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The Secret Life of a Love Song - Nick Cave
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West Country Girl | |
With a crooked smile and a heart-shaped face | |
Comes from the West Country where the birds sing bass | |
She's got a house-big heart where we all live | |
And plead and counsel and forgive | |
Her widow's peak, her lips I've kissed | |
Her gloves of bone at her wrist | |
That I have held in my hand | |
Her Spanish fly and her monkey gland | |
Her godly body and its fourteen stations | |
That I have embraced, her palpitations | |
Her unborn baby crying, Mummy | |
Amongst the rubble of her body | |
Her lovely lidded eyes I've sipped | |
Her fingernails, all pink and chipped | |
Her accent which I'm told is 'broad' | |
That I have heard and has been poured | |
Into my human heart and filled me | |
With love, up to the brim, and killed me | |
And rebuilt me back anew | |
With something to look forward to | |
Well, who could ask much more than that? | |
A West Country Girl with a big fat cat | |
That looks into her eyes of green | |
And meaows, 'He loves you', then meaows again | |
That was a song called West Country Girl. It is a love song. It began, in its | |
innocence, as a poem written about two years ago in Australia, where the sun | |
shines. I wrote it with my heart in my mouth, listing the physical details that | |
drew me towards a particular person...the West Country Girl. It set forth my own | |
personal criteria of beauty, my own particular truth about beauty, as angular, | |
cruel and impoverished as it probably was. It was a list of things I loved, and, | |
in truth, a wretched excuse in flattery, designed to win the girl. And it worked | |
and it didn't work. But the peculiar magic of the love song, if it has the heart | |
to do it, is that it endures where the object of the song does not. It attaches | |
itself to you, and together you move through time. But it does more than that, | |
for just as it is our task to move forward, to cast off our past, to change and | |
to grow, in short, to forgive ourselves and each other, the love song holds | |
within it an eerie intelligence all its own - to reinvent the past and to lay it | |
at the feet of the present. West Country Girl began in innocence and in | |
sunshine, as a simple poem about a girl. But it has done what all love songs | |
must do in order to survive: it has demanded the right to its own identity, its | |
own life, its own truth. I've seen it grow and mutate with time. It presents | |
itself now as a cautionary tale, as a list of ingredients in a witches' brew, it | |
reads as a coroner's report, or a message on a sandwich-board worn by a | |
wild-eyed man who states, "The end of the world is at hand." It is a hoarse | |
voice in the dark that croaks, "Beware . . . beware . . . beware." Anyway, I'm | |
getting ahead of myself. | |
People Ain't No Good | |
People just ain't no good | |
I think that's well understood | |
You can see it everywhere you look | |
People just ain't no good | |
We were married under cherry trees | |
Under blossom we made our vows | |
All the blossoms came sailing down | |
Through the streets and through the playgrounds | |
The sun would stream on the sheets | |
Awoken by the morning bird | |
We'd buy the Sunday newspapers | |
And never read a single word | |
People they ain't no good | |
People they ain't no good | |
People they ain't no good | |
Seasons came, seasons went | |
The winter stripped the blossoms bare | |
A different tree now lines the streets | |
Shaking its fists in the air | |
The winter slammed us like a fist | |
The windows rattling in the gales | |
To which she drew the curtains | |
Made out of her wedding veils | |
People they ain't no good | |
People they ain't no good | |
People they ain't no good | |
To our love send a dozen white lilies | |
To our love send a coffin of wood | |
To our love let all the pink-eyed pigeons coo | |
That people they just ain't no good | |
To our love send back all the letters | |
To our love a valentine of blood | |
To our love let all the jilted lovers cry | |
That people they just ain't no good | |
It ain't that in their hearts they're bad | |
They can comfort you, some even try | |
They nurse you when your ill of health | |
They bury you when you go and die | |
It ain't that in their hearts they're bad | |
They'd stick by you if they could | |
But that's just bullshit | |
People just ain't no good | |
People they just ain't no good | |
People they just ain't no good | |
People they just ain't no good | |
People they just ain't no good | |
I performed a more conservative, lo-tech version of this essay at the Poetry | |
Academy in Vienna last year. I was invited to actually teach a group of adult | |
students about songwriting. But first they wanted me to give a public lecture. | |
The subject I chose was the love song, and in doing it - I mean, standing up in | |
front of a crowd of people and teaching, lecturing - I was filled with a host of | |
conflicting feelings. The strongest, most insistent of these was one of abject | |
horror. Horror, because my late father was an English literature teacher at the | |
