#song: weighted
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mychemicalromance: @frankieromustdie celebrates the 10th anniversary of his album âStomachachesâ with the deluxe version âXNauseousX - Deluxe Anniversary Editionâ coming on August 30th. âThis Song Is A Curseâ out now along with an exclusive double vinyl + new merch available for pre-order. Link in bio to stream/order.
[Aug 23, 2024]
#mikey way#fi#mcr#fiatc#fiatx#live#mv#return#ig#2024#aug 2024#8/23/24#8/30/24#stomachaches#xnauseousx#weighted#song: weighted#this song is a curse#song: this song is a curse#vid#originals#eye strain#flashing warning
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One thing I've been asked a few times: Did the mountain happen for bear!Jaskier?
It did, but Jaskier stood his ground! And not with 'Burn Butcher, burn' afterwards.
#jaskier#geraskier#geralt of rivia#the witcher#song: the ballad of lucy gray baird#bear!jaskier#witcher!jaskier#Jaskier is not taking that much shit from Geralt! their relationship is different here#(since this is already an established relationship)#but also because Jaskier is older and more experienced#(it still hurts tho)#but I think it does change things in their relationship that in this 'verse Jaskier experiences time in the same way that Geralt does#I think human Jaskier felt the weight of the years he spent at Geralts side much more in this scene#and the unrequited feelings!#(S3 Jaskier can shut his lying liar mouth he was definitely in love at this point look at what he says but then what he SINGS how he acts!!#but since this is an established relationship - the drop is not THAT bad#Jaskier is more resigned than anything else#geralt is hard nut to crack emotionally
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based Doctor who
#doctor who#based#peter capaldi#his inner scott came out#abolish the monarchy#my back It simply refuses to carry the weight of an entirely pointless stratum of society#do you know how hard that goes#12th doctor#dr who#the husbands of river song#King hydroflax#greg davies#river song#the doctor#christopher eccleston would be proud#not my king#not my voice#doctor who quotes
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nice music
#you have no idea for how long ive been thinking about drawing anything related to red vox and how it always turned out cringe to me LOL#now i would like to think this is better than some past versions i drew in my middle school notebooks#it was more about the individual songs back then. i still have some cutouts in a bundle somewhere#do i tag this even#artstump#red vox#they are all 400x400 files weighting around 1 megabyte. in memory of 1x1 centimetre squares i did in school#its more of a coincidence actually lol i always drew small
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the weight of family and the pull of gravity
#those are song lyrics listen im running out of dramatic one liners to use as captions HGFJKD#i like the DRAMA!! the DEVASTATION!!!! if it doesnt feel fitting to the emotional weight i feel then i will DISINTEGRATE ON THE SPOT#the pic looks more saturated as i post it than it does in photoshop so hmmmgh not sure how the balance will be? c'est la vie it's j for me#u can rip those fuckign birds from my cold dead hands. i wont give them up. sleepie made fun of me for my bird motifs BUT I LIKE THEM#I NEEDED THEM FOR THE COMP IT GGRGAGAHAHHH#twst#twisted wonderland#twst silver#silver vanrouge#twst spoilers#ch 7 spoilers#oh yea i wanna make an animatic to that song once ch7 is done. maybe.. i fucking HATE making animatics but its SOOOOO SILVER#blame lettie its her fault#suntails
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This ghost townâs making a ghost of me
#outer wilds#outer wilds spoilers#pigin is artistic#the crane wives#song is here I am by the crane wives#ngl Iâm not the biggest fan of this#it was mostly an excuse to animate exaggerated expressions#which was very fun! totally worth it actually#they deserve to let out the inner suffering of carrying the weight of the universe on their back#just for once#outer wilds fanart#I Gave The Critter Anguish#the feeling of being left behind by both those who came before you and everything that will come after
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Digital doodles.jpg
yeah, sure, why not. Getting better with my digital style
I'm lazy to order them, what the hell
The last one is heavily inspired by Alien Stage -Ruler of my heart. Man, I freaking love this song.
#total drama#td noah#td alejandro#td leshawna#td heather#alternate universe#role swap au#genderswap#td duncan#td alenoah#The duncan/noah was heavily inspired by World Weary#I can imagine Alejandro fuming lmao#Also the I'm gonna make it song I was gonna make Noah try to be the male lead#but he is not able to hold Alejandro's weight so it would be hilarious#Also drawing Leshawna and Noah make's me so sad#they are almost wholesome
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Isn't this what you wantĐľd? Time sure feels like it's running out Just finish what you startĐľd Queen of nothing Wearing such a heavy crown
PLEASE listen to Queen of Nothing by The Crane Wives !
