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Total ratings: 1494
Length: 4:14
Plays (last 30 days): 2
my hungry ghost of hopefulness.
Giving up everything,
not haunted by wanting this.
Giving up everything,
the fortune I was saving.
Giving up everything,
I mercy-killed my craving.
Giving up everything,
I've opened up my eyes for this.
Giving up everything,
see the whole magnificent emptiness.
Gave what I want for how it is,
for the stone inside and the bitterness,
for the sweetness at the core of it.
Giving up everything,
the master plan, the scheming.
Giving up everything,
my cursed search for meaning.
Giving up everything,
the compass and the map I was reading.
The hinterlands I'm leaving,
I'm finally leaving behind.
Giving up everything,
the big to-do, the hullabaloo,
the tug-of-war for some twisted truth.
For the everlasting ache of it,
no longer slave, not chained to it,
no gate, no guard, no keeper,
no guru, master, teacher.
See the slow-receding faces
dissolve to black, no traces.
I mercy-killed my craving.
Four years later the song's played here again, and the lyrics are just as applicable with the shoe on the other foot.
You should've thought about that before you moved in with her. Just make her some coffee and a bowl of Cap'n Crunch and everything will get better.
That really made me laugh!!!
Ditto here. Too many naysayers and not enough yaysayers for my liking.
NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO. NO.
The worst part of her is on top of the sound and maudlin mewling, she isn't believable. Maybe then.
WR for hitting the PSD button. Give it a rest, Natalie.
You should've thought about that before you moved in with her. Just make her some coffee and a bowl of Cap'n Crunch and everything will get better.
NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO. NO.
The worst part of her is on top of the sound and maudlin mewling, she isn't believable. Maybe then.
They don't loose their shirts so easily.
What leads you to believe that those two groups are composed of the same people?
Easy: Because I like Forager Pinot Noir.
Ah, yes..of course. I should've known.
To those who describe themselves as NM voice haters, how can you also listen to Beth Or'hor'ton and like her vocal stylings?
Not that this is outstanding, but it is a tolerable, minimalist non-nihilistic effort.
What leads you to believe that those two groups are composed of the same people?
Easy: Because I like Forager Pinot Noir.
it goes with a rainy day we're having
To those who describe themselves as NM voice haters, how can you also listen to Beth Or'hor'ton and like her vocal stylings?
Not that this is outstanding, but it is a tolerable, minimalist non-nihilistic effort.
Her voice is so distinctive and immediately recognizable that it sounds, rightly or wrongly, like she's giving every song the same treatment.
I liked her much better with 10,000 Maniacs.
I guess you just have to be in the right mood to enjoy some music. I really like the instrumentals on this song, the vocals are typical Natalie—the combination evokes Philip Glass's 'Songs From Liquid Days", which is a good thing for me. :)
To those who describe themselves as NM voice haters, how can you also listen to Beth Or'hor'ton and like her vocal stylings?
Not that this is outstanding, but it is a tolerable, minimalist non-nihilistic effort.
What leads you to believe that those two groups are composed of the same people?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fX4iXjbWqDQ&list=RDMx5Iq0LTYw0&index=5
Amazing interview. What's immediately apparent is that she's chosen not to cover her graying, getting older. And what you gain from the piece is that she's looking forward to creating songs/art from the fact that she's becoming older, that she has the experience to express ideas that she simply couldn't 25 years ago. In a sense she encapsulates the journey that many pop singers make, from brash talent and perhaps revolutionary ideas to wizened professional, where craft is as important as raw talent and family is as important as hordes of screaming fans.
Rock'n'roll is indeed the province of the young. Music, however, is the province of those who lived to tell about it.
To those who describe themselves as NM voice haters, how can you also listen to Beth Or'hor'ton and like her vocal stylings?
Not that this is outstanding, but it is a tolerable, minimalist non-nihilistic effort.
no neked mule skinners??, but, but it;s my b-day 6/8 or is this a very different reanimated dude?