high school I attended back in Australia - you know, where the sun shines. I | |
have very clear memories of being about 12 and sitting in a classroom watching | |
my father, who would be standing, up here, where I am standing, and thinking to | |
myself, gloomily and miserably - for, in the main, I was a gloomy and miserable | |
child - "It doesn't really matter what I do with my life as long as I don't end | |
up like my father." Now, at 41, it would appear there is virtually no action I | |
can take that does not draw me closer to him, that does not make me more like | |
him. At 41, I have become my father, and here I am, ladies and gentlemen, | |
teaching. | |
Looking back over the past 20 years, a certain clarity prevails. Amidst the | |
madness and the mayhem, it would seem I have been banging on one particular | |
drum. I see that my artistic life has centred around an attempt to articulate an | |
almost palpable sense of loss that laid claim to my life. A great gaping hole | |
was blasted out of my world by the unexpected death of my father when I was 19. | |
The way I learned to fill this hole, this void, was to write. My father taught | |
me this as if to prepare me for his own passing. Writing allowed me direct | |
access to my imagination, to inspiration and, ultimately, to God. | |
I found that, through the use of language, I was writing God into existence. | |
Language became the blanket that I threw over the invisible man, which gave him | |
shape and form. The actualisation of God through the medium of the love song | |
remains my prime motivation as an artist. I found that language became a | |
poultice to the wounds incurred by the death of my father. Language became a | |
salve to longing. | |
The loss of my father created in my life a vacuum, a space in which my words | |
began to float and collect and find their purpose. WH Auden said, "the so-called | |
traumatic experience is not an accident, but the opportunity for which the child | |
has been patiently waiting - had it not occurred, it would have found another - | |
in order that its life became a serious matter". The death of my father was this | |
"traumatic experience" that left the hole for God to fill. How beautiful the | |
notion that we create our own personal catastrophes and that it is the creative | |
forces within us that are instrumental in doing this. Here, our creative | |
impulses lie in ambush at the side of our lives, ready to leap forth and kick | |
holes in it - holes through which inspiration can rise. We each have our need to | |
create, and sorrow itself is a creative act. | |
Though the love song comes in many guises - songs of exaltation and praise, of | |
rage and of despair, erotic songs, songs of abandonment and loss - they all | |
address God, for it is the haunted premise of longing that the true love song | |
inhabits. It is a howl in the void for love and for comfort, and it lives on the | |
lips of the child crying for his mother. It is the song of the lover in need of | |
their loved one, the raving of the lunatic supplicant petitioning his God. It is | |
the cry of one chained to the earth and craving flight, a flight into | |
inspiration and imagination and divinity. The love song is the sound of our | |
endeavours to become God-like, to rise up and above the earth-bound and the | |
mediocre. I believe the love song to be a sad song. It is the noise of sorrow | |
itself. | |
We all experience within us what the Portuguese call "saudade", an inexplicable | |
longing, an unnamed and enigmatic yearning of the soul, and it is this feeling | |
that lives in the realms of imagination and inspiration, and is the breeding | |
ground for the sad song, for the love song. Saudade is the desire to be | |
transported from darkness into light, to be touched by the hand of that which is | |
not of this world. The love song is the light of God, deep down, blasting up | |
though our wounds. | |
In his brilliant lecture, The Theory And Function Of Duende, Frederico Garcia | |
Lorca attempts to shed some light on the eerie and inexplicable sadness that | |
lives at the heart of certain works of art. "All that has dark sounds has | |
'duende'," he says, "that mysterious power that everyone feels but no | |
philosopher can explain." Contemporary rock music seems less inclined to have at | |
its soul, restless and quivering, the sadness that Lorca talks about. | |
Excitement, often, anger, sometimes - but true sadness, rarely. Bob Dylan has | |
always had it. Leonard Cohen deals specifically with it. It pursues Van Morrison | |
like a black dog and, though he tries to, he cannot escape it. Tom Waits and | |
Neil Young can summon it. My friends The Dirty 3 have it by the bucketload. But, | |
all in all, it would appear that the duende is too fragile to survive the | |
compulsive modernity of the music industry. In the hysterical technocracy of | |
modern music, sorrow is sent to the back of the class, where it sits, pissing | |
its pants in mortal terror. Duende, needs space to breathe. Melancholy hates | |
haste and floats in silence. I feel sorry for sadness, as we jump all over it, | |