#holly art#warrior cats#warrior cats fanart#squirrelflight#squirrelstar#!!#bramblestar#brambleclaw#if i were a more disciplined and creative artist i would make the squilfstar animatic in my head to this song real but alas....#just endlessly OTL thinking about her meeting starclan for the second time this time for her leader ceremony & it feeling incredibly bitter#even though its also a personal triumph for her. she's getting older. she felt like her time was running out. she wanted to be the greatest#leader of thunderclan when she was a kit but it means something else now#yes her crown looks more like a tiara. i promise the symbolic? metaphoric? weight of it is still very much heavy#ms paint art
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dan saying every song on the preshow playlist is thematically relevant to the show âšď¸âšď¸âšď¸
#i could write an essay on this#i just float?? feeling like a weight is lifted off their shoulders#i will love you so until the world explodes??#youâd have to stop the world just to stop the feeling??#i donât wanna break it just want it to bend??#and thereâs so much more#in this essay i will#dnptit#tit spoilers#kinda?? not really tho#titpreshowplaylist#dnptitpreshow#(just to clarify i have not seen the show yet)#but these songs are extremely d&p new era coded#and it makes me emotional#dnp#dan and phil#daniel howell#phil lester#amazingphil#the terrible influence tour#tit tour#dip and pip#phan
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List of queer books I read, loved & recommend!
(There isn't any particular order, I wrote these as I remembered them)
Master Of One - Jaida Jones & Dani Bennett (mlm, fantasy, very cool worldbuilding and magic system, funny, cool characters)
Legends & Lattes - Travis Baldree (wlw, fantasy, very soft & chill vibes)
The Priory of the Orange Tree - Samantha Shannon (wlw, high fantasy, cool worldbuilding, kinda reminds me of LOTR but with more dragons and feminism and lesbians)
Even Though I Knew The End - C.L. Polk (wlw, supernatural noir, cool 1930s detective story with angels & demons, I loved this one!)
The Love Interest - Cale Dietrich (mlm, science fiction, very cool concept)
The Darkest Part Of The Forest - Holly Black (side mlm, fantasy, cool fae lore)
The Weight Of The Stars - K. Ancrum (wlw, not quite science fiction but space stuff is involved, lovely and complex characters)
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe - Benjamin Alire SĂĄenz (mlm, fiction, very nice in general, there is also a sequel)
The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue - Mackenzi Lee (mlm, historical and vaguely fantasy, nice story but I preferred the sequel honestly)
The Lady's Guide to Petticoats and Piracy - Mackenzi Lee (wlw, the sequel to the one before, more fantasy elements than the first, asexual main character!!)
Gallant - V.E. Schwab (no romance, but in the background one of the characters(?) uses they/them pronouns, very cool dark fantasy vibe)
Stranger Than Fanfiction - Chris Colfer (gay main character, trans main character, coming-of-age, nice book)
Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda (yes it's the Love, Simon book, mlm, fiction, pretty nice)
They Both Die At The End - Adam Silvera (mlm, sci-fi ish but mostly fiction, cool ideas, but the ending is sad! Very amazing book though, I haven't read the prequel yet)
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo - Taylor Jenkins Reid (wlw, bi main character, historical fiction, cool story, just a neat book in general)
This Is How You Lose The Time War - Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone (wlw, sci-fi, very cool time travel stuff!! and very beautiful, it felt like reading poetry most of the time)
One Last Stop - Casey McQuinston (wlw, background trans & pan & queer characters, sci-fi or fantasy idk, but time travel, I loooved this book, great)
The House In The Cerulean Sea - TJ Klune (mlm, fantasy, THIS BOOK oh my gosh you should read it!!, just cute and lovely and good)
Under The Whispering Door - TJ Klune (mlm, fantasy, this book is also sooo amazing, great character development and awesome relationships and stuff, it's been a while since I read it but it was so good)
In the Lives of Puppets - TJ Klune (mlm, ace main character!!, sci-fi, now THIS is found family, oughh feelings. argh, tj klune youâve done it again, a human and his family of funky robots⌠I love them)
And They Lived... - Steven Salvatore (nblm, fiction, about gender identity and learning to love yourself, read it a while ago but it was very nice)
I Wish You All The Best - Mason Deaver (nblm, fiction, about finding your identity and people who care about you, very cute and sweet)
The Song Of Achilles - Madeleine Miller (mlm, historical, very good in general)
Carry On - Rainbow Rowell (mlm, background wlw in the third book, fantasy, it's a trilogy, basically Harry Potter if it was gay and also better)
Silver In The Wood - Emily Tesh (mlm, fantasy, very pretty, lots of fae stuff and lovely descriptions, it has a really good sequel too)
Pretty much anything by Alice Oseman (all cute and lovely and great, though I've only read Radio Silence so far I hear only good things, Solitaire is on my to-read list)
I Kissed Shara Wheeler - Casey McQuinston (wlw, fiction, it's been a while but I liked this book)
The Falling In Love Montage - Ciara Smyth (wlw, fiction, this book was so cute and funny and deeply emotional it made me Feel way too many things, I'd definitely recommend it)
What Big Teeth - Rose Szabo (a bit of queerness all around, fantasy, werewolves and monsters, this one was pretty cool!, lots of original ideas for the world/character building)
His Quiet Agent - Ada Maria Soto (mlm, asexual, fiction, about like spies but this book was so gentle and sweet I wanted to cry in the best way possible)
Some By Virtue Fall - Alexandra Rowland (wlw, historical fiction(?), theatre drama!! rival romance!! duels!!, a very good read in general)
Donât Want You Like a Best Friend - Emma R. Alban (wlw, historical fiction, Iâm not usually one for regency romances, but I really liked this!!, very cute and lots of drama, and thereâs a sequel coming out soon!)
