07.82]I like to feel the burn of the audience's eyes on me when I'm revealing all my darkest secrets into the microphone.
[07:17.23]When I was a kid I used to carry a safety pin around with me every where I went in my pocket, and when people weren't paying enough attention to me, I'm dig it into my arm until I started crying.
[07:28.15]Everyone would stop what they were doing and ask me what was the matter
[07:30.61]I guess, I guess I kind of liked that
[07:33.04]Radio: Really, you're telling me that you're doing all of this for attention?
[07:37.48]Conor: No, I hate it when people look at me, I get nauseous.
[07:41.70]In fact, I could care less what people think about me. Do you feel that?
[07:48.65]Radio: No, I feeling sick
[07:51.72]Conor: I really just want to be this warm yellow light that pours over everyone that I love
[07:55.77]Radio: So you're going to play something for us now? Is this a new song?
[08:00.78]Conor: Yeah, but I haven't written it yet. It's one I've been meaning to write called A Song To Pass The Time
[08:09.18]Radio: Oh, that's a nice title
[08:15.19]Conor: You should write your own scripts
[08:17.16]Radio: Yeah, I know

🌍 纯翻译歌词

你认为故事
会在你挥手道别时完结吗?
像夕阳就快落下
而你却乞求夜晚?
黑夜里的我们无影无踪
家庭也会促使破碎
若有天我们分别 谁会施舍同情
即便现在真能永远相爱?
夏日要来临了
要来熏透我们的泪眼
别再浪费精力
当眼前的一切都已了无意义
让我们来以血换取酒精 来扭转天平
我想你因杂乱的细节 而失去了心头所爱
他们似乎如此宝贵
但你已无法挽回
任何名字、面孔与过往
被情感愈加放大
冬天就快离去
我也要开始戒去酒瘾
深处幽暗的我又想要回到光明
下面是一段访谈,Conor Oberst由Todd Fink扮演,采访者是Matt Silcock,所有访谈对话都由Conor Oberst本人写剧本排演。
【主持人】嗨又见面了,这里是XX电台。我们今天请到了Bright Eyes乐队的主唱。怎么样Conor?
【Conor】好多了,谢谢,就是有点潮
【主持人】哦,外面好像还下雨
【Conor】嗯,我不得不从车里跑出来
【主持人】好的,我们很乐意看到你的新作,你的新专辑《 Fevers and Mirrors》。可否告诉我专辑名的题意?
我注意到歌词里有很多次提到的意象,狂躁...镜子、天平、钟摆
能够概述下其中的用意吗?
【Conor】可以,我想想,“狂躁”是——
【主持人】首先我想说,这是张绝佳的唱片,我们现在电台很投入
同时收到了很多反响,这是件好事
【Conor】非常感谢
【主持人】所以来聊聊象征手法
【Conor】“狂躁”?
【主持人】对
【Conor】“狂躁”基本是任何困扰并让你不适的东西。与我的个人情况,就是我的恐惧,我的焦虑,但我不想被困扰着。
不同的人群肯定都不同。它是能让你睡不好觉的东西
【主持人】了解
【Conor】然后“镜子”就是像,你可能猜得到,自我反省与反思以及别的什么、
可能是自负与自我埋怨。我不懂,我都遭这两个的罪
【主持人】很有意思,那“天平”呢?
【Conor】“天平”就是我们从理智与逻辑出发数量上地排除问题
就我本人来说,没啥用,但总是...好吧没有总是
时钟与日历等,都是时间,都是我们渺小的测量单位
感觉就像它们在追我们
【主持人】我懂了,那“艾莉娜特”呢,她是如何贯穿全专辑的?
【Conor】我不想谈这个,以防她在偷听
【主持人】不好意思,我没意识到她是真实人物
【Conor】不,她是我创造出的
【主持人】噢,她不是真实的??
【Conor】就像你和我一样真实
【主持人】我不觉得我能理解
【Conor】我也一样,但我成熟点了应该会。我是说,你知道吗现在很多事与我而言都不清楚
【主持人】很有意思,你现在又提及了你的焦虑
【Conor】不没有
【主持人】你来自内布拉斯加吗?
【Conor】对的
【主持人】如果细讲到私事,那里似乎有个黑暗的往事。你觉得你的成长经历如何?
【Conor】黑暗?没怎么。事实上我有很好的童年。家境不错
我上的是TZ教学校。家里人有钱,我也有,所以都很优越。我有任何我想要的
【主持人】真的吗?所以像浴缸里的婴儿这样的参照不是来自传记?
【Conor】我确实有个兄弟死在了浴缸里...溺死了
我有五个兄弟都溺死了
【主持人】(笑笑)
【Conor】我认真的,我母亲生了五个都溺死了。他们都叫Padriaic,这就是为什么他们只有一首歌
就像走出窗户,发觉又是一扇窗
【主持人】但你的音乐确实很私人
【Conor】是这样的,我把很多事灌入了音乐里。就像一个作者,你要去诠释自己,利用象征与寓意来实现。
也有一部分来自怜悯,同情他人的处境
我唱的歌曲部分来自他人的经历
无所谓,这段话就是要公诸于世
【主持人】我懂你的意思了
【Conor】可以把这背景音关了吗?
【主持人】可以。然后你的目标是?
【Conor】不知道。创造我的情感大概
一首歌永远不会照你计划中写出
【主持人】你的话真有意思,你不觉得——?
【Conor】你不觉得现在这里都不是真实的吗?
【主持人】不好意思你在说啥?
【Conor】没什么,你在这个电台待多久了?
【主持人】噢,几分钟而已。刚才你讲到了对他人的同情
你能说这是你音乐创作的动力吗?
【Conor】不完全是,更需要同情。我需要他人对我同情
我乐意在我对着麦克风讲我的黑暗往事时,看着听众焦灼的目光
我小时候我都会随身携带一枚安全别针,当别人不再关注我,我都把他扎进我的手臂直到哭泣
每个人驻足问我怎么了
我觉得,我很喜欢这样
【主持人】你这么做真的只是为了引起别人注意?
【Conor】不,我讨厌别人看着我,我感觉恶心
事实上,我懒得在乎别人怎么管我。你觉得是吧?
【主持人】不,我有点对不住
【Conor】我真心想成为一盏黄灯,温暖每个爱我的人
【主持人】所以你要弹首什么,一首新歌?
【Conor】对,但我没写好。我一直想写首叫《A Song To Pass The Time》的歌
【主持人】噢,不错的标题
【Conor】你该自己写剧本了
【主持人】我知道的