denying its voice and muscling it into the outer reaches. No wonder sorrow | |
doesn't smile much. No wonder sadness is so sad. | |
All love songs must contain "duende", because the love song is never simply | |
happy. It must first embrace the potential for pain. Those songs that speak of | |
love, without having within their lines an ache or a sigh, are not love songs at | |
all, but rather hate songs disguised as love songs, and are not to be trusted. | |
These songs deny us our human-ness and our God-given right to be sad, and the | |
airwaves are littered with them. The love song must resonate with the whispers | |
of sorrow and the echoes of grief. The writer who refuses to explore the darker | |
reaches of the heart will never be able to write convincingly about the wonder, | |
magic and joy of love, for just as goodness cannot be trusted unless it has | |
breathed the same air as evil, so within the fabric of the love song, within its | |
melody, its lyric, one must sense an acknowledgement of its capacity for | |
suffering. | |
Sad Waters | |
Down the road I look and there runs Mary | |
Hair of gold and lips like cherries | |
We go down to the river where the willows weep | |
Take a naked root for a lovers' seat | |
That rose out of the bitten soil | |
But bound to the ground by creeping ivy coils | |
O Mary you have seduced my soul | |
(And I don't know right from wrong) | |
Forever a hostage of your child's world | |
And then I ran my tin-cup heart along | |
The prison of her ribs | |
And with a toss of her curls | |
That little girl goes waddling in | |
Rolling her dress up past her knee | |
Turning these waters into wine | |
Then she plaited all the willow vines | |
Mary in the shallows laughing | |
Over where the carp dart | |
Spooked by the new shadows that she cast | |
Across these sad waters and across my heart | |
Around the age of 20, I started reading the Bible and found in the brutal prose | |
of the Old Testament, in the feel of its words and its imagery, an endless | |
source of inspiration, especially in the series of love songs/poems known as the | |
Psalms. I found the Psalms, which deal directly with the relationship between | |
man and God, teeming with all the clamorous desperation, longing, exaltation, | |
erotic violence and brutality that I could hope for. They are soaked in saudade, | |
drenched in duende, and bathed in bloody-minded violence. In a lot of ways, | |
these songs became the blueprint for many of my more sadistic love songs. Psalm | |
137, a particular favourite of mine, which was turned into a chart hit by the | |
fab Boney M, is a perfect example of this. | |
Psalm 137 | |
By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yea, | |
We wept, when we remembered Zion | |
We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof | |
For there they that carried us away captive required | |
Of us a song; and they that wasted us required of us | |
Mirth saying, Sing us one of the songs of Zion. | |
How shall we sing the Lord's Song in a strange land | |
If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, Let my right hand | |
Forget her cunning | |
If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to | |
The roof of my mouth: If I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy | |
Remember, O Lord, the children of Edom in the | |
Day of Jerusalem; who said Rase it, rase it, even to | |
The foundation thereof | |
Daughter of Babylon, who are to be destroyed; | |
Happy shall he be, that rewardeth thee as thou hast | |
Served us. | |
Happy shall he be, that taketh and dasheth thy little | |
Ones against the stones. | |
Here, the poet finds himself captive in "a strange land", and is forced to sing | |
a song of Zion. He declares his love to his homeland and dreams of revenge. The | |
psalm is ghastly in its violent sentiments, as he sings to his God for | |
deliverance, and that he may be made happy by murdering the children of his | |
enemies. What I found, time and time again in the Bible, was that verses of | |
rapture, of ecstasy and love could hold within them apparently opposite | |
sentiments - hate, revenge, bloody-mindedness - that were not mutually | |
exclusive. This has left an enduring impression upon my songwriting. | |
The love song must be borne into the realm of the irrational, the absurd, the | |
distracted, the melancholic, the obsessive and the insane, for it is the clamour | |
of love itself, and love is, of course, a form of madness. Whether it is the | |
love of God, or romantic erotic love, these are manifestations of our need to be | |
torn away from the rational, to take leave of our senses, so to speak. Love | |
songs come in many forms and are written as declarations of love or revenge, to | |
praise or to wound or to flatter - I have written songs for all these reasons, | |
but ultimately the love song exists to fill with language the silence between | |
ourselves and God, to decrease the distance between the temporal and the divine. | |
But within the world of pop music, a world that deals ostensibly with the love | |
song, true sorrow is just not welcome. There are exceptions: occasionally, a | |