#any recommendations are appreciated!#honestly I might've forgotten some#lgbtqia#book recs#master of one#legends & lattes#the priory of the orange tree#even though i knew the end#the love interest#the darkest part of the forest#the weight of the stars#aristotle and dante#the gentleman's guide to vice and virtue#the lady's guide to petticoats and piracy#gallant#stranger than fanfiction#simon vs the homosapiens agenda#they both die at the end#the seven husbands of evelyn hugo#this is how you lose the time war#one last stop#and they lived...#i wish you all the best#the song of achilles#carry on#radio silence#alice oseman#the house in the cerulean sea#under the whispering door#silver in the wood
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flick a pube if you think i should keep making these
#the beatles#ringo starr#video#volume warning#Song: âHibikaseâ by Reol#i will fix his weight painting and bones later.
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the young wolf sketches
#eldest daughter syndrome how I adore you#holding the weight of the world on your shoulders bc that is your dutyâŚ#only a 10th grader#robb stark#jon snow#joffrey baratheon#theon greyjoy#asoiaf#my art#extra tags:#fanart#artists on tumblr#art#digital art#a song of ice and fire#valyrianscrolls#house stark#house greyjoy#house baratheon#house lannister
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Clone^2 Damian
If you really think about, Damian's situation in the clone^2 au is... kinda tragic? Especially in the early months of his arrival. Like,,, think about it. Damian has always known he was a clone of Damian Wayne, that he was a copy of the blood son. There was nothing 'original' about him, not even his name (of which at least Danny has that). He was just... a replacement. A disposable one, to boot.
And he knew that, to an extent, by the time he was six years old. he might not have been actively acknowledging it -- he's six years old -- but deep down he knew. And like, he's six years old. Every small child craves the love and affection of an adult, especially their parents, and even though he knew he was clone, I imagine he still considered - and still does consider, somewhat - Talia and Bruce as his mother and father. And I really doubt he was... getting it?
Now, I know Talia loves Damian, her son. At least in some interpretations she does, and in this au she does. But... a clone of her son? I'm not so certain if she would have the same affection for baby Dames as she would for Damian. I don't think she would treat him badly, but I don't think Talia would treat him warmly either. Kinda just, distant. Colder than she would have been with OG Damian.
And, I know I've mentioned Damian's arrival from Danny's point of view, and its kind of comical kind of insane from his perspective -- a little boy clone of Damian Wayne falls through a portal and immediately attacks him. That sounds like a bad joke.
But, if you think of this from Damian's point of view? It's like he just got dropped into a scary movie. Like, think about it. You're six years old, and suddenly a portal, as green and as swirling as your grandfather's pools, opens up beneath your feet and sucks you through.
After an intense bout of vertigo, you end up in a massive, urban city -- completely different from the rural mountain palace that you lived in for the last six years of your life, and in this city, you don't know any of the language. You don't know what anyone is saying, you can't read any of the signs - you are completely stranded, away from home.
And then, to make things worse, you're facing a figure with a terrifying mask and eyes as burning green as the portal you fell through. Of course Damian's first instinct, six years old, is to attack. He's terrified.
And this figure, he's not a good fighter, but he's fast, and he dodges you quickly. He grabs your sword with his hands, and tries to restrain you, saying something in a language you don't know. Naturally, Damian is just scared. He's six! He'd just be learning how to read if he was normal child going to school.
This figure halfway through the fight yanks off his mask -- he realizes you're scared -- and looking at you now, is a youthful version of your father. This is a clone of your dad, someone you have never met but, six years old, still wants to. Damian gets defensive. This is an imposter.
But this imposter eventually gets you home with him - and he's using his little box, his phone, to communicate with you through a mechanical voice speaking in arabic. and it's frustrating. The boy, the imposter, can say whatever to you just fine, but trying to talk back is a hassle and a half. He's six, he doesn't have that much patience.
He wants to go home.
And so he keeps trying to run away. He keeps trying to find out of this hellish concrete jungle, and he keeps getting lost. It's loud, and busy, and there are people talking to you and you don't understand them, and there are rules and signs you don't understand - Damian tries to cross the street and nearly gets hit by a car. He doesn't know how the road signs work, he was never taught. They didn't get to that.
And he gets lost. And it gets dark, and Damian is brave, but he is six, and this is the worst stress he's been under in all his six years of life. He wants, desperately more than anything, to go home. Why wouldn't he? The only stable... semi-stable environment he was in just got ripped out from under his feet, literally! He wants his mother.
And it's not happening.
But there's something good to be said, at least. The imposter that looks like his father always comes and finds him, no matter what. He could have left that morning, and he will find Damian at midnight, frazzled and worried, and carrying an extra jacket with him because it is cold in Amity Park and Damian is six years old.