🔤 LRC翻译歌词

[by:卡子淇]
[00:11.74]你认为故事
[00:16.58]会在你挥手道别时完结吗?
[00:20.37]像夕阳就快落下
[00:25.24]而你却乞求夜晚?
[00:28.63]黑夜里的我们无影无踪
[00:33.63]家庭也会促使破碎
[00:37.52]若有天我们分别 谁会施舍同情
[00:41.73]即便现在真能永远相爱?
[00:46.39]夏日要来临了
[00:48.51]要来熏透我们的泪眼
[00:51.78]别再浪费精力
[00:53.15]当眼前的一切都已了无意义
[00:58.76]让我们来以血换取酒精 来扭转天平
[01:07.16]我想你因杂乱的细节 而失去了心头所爱
[01:15.35]他们似乎如此宝贵
[01:20.06]但你已无法挽回
[01:24.27]任何名字、面孔与过往
[01:28.31]被情感愈加放大
[01:33.11]冬天就快离去
[01:35.05]我也要开始戒去酒瘾
[01:37.93]深处幽暗的我又想要回到光明
[02:14.67]下面是一段访谈,Conor Oberst由Todd Fink扮演,采访者是Matt Silcock,所有访谈对话都由Conor Oberst本人写剧本排演。
[02:32.56]【主持人】嗨又见面了,这里是XX电台。我们今天请到了Bright Eyes乐队的主唱。怎么样Conor?
[02:39.46]【Conor】好多了,谢谢,就是有点潮
[02:42.14]【主持人】哦,外面好像还下雨
[02:44.92]【Conor】嗯,我不得不从车里跑出来
[02:47.18]【主持人】好的,我们很乐意看到你的新作,你的新专辑《 Fevers and Mirrors》。可否告诉我专辑名的题意?
[02:52.78]我注意到歌词里有很多次提到的意象,狂躁...镜子、天平、钟摆
[02:59.25]能够概述下其中的用意吗?
[03:01.73]【Conor】可以,我想想,“狂躁”是——
[03:04.95]【主持人】首先我想说,这是张绝佳的唱片,我们现在电台很投入
[03:09.77]同时收到了很多反响,这是件好事
[03:12.77]【Conor】非常感谢
[03:14.69]【主持人】所以来聊聊象征手法
[03:17.22]【Conor】“狂躁”?
[03:18.64]【主持人】对
[03:19.55]【Conor】“狂躁”基本是任何困扰并让你不适的东西。与我的个人情况,就是我的恐惧,我的焦虑,但我不想被困扰着。
[03:32.72]不同的人群肯定都不同。它是能让你睡不好觉的东西
[03:36.74]【主持人】了解
[03:38.92]【Conor】然后“镜子”就是像,你可能猜得到,自我反省与反思以及别的什么、
[03:46.02]可能是自负与自我埋怨。我不懂,我都遭这两个的罪
[03:52.24]【主持人】很有意思,那“天平”呢?
[03:55.02]【Conor】“天平”就是我们从理智与逻辑出发数量上地排除问题
[04:04.62]就我本人来说,没啥用,但总是...好吧没有总是
[04:12.73]时钟与日历等,都是时间,都是我们渺小的测量单位
[04:19.18]感觉就像它们在追我们
[04:22.79]【主持人】我懂了,那“艾莉娜特”呢,她是如何贯穿全专辑的?
[04:28.76]【Conor】我不想谈这个,以防她在偷听
[04:33.51]【主持人】不好意思,我没意识到她是真实人物
[04:35.85]【Conor】不,她是我创造出的
[04:40.05]【主持人】噢,她不是真实的??
[04:41.83]【Conor】就像你和我一样真实
[04:44.42]【主持人】我不觉得我能理解
[04:46.78]【Conor】我也一样,但我成熟点了应该会。我是说,你知道吗现在很多事与我而言都不清楚
[04:54.93]【主持人】很有意思,你现在又提及了你的焦虑
[04:58.58]【Conor】不没有
[04:59.71]【主持人】你来自内布拉斯加吗?
[05:01.06]【Conor】对的
[05:02.28]【主持人】如果细讲到私事,那里似乎有个黑暗的往事。你觉得你的成长经历如何?
[05:08.72]【Conor】黑暗?没怎么。事实上我有很好的童年。家境不错
[05:16.51]我上的是TZ教学校。家里人有钱,我也有,所以都很优越。我有任何我想要的
[05:28.25]【主持人】真的吗?所以像浴缸里的婴儿这样的参照不是来自传记?