I be me...
this new album is loaded with marvelous songs, but this particular song by Natalie Merchant is not a bad song, just a ho hummer... ho ho ho...
hope you be having a marvelous time these days, oldfart48... smiles to ya...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fX4iXjbWqDQ&list=RDMx5Iq0LTYw0&index=5
Have always enjoyed her soulful energy and sound
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fX4iXjbWqDQ&list=RDMx5Iq0LTYw0&index=5
After reading all the comments about the lyrics, I found and read them. She seems to be taking a very Buddhist approach and accepting things as they are and as they arise instead of experiencing them through her conditioned experiences, cravings and desires. All that's a very good thing. What I don't get is why does she sounds so terribly sad about it. Any person I've ever known who has come anywhere close to achieving this goal is happy. The obvious example would be the Dalai Lama.
She usually sings that way.
I agree - if you read the lyrics it seems she is singing about shedding many things we all struggle with, ego, desire to control the outcome, a need for complete certainty. Life would certainly be a whole lot simpler without a bunch of those things.
After reading all the comments about the lyrics, I found and read them. She seems to be taking a very Buddhist approach and accepting things as they are and as they arise instead of experiencing them through her conditioned experiences, cravings and desires. All that's a very good thing. What I don't get is why does she sounds so terribly sad about it. Any person I've ever known who has come anywhere close to achieving this goal is happy. The obvious example would be the Dalai Lama.
Natalie Merchant superficially sounds like she is trying to become a monk who doesn't want anything, so who feels no pain from unrequited desire, but at a deeper level, she sounds like she is devoid of any pleasure in life... (in the Greek language the word for "monk" is "μοναχÏς" and it can apply to women...)
the lyrics for this song are complex and very interesting... the extreme nihilism and absence of hope expressed by Natalie Merchant in "Giving Up Everything" gives the song some potent emotive punch lyrically... this song reminds me a lot of Gary Numan's album last year Splinter (Songs from a Broken Mind)... Natalie sounds like she is going nuts with Freudian rationalizations — not to escape from desire — but really because life has become such a bummer for her...
but musically, in my opinion, Merchant tries too hard to sound unique and experimental, and the music consequently drains a lot of emotional force from the lyrics... the music is a distraction from the message in the lyrics...
(and if you haven't seen the official video for this song, the video is an artsy-fartsy mess...)
so to me, the music cancels out the force of the lyrics and I am leaving this song unrated...
no neked mule skinners??, but, but it;s my b-day 6/8 or is this a very different reanimated dude?
Sounds more like nonattachment to me.
thank you. again for the fact that against the hate you continue to support Nat, her songs are powerful and often disturbing. thats a GOOD thing. and where did the lyrics button go...?
probably about the fact that she sucks.
P.S. To BillG, another terrific set this evening. Tusin tuck!
Sounds more like nonattachment to me.
I agree - if you read the lyrics it seems she is singing about shedding many things we all struggle with, ego, desire to control the outcome, a need for complete certainty. Life would certainly be a whole lot simpler without a bunch of those things.
Natalie Merchant superficially sounds like she is trying to become a monk who doesn't want anything, so who feels no pain from unrequited desire, but at a deeper level, she sounds like she is devoid of any pleasure in life... (in the Greek language the word for "monk" is "μοναχÏς" and it can apply to women...)
the lyrics for this song are complex and very interesting... the extreme nihilism and absence of hope expressed by Natalie Merchant in "Giving Up Everything" gives the song some potent emotive punch lyrically... this song reminds me a lot of Gary Numan's album last year Splinter (Songs from a Broken Mind)... Natalie sounds like she is going nuts with Freudian rationalizations — not to escape from desire — but really because life has become such a bummer for her...
but musically, in my opinion, Merchant tries too hard to sound unique and experimental, and the music consequently drains a lot of emotional force from the lyrics... the music is a distraction from the message in the lyrics...
(and if you haven't seen the official video for this song, the video is an artsy-fartsy mess...)
so to me, the music cancels out the force of the lyrics and I am leaving this song unrated...
Sounds more like nonattachment to me.