And sometimes Damian attacks him - he's scared and stressed and he doesn't want to be here. And every time he catches the sword. Even though Damian can see it cut into his hand and pearls of blood well up and stains his fingers. Even though Damian can see him wince in pain and bite his lip, he still catches it.
But with that little box, he coaxes Damian to come back with him. It's cold, it's dark, Amity Park is unsafe at night. They can figure something out tomorrow, please. And every time, he agrees, reluctantly. And the imposter takes the extra jacket he brought with -- a flannel, a hoodie, a jacket -- and he wraps it around him. It's warm, Damian's clothes are not that thick, and even though he thinks he might hate this imposter, he still sticks close to his legs as he leads him down the street.
And sometimes the imposter carries him, because Damian's shoes are not that thick, and he cuts his foot on broken glass while they're walking home. The imposter sits in the bathroom with him and carefully cleans the cut out, and makes sure it doesn't get infected.
There's hope you know, he still has it. His mother will be looking for him. She'll be worried. He's important to them. Damian may not be the original, but he is still a blood son. He is still her son. She will come find him. This nightmare will end soon. He can go home.
And then weeks pass, and nothing. Then months, and nothing. His family is not coming for him, and it hurts. Hurts more than anything. And yet while that happens, the boy he's attacked, and hurt, teaches himself arabic in order to speak to him. He takes Damian out of the house one afternoon and buys him new clothes, or tries to. And then he keeps buying him new clothes. He gives him blankets and gives up his bed to him until they can get him one himself, and steadily he teaches Damian english.
This boy is kind. Kinder than Damian's ever experienced, and he doesn't know what to do with it. He's devastated by the fact that he is not as important to his family as his family is to him. What do you do when you're six years old and you learn something like that? When a random stranger who looks like your father is kinder to you, and cares more about you than your family did?
And then Damian tells him he's a clone. He's Damian Wayne's clone, and he tells him his purpose - that their grandfather made him to kill him. And the boy, the imposter, Damian thinks he probably already knows that he's a clone. But he doesn't say that. He just nods, and asks him if he wants to tell his original about him.
Damian says no. He doesn't want to. He's tired of living in the shadow of his original. He wants to keep this to himself. This is his. For once, all of this is his.
And to his surprise, the imposter doesn't try and convince him otherwise. He just nods, and says okay. And when Damian asks why, the imposter - his brother - looks at him and says.
"I don't care about Damian Wayne. I care about you." And in Damian's gobsmacked silence, his brother continues. He tells him that if Damian doesn't want to tell his original that he exists, then they don't need to. They don't need to worry about the LoA going after him, because clearly if his 'grandfather' needs to make a clone of Damian in order to take him out, then whatever it was that Damian Wayne was doing to keep himself safe, was working.
"Wayne already has people in his corner, he's got Gotham's army of vigilantes to keep himself safe." his brother says with his eyes as blue as moonlight. "You, however. Do not." And he continues, and says that if Damian Wayne has the same training as Damian does, then he will be fine. He doesn't need to be aware of his clone. Because if DW doesn't know about Damian, then the LoA doesn't either.
And here's the thing. Damian would not have survived in the LoA for long. Not as a clone. No matter what, he was going to die no matter what he did, and sooner rather than later. The sword of Damocles was always hanging above his head in the League of Assassins.
That portal, and meeting Danny, saved his life. There's no way around it. And to an extent Damian knows this even at six years old. He may not be aware that he would've died, but he knows that meeting Danny was the best thing to happen to him.
It's no wonder after that, that Damian is as clingy to Danny as he is. Danny is the first person he's met to offer him unconditional love, with no strings attached, only pure affection.
#dpxdc#dp x dc#dp x dc crossover#dpdc#dpxdc crossover#clone^2#like god can you imagine how scared he must've been? how afraid? he just wants his mom - only to realize he doesnt even matter to her#dpxdc au#danny fenton is not the ghost king#this poor kid man. no wonder he latched onto danny the moment he gave up on the league like a leech. he's a six year old kid man and#it doesnt matter how smart he is or how mature he acts. he still is six years old. he still needs that validation and affection from adults#or from people older than him. and his emotional needs were just not being met in the league.#cue the song âtwoâ from sleeping at last - some of their songs are very clone^2 honestly.#'sweetheart you look a little tired. when did you last eat? come in and make yourself right at home. stay as long as you need.'#'tell me is something wrong? if something's wrong you can count on me'#'its okay if you can't find the words. let me take your coat and this weight off of your shoulders'#'like a force to be reckoned with. am i the ocean or a gentle kiss. i will love you with every single thing i have'#'like a tidal wave i'll make a mess. or calm waters if that serves you best'#'i will love you without any strings attached'#like just. just *imagine* being in damian's shoes during all of this. he's *six* you guys. i've worked with six year olds and they're#pretty independent but they're still six. they get excited when they see their parents and they get upset when an adult is angry with them.#they're still developing their motor skills. they're still developing everything else!