song comes along that hides behind its disposable plastic beat a love lyric of | |
truly devastating proportions. Better The Devil You Know, written by Stock, | |
Aitken and Waterman and sung by Kylie Minogue, is such a song. The disguising of | |
the terror of love in a piece of mindless, innocuous pop is an intriguing | |
concept. Better The Devil You Know contains one of pop music's most violent and | |
distressing love lyrics. | |
Better the Devil You Know | |
Say you won't leave me no more | |
I'll take you back again | |
No more excuses, no, no | |
'Cause I've heard them all before | |
A hundred times or more | |
I'll forgive and forget | |
If you say you'll never go | |
'Cause it's true what they say | |
Better the devil you know | |
Our love wasn't perfect | |
I know, I think I know the score | |
You say you love me, O boy | |
I can't ask for more | |
I'll come if you should call | |
I'll be here every day | |
Waiting for your love to show | |
'Cause it's true what they say | |
It's better the devil you know | |
I'll take you back | |
I'll take you back again | |
When Kylie sings these words, there is an innocence to her voice that makes the | |
horror of the chilling lyric all the more compelling. The idea presented within | |
this song, dark and sinister and sad, that love relationships are by nature | |
abusive, and that this abuse, be it physical or psychological, is welcomed and | |
encouraged, shows how even the most seemingly harmless of love songs has the | |
potential to hide terrible human truths. Like Prometheus chained to his rock, | |
the eagle eating his liver night after night, Kylie becomes Love's sacrificial | |
lamb, bleating an earnest invitation to the drooling, ravenous wolf to devour | |
her time and time again, all to a groovy techno beat. "I'll take you back, I'll | |
take you back again." Indeed, here the love song becomes a vehicle for a | |
harrowing portrait of humanity, not dissimilar to the Old Testament psalms. Both | |
are messages to God that cry out into the yawning void, in anguish and | |
self-loathing, for deliverance. | |
As I said earlier, my artistic life has centred around the desire or, more | |
accurately, need to articulate the feelings of loss and longing that have | |
whistled through my bones and hummed in my blood. In the process, I have written | |
about 200 songs, the bulk of which are love songs. Love songs, and thereafter, | |
by my definition, sad songs. A handful of them rise above the others as true | |
examples of all I have talked about. | |
Sad Waters, Black Hair, I Let Love In, Deanna, From Her To Eternity, Nobody's | |
Baby Now, Into My Arms, Lime Tree Arbour, Lucy, Straight To You, I am proud of | |
these songs. Mostly, they were the offspring of complicated pregnancies and | |
difficult and painful births. Most are rooted in direct personal experience and | |
were conceived for a variety of reasons, but this rag-tag group of love songs | |
are, at the death, all the same thing - lifelines thrown into the galaxies by a | |
drowning man. | |
The reasons I feel compelled to write love songs are legion. Some of these | |
became clearer to me when I sat down with a friend of mine. We admitted to each | |
other that we both suffered from the psychological disorder that the medical | |
profession terms "Erotigraphomania". | |
Erotigraphomania is the obsessive desire to write love letters. He shared with | |
me the fact that he had written, and sent, over the past five years more than | |
7,000 love letters to his wife. My friend looked exhausted, and his shame was | |
almost palpable. We discussed the power of the love letter, and found that it | |
was, not surprisingly, very similar to that of the love song. Both serve as | |
extended meditations on one's beloved. Both serve to shorten the distance | |
between the writer and the recipient. Both hold within them a permanence and | |
power that the spoken word does not. Both are erotic exercises in themselves. | |
Both have the potential to reinvent, through words, like Pygmalion with his | |
self-created lover of stone, one's beloved. But more than that, both have the | |
insidious power to imprison one's beloved, to bind their hands with love-lines, | |
gag them, blind them, for words become the defining parameter that keeps the | |
image of the loved one imprisoned in a bondage of poetry. "I have taken | |
possession of you," the love letter, the love song, whispers, for ever. | |
These stolen souls we set adrift, like lost astronauts floating for eternity | |
through the stratospheres of the divine. Me, I never trust a woman who writes | |
letters, because I know that I, myself, cannot be trusted. Words endure, flesh | |
does not. The poet will always have the upper hand. Me, I'm a soul-catcher for | |
God. Here I come with my butterfly net of words. Here I catch the chrysalis. | |
Here I blow life into bodies, and hurl them fluttering to the stars and the care | |
of God. | |
I'd like to look finally at a song I wrote for The Boatman's Call album. It is | |
called Far From Me. | |
Far From Me | |
For you, dear, I was born | |
For you I was raised up | |
For you I've lived and for you I will die | |