[05:33.69]【Conor】我确实有个兄弟死在了浴缸里...溺死了
[05:39.10]我有五个兄弟都溺死了
[05:41.03]【主持人】(笑笑)
[05:42.41]【Conor】我认真的,我母亲生了五个都溺死了。他们都叫Padriaic,这就是为什么他们只有一首歌
[05:56.37]就像走出窗户,发觉又是一扇窗
[05:59.90]【主持人】但你的音乐确实很私人
[06:02.87]【Conor】是这样的,我把很多事灌入了音乐里。就像一个作者,你要去诠释自己,利用象征与寓意来实现。
[06:12.35]也有一部分来自怜悯,同情他人的处境
[06:18.33]我唱的歌曲部分来自他人的经历
[06:24.13]无所谓,这段话就是要公诸于世
[06:27.93]【主持人】我懂你的意思了
[06:30.46]【Conor】可以把这背景音关了吗?
[06:32.39]【主持人】可以。然后你的目标是?
[06:37.64]【Conor】不知道。创造我的情感大概
[06:41.33]一首歌永远不会照你计划中写出
[06:44.80]【主持人】你的话真有意思,你不觉得——?
[06:46.92]【Conor】你不觉得现在这里都不是真实的吗?
[06:49.09]【主持人】不好意思你在说啥?
[06:51.42]【Conor】没什么,你在这个电台待多久了?
[06:54.71]【主持人】噢,几分钟而已。刚才你讲到了对他人的同情
[06:57.93]你能说这是你音乐创作的动力吗?
[07:02.06]【Conor】不完全是,更需要同情。我需要他人对我同情
[07:07.82]我乐意在我对着麦克风讲我的黑暗往事时,看着听众焦灼的目光
[07:17.23]我小时候我都会随身携带一枚安全别针,当别人不再关注我,我都把他扎进我的手臂直到哭泣
[07:28.15]每个人驻足问我怎么了
[07:30.61]我觉得,我很喜欢这样
[07:33.04]【主持人】你这么做真的只是为了引起别人注意?
[07:37.48]【Conor】不,我讨厌别人看着我,我感觉恶心
[07:41.70]事实上,我懒得在乎别人怎么管我。你觉得是吧?
[07:48.65]【主持人】不,我有点对不住
[07:51.72]【Conor】我真心想成为一盏黄灯,温暖每个爱我的人
[07:55.77]【主持人】所以你要弹首什么,一首新歌?
[08:00.78]【Conor】对,但我没写好。我一直想写首叫《A Song To Pass The Time》的歌
[08:09.18]【主持人】噢,不错的标题
[08:15.19]【Conor】你该自己写剧本了
[08:17.16]【主持人】我知道的

📝 纯歌词版本

Did you expect it all to stop
At the wave of your hand?
Like the sun is just going to drop
If it's night you demand
Well, in the dark we are just air
So the house might dissolve
But once we are gone, who is gonna care
If we were ever here at all?
Well, summer is going to come
It't gonna cloud our eyes again
There's no need to focus
When there is nothing that it worth seeing
So we trade liquor for blood in an attempt to tip the scales
I think you lost what you loved in that mess of details
They seemed so important at the time
But now you can't even recall
Any of the names, faces, or lines
It is more the feeling of it all
Well, winter is going to end
I'm going to clean these veins again
So close to dying that I finally can start living