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Paul about the breakup of The Beatles in The Lyrics, 2021
The four of us just knew how to fall in with each other and play, and that was our real strength. That made it all the more sorrowful to think that our breaking up was almost inevitable. So thereâs a wistful aspect to âGet Backâ. The idea that you should get back to your roots, that The Beatles should get back to how we were in Liverpool. And the roots are embodied in the style of the song, which is straight-up rock and roll. Because that was definitely what I thought we should do when we broke up â that we should âget back to where we once belongedâ and become a little band again. We should just play and do the occasional little gig. The others laughed at that â quite understandably â because by then it was not really a practical solution. John had just met Yoko, and he clearly needed to escape to a new place, whereas I was saying we should escape to an old place. Reviving the old Beatles just wasnât on the cards. It was too late to be recommending that we not forget who we were and where we once were from. If my dream at the time really was to get back to where we once belonged, Johnâs dream was to go beyond where we once belonged, to go somewhere we didnât yet belong. Iâve already mentioned how in September 1969 we were in a meeting and talking about future plans, and John said, âWell, Iâm not doing it. Iâm leaving. Bye.â In the ensuing moments, he was giggling and saying how this felt really thrilling, like telling someone youâre going to divorce them and then laughing. At the time, obviously, that was wildly hurtful. Talk about a knockout blow. Youâre lying on the canvas, and heâs giggling and telling you how good it feels to have just knocked you out. It took a while, but I suppose I eventually got with the programme. This was my best mate from my youth, the collaborator with whom Iâd done some of the best work of the twentieth century (he said, modestly). If he fell in love with this woman, what did that have to do with me? Not only did I have to let him do it, but I had to admire him for doing it. That was the position I eventually reached. There was nothing else I could do but be cool with it.
(Paul McCartney about Get Back (1969), The Lyrics, 2021)
That was coupled with the business problems at Apple Records, which really were horrible. The business meetings were just soul-destroying. Weâd sit around in an office, and it was a place you just didnât want to be, with people you didnât want to be with. Thereâs a great picture that Linda took of Allen Klein, in which heâs got a hammer like Maxwellâs silver hammer. Itâs very symbolic. And thatâs why we have the little nod and a wink in the middle section to âYou Never Give Me Your Moneyâ, in the lines âI never give you my pillow / I only send you my invitationsâ. That whole period weighed on me to such an extent that I even began to think it was all tied in with the idea of original sin. Even though my mum had christened me as a Catholic, we werenât brought up Catholic, so I didnât buy into the concept of original sin on a day-to-day basis. Itâs really very depressing to think that you were born a loser.
(Paul McCartney about Carry That Weight (1969), The Lyrics, 2021)
The Beatles stuff all got too heavy, and 'heavy' at that time had a very particular meaning for me. It meant more than oppressive. It meant having to go into meetings and sit in the boardroom with all the other Beatles and with the accountants and with this guy Allen Klein. He was a New York spiv who had come over to London and talked to The Rolling Stones and persuaded them he was the man for them. Prior to that, he had persuaded Sam Cooke he was the man for him. I smelled a rat but the other chaps didnât, so we had a fight over it and I got voted down. I was trying to be Mr Rational and Mr Sensible, and it all went haywire. It was early 1969, and The Beatles were already beginning to break up. John had said he was leaving, and Allen Klein told us not to tell anyone, as he was in the middle of doing deals with Capitol Records. So, for a few months we had to keep mum. We were living a lie, knowing that John had left the group. Allen Klein and Dick James, who sold our publishing in Northern Songs without giving us a chance to buy the company, were both hanging around in the background of this song. All the people who had screwed us or were still trying to screw us. Itâs fascinating how directly we acknowledged this in the song. Weâd cottoned on to them, and they must have cottoned on to the fact that weâd cottoned on. We couldnât have been more direct about it. ...
Contracts were written on funny paper. Lying behind the song is the idea of the contract as a relationship between two people. The negotiations are at once business negotiations and romantic negotiations; Iâm thinking of the lines âAnd in the middle of negotiations / You break downâ. The breakdown in negotiations is also a kind of nervous breakdown. The problem was that, by this stage, everything was up for negotiation, and miscommunication was the order of the day. We werenât really writing together anymore. Each person was bringing in little bits of this and little bits of that. And we all knew that phase of our lives, of being The Beatles, was coming to an end. We were working towards an album, knowing it was probably going to be our final fling. Though Let It Be was released later, Abbey Road was indeed the last album we recorded in the studio. There was an upside, however. Iâd got married to Linda, and our relationship offered some respite from the dreary infighting and the financial stuff. The lines âOne sweet dream / Pick up the bags and get in the limousineâ were a reference to how Linda and I were still able to disappear for a weekend in the country. That saved me.