For you I am dying now | |
You were my mad little lover | |
In a world where everybody fucks everybody else over. | |
You who are so | |
Far from me | |
So far from me | |
Way across some cold neurotic sea | |
Far from me | |
I would talk to you of all manner of things | |
With a smile you would reply | |
Then the sun would leave your pretty face | |
And you'd retreat from the front of your eyes | |
I keep hearing that you're doing your best | |
I hope your heart beats happy in your infant breast | |
You are so far from me | |
Far from me | |
Far from me | |
There is no knowledge but I know it | |
There's nothing to learn from that vacant voice That sails to me across the line | |
From the ridiculous to the sublime | |
It's good to hear you're doing so well But really, can't you find somebody else | |
that you can ring and tell? | |
Did you ever care for me? | |
Were you ever there for me? | |
So far from me | |
You told me you'd stick by me | |
Through the thick and through the thin | |
Those were your very words | |
My fair-weather friend | |
You were my brave-hearted lover | |
At the first taste of trouble went running back to mother | |
So far from me | |
Far from me | |
Suspended in your bleak and fishless sea | |
Far from me | |
Far from me | |
Far From Me took four months to write, the duration of the relationship it | |
describes. The first verse was written in the first week of the affair, and is | |
full of the heroic dreams of the new love, describing the totality of feeling | |
while acknowledging its parallel pain - "for you I'm dying now". It sets the two | |
lover-heroes against an uncaring world - "a world where everybody fucks | |
everybody else over" - and brings in the notion of physical distance suggested | |
in the title. Verse One, and all is well in the garden. But Far From Me had its | |
own agenda, and was not about to allow itself to be told what to do. As if | |
awaiting the inevitable "traumatic experience", it refused to let itself be | |
completed until the catastrophe had occurred. Some songs are tricky like that, | |
and it is wise to keep your wits about you when dealing with them. More often | |
than not, the songs I write seem to know more about what's going on in my life | |
than I do. I have pages and pages of final verses for this song, written while | |
the relationship was still sailing happily along. One such verse went: "The | |
Camellia, the Magnolia/ Have such a pretty flower/ And the bell from St Mary's/ | |
Informs us of the hour." Pretty words, innocent words, unaware that any day the | |
bottom was about to drop out of the whole thing. As I wrote the final verse, it | |
became clear that my life was being dictated by the largely destructive | |
ordinance of the song itself, that it had its own in-built destiny over which I | |
had no control. In fact, I was an afterthought, a bit player in its sly, | |
mischievous and finally malicious vision of how the world should be. | |
Love songs that attach themselves to actual experience, that are a poeticising | |
of real events, have a beauty unto themselves. They stay alive in the same way | |
memories do and, being alive, they grow up and undergo changes and develop. If a | |
song is too weak to do that, if it is lacking in sufficient stamina and the will | |
to endure, sadly, it will not survive. You'll come home one day and find it dead | |
in the bottom of its cage. Its soul will have been reclaimed and all that will | |
remain is a pile of useless words. A love song such as Far From Me demanded a | |
personality beyond the one I originally gave it, with the power to influence my | |
own feelings and thoughts around the actual event itself. The songs that I have | |
written that deal with past relationships have become the relationships | |
themselves, heroically mutating with time and mythologising the ordinary events | |
of my life, lifting them from the temporal plane and blasting them way into the | |
stars. As the relationship itself collapses, whimpering with exhaustion, the | |
song breaks free of it and beats its wings heavenward. Such is the singular | |
beauty of songwriting. Twenty years of songwriting have now passed, and still | |
the void gapes wide. Still the inexplicable sadness, the duende, the saudade, | |
the divine discontent, persists, and perhaps it will continue until I see the | |
face of God himself. But when Moses desired to see the face of God, he was | |
answered that he may not endure it, that no man could see the face of God and | |
live. Well, me, I don't mind. I'm happy to be sad. For the residue cast off in | |
this search, the songs themselves, my crooked brood of sad-eyed children, rally | |
round and in their way protect me, comfort me and keep me alive. They are the | |
companions of the soul that lead it into exile, that sate the overpowering | |
yearning for that which is not of this world. The imagination demands an | |
alternative world, and through the writing of the love song one sits and dines | |
with loss and longing, madness and melancholy, ecstasy, magic and joy with equal | |
measure of respect and gratitude. |
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