Video response to Rufus' current avatar.
http://youtu.be/fvPpAPIIZyo
webenda wrote:...I am reminded of coughing and sneezing after my coronary bypass surgery. It took four weeks for my sternum to fuse back together, during which time every cough or sneeze put me in danger of exploding like a suicide bomber. The pain was like being skewered with a burning sword. ...
rogruth wrote:To me that video was strange.I did not understand it or the song[?].
webenda wrote:rogruth wrote:To me that video was strange.I did not understand it or the song[?].
The opening lyrics remind me of such things as "The Wrong Theory of Flight" we were taught.
We don't need no education.
We don't need no thought control.
No dark sarcasm in the classroom.
Teacher leave them kids alone
Hey! Teacher! Leave them kids alone!
All in all it's just another brick in the wall.
All in all you're just another brick in the wall.
But, the meaning is far more sinister than that. Pink—a character inspired by Roger Waters' childhood experiences—is speaking out against the cruel teachers of his childhood whom he blames for contributing more bricks to his wall of mental illness.
The crossed hammers, a symbol of fascism, also symbolize tools capable of building a wall, but they are also capable of tearing a wall down.
The teacher is shown cramming children into the school house grinder to come out totally homogenized with no individualism left in them. Not one would even think to challenge "The Wrong Theory of Flight" after being "formed" by the school.
The teacher himself is shown as a puppet, being controlled by a higher authority. Reminds me of what J. Long said, "Nobody deliberately lied to us." Can we blame a puppet for what he teaches?
Does that help "understanding?"
rogruth wrote:I don't know who Pink is...
Never knew that crossed hammers stood for fascism.
Rufus T. Firefly wrote:It would help to hear the entire recording of "The Wall", probably several times, to get the entire meaning and understand the full range of those childhood experiences. Watching the movie that was made as well, while challenging at times, is also illuminating.
rogruth wrote:Myfirst impression on reading is that it tends to be anti-war which just about everything in pop culture at that time seemed to be to me.
"The Wall is a concept album and deals largely with themes of abandonment and personal isolation. It was first conceived during their 1977 In the Flesh Tour, when bassist and lyricist Roger Waters's frustration with the spectators' perceived boorishness became so acute that he imagined building a wall between the performers and audience. The album is a rock opera that centres on Pink, a character Waters modelled after himself, with some aspects based on the band's original leader, Syd Barrett. Pink's life experiences begin with the loss of his father during the Second World War, and continue with ridicule and abuse from his schoolteachers, an overprotective mother and finally, the breakdown of his marriage. All contribute to his eventual self-imposed isolation from society, represented by a metaphorical wall."

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