(Paul McCartney about You Never Give Me Your Money (1969), The Lyrics, 2021)
This was just after The Beatles broke up, and I was trying to establish myself as a solo artist with a new repertoire. If it was going to work like the Beatles repertoire had worked, I had to have a hit. One in two songs had to be a hit. So, this was a conscious effort to write a hit, and Phil was very helpful. We knew that if we had a hit, it would cement our relationship and we would keep working together, which we did with the RAM album. It would prove that we were both good â he as a producer and I as a singer songwriter. Releasing my first solo song after the breakup felt like a big moment. Thrilling, though tinged with sadness. It also felt like I had something to prove, and that kind of challenge is always exciting. The song went to number two in the UK singles chart and number five in the US Billboard Hot 100, so it did pretty well. Of course, this was still a time when there was a bit of tension between John and me, and this sometimes filtered into our songwriting. John made fun of this song in one of his own, âHow Do You Sleep?âThe only thing you done was yesterday And since youâve gone youâre just another day One of his little piss takes.
(Paul McCartney about Another Day (1969/1971), The Lyrics, 2021)
This song was written a year or so after The Beatles breakup, at a time when John was firing missiles at me with his songs, and one or two of them were quite cruel. I donât know what he hoped to gain, other than punching me in the face. The whole thing really annoyed me. I decided to turn my missiles on him too, but Iâm not really that kind of a writer, so it was quite veiled. It was the 1970s equivalent of what we might today call a âdiss trackâ. Songs like this, where youâre calling someone out on their behaviour, are quite commonplace now, but back then it was a fairly new âgenreâ. The idea of too many people âpreaching practicesâ was definitely aimed at John telling everyone what they ought to do â telling me, for instance, that I ought to go into business with Allen Klein. I just got fed up with being told what to do, so I wrote this song. âYou took your lucky break and broke it in twoâ was me saying basically, âYouâve made this break, so good luck with it.â But it was pretty mild. I didnât really come out with any savagery, and itâs actually a fairly upbeat song; it doesnât really sound that vitriolic. If you didnât know the story, I donât know that youâd be able to guess at the anger behind its writing. It was all a bit weird and a bit nasty, and I was basically saying, âLetâs be sensible. We had a lot going for us in The Beatles, and what actually split us up is the business stuff, and thatâs pretty pathetic really, so letâs try and be peaceful. Letâs maybe give peace a chance.â The first verse and the chorus have pretty much all the anger I could muster, and when I did the vocal on the second line, âToo many reaching for a piece of cakeâ, I remember singing it as âPiss off cakeâ, which you can hear if you really listen to it. Again, I was getting back at John, but my heart wasnât really in it. This is me saying, âToo many people are sharing the party line. Too many people are grabbing for a slice of the cake, a piece of the pie.â The âsleep in lateâ thing â whether that was accurate, whether John and Yoko actually slept in late or not, Iâm not sure (although John often was a late riser when I would drive out to Weybridge so that we could write together). They were all references to people thinking that their own truth was the only truth, which was certainly what was coming from John. The thing is, so much of what they held to be truth was crap. War is over? Well no, it isnât. But I get what youâre saying: war is over if you want it to be. So, if enough people want war to be over, itâll be over. Iâm not sure thatâs entirely true, but itâs a great sentiment; itâs a nice thing to think and to say.
Iâd been able to accept Yoko in the studio, sitting on a blanket in front of my amp. Iâd worked hard to come to terms with that. But then when we broke up and everyone was now flailing around, John turned nasty. I donât really understand why. Maybe because we grew up in Liverpool, where it was always good to get in the first punch of a fight. The whole story in a nutshell is that we were having a meeting in 1969, and John showed up and said heâd met this guy Allen Klein, who had promised Yoko an exhibition in Syracuse, and then matter-of-factly John told us he was leaving the band. Thatâs basically how it happened. It was three to one because the other two went with John, so it was looking like Allen Klein was going to own our entire Beatles empire. I was not too keen on that idea. John actually had Allen Klein and Yoko in the room, suggesting lyrics during writing sessions. In his song âHow Do You Sleep?â the line âThe only thing you done was yesterdayâ was apparently Allen Kleinâs suggestion, and John said, âHey, great. Put that in.â I can see the laughs they had doing it, and I had to work very hard not to take it too seriously, but at the back of my mind I was thinking, âWait a minute, All I ever did was âYesterdayâ? I suppose thatâs a funny pun, but all I ever did was âYesterdayâ, âLet It Beâ, âThe Long and Winding Roadâ, âEleanor Rigbyâ, âLady Madonnaâ, . . . â fuck you, John.â I had to fight them for my bit of The Beatles and, in fact, for their bit of The Beatles, which many years later they realised and almost thanked me for. Nowadays people get it, but at the time I think the others felt they were the ones who were victims, who were being hurt by my actions. Allen Klein already had a history with The Rolling Stones. I just thought, âOy oy oy, no, this guyâs got such a bad reputation.â And good old John says, âOh, if heâs that badly talked about, he canât be all bad.â John had this kind of distorted thinking, which was amusing sometimes. But not when someone was going to take everything that John and George and Ringo and I owned and had worked really hard to get.