Radio: Hi, we're back. This is Radio KX and we're here with Conor Oberst of the band Bright Eyes. How are you doing Conor?
Conor: Fine, thanks. Just a little wet
Radio: Oh yeah, it's still coming down out there
Conor: Yeah, I sort of had to run from the car
Radio: Well, we are glad you made it. Now your new album, Fevers and Mirrors. Tell us a little bit about the title.
I noticed there was a good deal of repeated imagery in the lyrics,fevers...mirrors, scales, clocks.
Could you discuss some of this?
Conor: Sure. Let's see, the fever is--
Radio: First let me say, that this is a brilliant record, man, we're all really into it here at the station.
We get lots of calls, it's really good stuff
Conor: Thanks, thanks a lot
Radio: So talk a little bit about some of the symbolism
Conor: The fever?
Radio: Sure
Conor: Well the fever is basically whatever ails you or oppresses you, it could be anything. In my case it's my neurosis, my depression, but I don't want to be limited to that.
It's certainly different for different people.It's whatever keeps you up at night
Radio: I see
Conor: And then the mirror is like, as you might have guessed, self-examination or reflection or whatever form.
This could be vanity or self-loathing. I don't know, I'm guilty of both
Radio: That's interesting. How about the scale?
Conor: The scale is essentially our attempt to solve our problems quantitatively through logic or rationalization.
In my opinion it's often fruitless, but always, well, not always.
And the clocks and calendars, etcetera, its just time, our little measurements.
It's like, it's always chasing after us
Radio: It is, it is. How about this Arienette, how does she fit in to all of this?
Conor: I'm prefer not talk about it, in case she's listening
Radio: Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize she was a real person
Conor: She's not, but I made her up
Radio: Oh, so she's not real?
Conor: Just as real as you or I
Radio: I don't think I understand
Conor: Neither do I, but after I grow up I will. I mean, you know what, a lot of things are really unclear for me right now
Radio: That's interesting. Now you mentioned your depression
Conor: No I didn't
Radio: You're from Nebraska, right?
Conor: Yeah, that's right
Radio: Now let me know if I'm getting to personal, but there seems to be a pretty dark past back there somewhere. What was it like for you growing up?
Conor: Dark? Not really. Actually I had a great childhood. My parents were wonderful.
I went to a Catholic school. They have, I had money, so it was all easy. I basically had everything that I wanted anytime
Radio: Really? So some of the references like babies in bathtubs are not biographical?
Conor: Well I did have a brother who died in a bathtub...he drowned.
Well actually I had five brothers that drowned
Radio: (Chuckle)
Conor: No, I'm serious. My mother drowned one every year for five consecutive years. They were all named Padraic, and that's why they only got one song.
It's kind of like walking out a door and discovering that it's a window
Radio: But your music is certainly very personal
Conor: Of course, I put a lot of myself into what I do. It's like being an author, you have to free yourself to use symbolism and allegory to meet your goal.
And part of that is compassion, empathy for other people and their situations.
Some of what I sing about comes from other people's experiences.
It shouldn't matter, the message is intended to be universal
Radio: I see what you mean
Conor: Could you make that sound stop, please?
Radio: Yes. And your goal?
Conor: I don't know. Create feelings I guess.
A song never ends up the way you planned it
Radio: That's funny you'd say that, do you think that--
Conor: Do you ever hear things that aren't really there?
Radio: I'm sorry, what?
Conor: Never mind. How long have you worked at this station?
Radio: Oh, just a few minutes. Now you mentioned empathy for others.
Would you say that that motivates you to make the music that you make?
Conor: No, not really. It's more a need for sympathy. I want people to feel sorry for me.
I like to feel the burn of the audience's eyes on me when I'm revealing all my darkest secrets into the microphone.
When I was a kid I used to carry a safety pin around with me every where I went in my pocket, and when people weren't paying enough attention to me, I'm dig it into my arm until I started crying.
Everyone would stop what they were doing and ask me what was the matter
I guess, I guess I kind of liked that
Radio: Really, you're telling me that you're doing all of this for attention?
Conor: No, I hate it when people look at me, I get nauseous.
In fact, I could care less what people think about me. Do you feel that?
Radio: No, I feeling sick
Conor: I really just want to be this warm yellow light that pours over everyone that I love
Radio: So you're going to play something for us now? Is this a new song?
Conor: Yeah, but I haven't written it yet. It's one I've been meaning to write called A Song To Pass The Time
Radio: Oh, that's a nice title
Conor: You should write your own scripts
Radio: Yeah, I know
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加载歌词中...
An Attempt To Tip The Scales
Bright Eyes