Sid in the Sharknado
New member
These days, if you question why certain songs are played at England football matches you get arrested and thrown in jail.
Neil Diamond should have his goolies chopped off.
These days, if you question why certain songs are played at England football matches you get arrested and thrown in jail.
Creepy song written about a 12 year old girl.
How? It states a false tale about Jesus visiting England. It’s a parody.
Sir Hubert Parry wrote the lovely music.
These days, if you question why certain songs are played at England football matches you get arrested and thrown in jail.
Diamond is a fairly straight forward songwriter, there aren't hidden allegories or metaphors. He basically wrote a song for his wife Marcia but couldn't get Marcia to rhyme. He wrote it when Caroline Kennedy was just 7, it didn't get recorded and released till she was 12, Caroline is 3 syllables so worked - that is about the extent of it.
I had not heard that it was a parody. There is no mention of parody here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/And_did_those_feet_in_ancient_time
However if you make a living from alternative interpretations of literature it's possible to posit anything. Here the analyst muses that the Dark Satanic Mills are in fact Englands churches, and Blake is attacking orthodox Christianity and excessive patriotism:
https://interestingliterature.com/2017/04/a-short-analysis-of-william-blakes-jerusalem/
Since Blake is not on record explaining the meaning of his poem we shall never know.
However I rather like the idea that orthodox Christians, and scoundrels seeking a last refuge, sing the song with gusto without realising the words mock them. I like a bit of irony, me.
I had it in my head he wrote lots of hits for others so just looked him up.
In 1967 he released the single "Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon" with a b side of "You'll Forget"
I had not heard that it was a parody. There is no mention of parody here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/And_did_those_feet_in_ancient_time
However if you make a living from alternative interpretations of literature it's possible to posit anything. Here the analyst muses that the Dark Satanic Mills are in fact Englands churches, and Blake is attacking orthodox Christianity and excessive patriotism:
https://interestingliterature.com/2017/04/a-short-analysis-of-william-blakes-jerusalem/
Since Blake is not on record explaining the meaning of his poem we shall never know.
However I rather like the idea that orthodox Christians, and scoundrels seeking a last refuge, sing the song with gusto without realising the words mock them. I like a bit of irony, me.
The very first line is a question. And did those feet?
That's a question, not a parody, surely?
I understand that some Christians get annoyed about the musings about Jusus tarvelling to England, almost as much as some Christians get vexed about the Da Vinci Code (the last time someone was thrown out of Nicky Campbell's phone in when he had studio guests many years ago it was over this). However that doesn't mean Blake's musings are parody. Albeit there may be other reasons that prove that it is.
I accept that the Dark Satanic Mills may be a reference to the churches, albeit I suspect he was referring to England's dark satanic mills. But we shall never know.
If you have a link to proof of Blake's true intentions I'd be interested to read it. I like a bit of philosophy but Eng Lit isn't really my thing
Blake was a bit mad, but it doesn't stop his lyrics being rather better than those of a hack American song writer.
Blake was a bit mad, but it doesn't stop his lyrics being rather better than those of a hack American song writer.
I cant take much credit as I read the US Soccer Guy report this morning and saw they had this T shirt for sale
https://usasoccerguystore.com/product/three-lines-on-a-t-shirt/
The report of the game for those that may not have seen it
"England Soccer Club emulize the guys in the summer of '69 by making it right the way through to the final of a world championship. They needed hyper-overtime to go get the 3 points against Denmark Soccer Club, who were the winningest franchise in the tie for a few minutes after inserting a real sweet felony kick. But after Kasper the friendly Goaltender had made a hand denial with his body to deny Raheem British Dollar, the Three Lines came again and knotted it up at ones after Buckaroo Soccer's cross pass forced a deefense guy into a negative equity goalshot. The second quarter went by without any insertions, which kinda sucked. In hyper-overtime, the British guys dominized and eventually made it pay when British Dollar, who some thought did the voluntary simulation plunge in the danger box zone, won the deathstrike. The HurriKane's kick strike was denied by Kasper the friendly Goaltender, but the the ball fell to the cleats of the Soccer Chicken inserter, who finished it off his second chance chance. The jewels remain real shiny, and the Lines will hope to go save that queen when they play soccer again on on the weekend. "
So you don't rate William Blake vs. Neil Diamond?