So, I stood up as the sensible one and said, âThis is not good.â Klein wanted twenty per cent, and I said, âTell him he can have ten, if you have to go with him.â âOh no, no, no,â they came back. âNo, he wants twenty.â It seemed to me they were just fucking out of it and making no attempt to do anything sensible. A lot of hurt went down during that period in the early 1970s â them feeling hurt, me feeling hurt â but John being John, he was the one who would write a hurtful song. That was his bag.
(Paul McCartney about Too Many People (1971), The Lyrics, 2021)
Towards the end of 1969, John had quite gleefully told us it was over. There were a few of us in the Apple boardroom at the time. I think George was away visiting family, but Ringo and I were at the meeting, and John was saying no to every suggestion. I thought we should go back to playing smaller gigs again, but the answer came back: âNoâ. Eventually John said, âOh, Iâve been wanting to tell you this, but Iâm leaving The Beatles.â We were all shocked. Relations had been strained, but we sat there saying, âWhat? Why? Why? Why?â It was like a divorce, and he had just had a divorce from Cynthia the year before. I can remember him saying, âOh, this is quite exciting.â That was very John, and I had admired this kind of contrarian behaviour about him since we were kids, when I first met him.
He really was a bit loony, in the nicest possible way. But whilst all of us could see what he meant, it was not quite so exciting for those left on the other side.
(Paul McCartney about Dear Friend (1971), The Lyrics, 2021)
This is one of my favourite songs. It's a ballad with a brass section, but itâs always felt Victorian in style to me. Itâs very heartfelt. âA love so warm and beautiful / Stands when time itself is fallingâ. I like that idea, instead of just saying, âIt will go on forever.â I got a good feeling writing this song, and listening to it now, I still do. âLove, faith and hope are beautifulâ. The brass solo is lovely for me because it harks back to the brass bands that were so common when I was a kid; there would often be brass bands in the park or in the streets. My dad played trumpet, as I never fail to mention, and he had his own little band â Jim Macâs Jazz Band. The first instrument he bought me was a trumpet, and he taught me the scale of C which, when you go on the piano, becomes B-flat. Itâs all very complicated. Thatâs why we didnât even bother learning music. I realised that I wanted to swap the trumpet for a guitar, so I asked his permission, and he said, âYes, okay.â âWarm and Beautifulâ was written well after the demise of The Beatles, and at this time we knew sadness. I knew about delving into your mind to look for help and looking for some sort of solace in a song. I liked the idea of writing a song in a universal way that dispels the sadness. You write about the wonderful things you know in the world, and you try to write so that it will sing well and be well received by people dealing with grief something that inevitably surrounds all of us at one time or another. On a more personal level, the main inspiration for the song was LindaâŚ
(Paul McCartney about Warm and Beautiful (1976), The Lyrics, 2021)
After The Beatles thing became so depressing, Linda and I decided weâd get out of London and start living full-time on our small holding in Scotland. It was quite a difficult period because of the bandâs breakup but it allowed me to see another side of myself. First and foremost, we did everything for ourselves, and at this point it was Linda, Heather, Mary â who was still a baby â and me. If we needed something to eat, weâd go into town in the little Land Rover, come back up, and cook it. We didnât have anyone helping us, except for one guy, the shepherd, because it was a little sheep farm. It was an experience that allowed me to be a man. <âŚ> Iâd grown up in Liverpool and gone on the road with The Beatles around the world and then around again, and now here I was on a farm in the middle of nowhere, and it was sensational. <âŚ> This was the kind of thing Iâd never done, ever, in my life, and it was amazingly liberating. I got to do all the things I think a lot of young people still dream about today â the famous âgap yearâ. I sense a lot of people want that freedom, escaping the rat raceâŚ
(Paul McCartney about When Winter Comes (1992), The Lyrics, 2021)
After the breakup of The Beatles, I wouldoften just sit around a lot. Sometimes I sat in the kitchen while the kids were playing. Maybe they were drawing. Maybe they were doing bits and pieces of homework. In this case, I came across the chords and I just felt optimistic, and I liked the idea of a song saying that help is coming and thereâs a bright light on the horizon. Iâve got absolutely no evidence for this, but I like to believe it. It helps to lift my spirits, to move me forward, and hopefully it might help other people move forward too.
(Paul McCartney about Great Day (1972/1997), The Lyrics, 2021)
Wings, which we began in 1971, was in many ways an experiment to see whether there was life after The Beatles, to see whether that success could be followed. It was the result of asking myself, âAm I going to stop now?â The Beatles were so wonderful and all-encompassing, so successful. Now, should I stop and look for something else to do? But I thought, âNo. I like music too much, so whatever the something else is, it will be music.â <âŚ> But it wouldnât be The Wings, like The Beatles. Just Wings. My problem after The Beatles was, whoâs going to be as good as them? I thought, âWe canât be as good as The Beatles, but we can be something else.â I knew that if I were to go ahead with this project Iâd have to tough it out, but I had reserves of courage from being part of The Beatles when pennies were thrown at us at the village hall in Stroud, when we were still starting out. <âŚ> Starting off a new band is always a lot of fun, but itâs a lot of hard work too; you have to establish yourself. Following The Beatles was one of the most difficult things for me, just trying to live up to those expectations. It was even more difficult for her [Linda]. I started to write songs for Wings from 1971 onwards, when we got started, and I tried to keep them away from The Beatlesâ style. There were avenues I could go down that I wouldnât have gone down with The Beatles, like bringing in the influence of reggae, which Linda and I got into in Jamaica. I fancied doing something crazy, and Wings allowed me a little bit more freedom. So, this is a love song in which Cupidâs arrow is referenced, but itâs a malevolent arrow. Itâs possible Iâd seen an illustration of Cupid and thought, âCupid fires a bow, but Iâll switch it. It wonât be love; it will be the opposite.â The character in the song has been wounded. Heâs been cheated on. And it couldâve been a great relationship, couldâve been fantastic. As things stand, you couldnât âhave found a more down heroâ, because there was nobody more down than me at that moment. So, get it together and bring your love. I have always had a soft spot for this song. Thereâs a nice horn riff in it, and itâs funky. Sometimes you write to get a sort of feeling rather than a perfectly âcorrectâ lyric. Sometimes the lyric can be secondary to the feeling. This one has as much, or more, to do with the feel of the song, the groove.
(Paul McCartney about Arrow Through Me (1979), The Lyrics, 2021)
John described âComing Upâ somewhere as âa good piece of workâ. Heâd been lying around not doing much, and it sort of shocked him out of inertia. So it was nice to hear that it had struck a chord with him. At first, after the breakup of The Beatles, we had no contact, but there were various things we needed to talk about. Our relationship was a bit fraught sometimes because we were discussing business, and we would sometimes insult each other on the phone. But gradually we got past that, and if I was in New York I would ring up and say, âDo you fancy a cup of tea?â
(Paul McCartney about Coming Up (1979), The Lyrics, 2021)
Itâs very possible that Iâd been feeling down in London. I was back in the solace of family and Liverpool, and what with the Beatles troubles down south, I was likely thinking, âWouldnât it be nice to get home and have that comfortable feeling again?â So, there may have been some of that in the background. I wouldnât rule it out. When I wrote the song, I hadnât been back home to Liverpool for a long time. But now I was at my dadâs house, which wasnât quite home because it was a house Iâd bought him when I got some money â a five-bedroomed mock Tudor place in Heswall near the River Dee. But it was still Liverpool, and it was âhomewardâ. So I added, âOnce there was a way to get back homeward / Once there was a way to get back homeâ. The song turned out to be quite soulful, and I think thatâs what attracted me to those lyrics in the first place â that notion of consoling a baby or reading kids a bedtime story. âSleep, pretty darling, do not cry / And I will sing a lullabyâ. Those are lines â or something with a similar sentiment â that most parents probably say to their children to soothe them when theyâre growing up.
(Paul McCartney about Golden Slumbers (1969), The Lyrics, 2021)
It became a refuge of sorts, and it was nice to get away from London and everything â both the good and bad â that comes with the city. I would drive a Massey Ferguson 315 tractor and mow the hay, and I loved that because Iâd been a nature fiend as a kid, and this freedom just gave me time to think â âDown to Junior's Farm where I want to lay lowâ. It was such a relief to get out of those business meetings with people in suits, who were so serious all the time, and to go off to Scotland and be able just to sit around in a T-shirt and corduroys. I was very much in that mindset when I wrote this song. The basic message is, letâs get out of here. You might say itâs my post-Beatles getting-out-of-town song.
(Paul McCartney about Junior's Farm (1974), The Lyrics, 2021)
The context in which the song was written was one of stress. It was a difficult time because we were heading towards the breakup of The Beatles. It was a period of change partly because John and Yoko had got together, and that had an effect on the dynamics of the group. Yoko was literally in the middle of the recording session, and that was challenging. But it was also something we had to deal with. Unless there was a really serious problem â unless one of us said, âI canât sing with her thereâ â we just had to let it be. We werenât very confrontational, so we just bottled it up and got on with it. We were northern lads, and that was part of our culture. Grin and bear it. One interesting thing about âLet It Beâ that I was reminded of only recently is that, while I was studying English literature at the Liverpool Institute High School for Boys with my favourite teacher, Alan Durband, I read Hamlet. In those days you had to learn speeches by heart because you had to be able to carry them into the exam and quote them. There are a couple of lines from late in the play: O, I could tell you But let it be. â Horatio, I am dead I suspect those lines had subconsciously planted themselves in my memory. When I was writing âLet It Beâ, Iâd been doing too much of everything, was run ragged, and this was all taking its toll. The band, me we were all going through times of trouble, as the song goes, and there didnât seem to be any way out of the mess. <âŚ> Around the time we recorded âLet It Beâ, Iâd been pushing the band to go back out and play some club dates â to get back to basics and just bond again as a band, end the decade like weâd begun it, just playing for the love of it. We didnât get to do that as The Beatles, but that idea did inform the direction of the Let It Be album. We didnât want any studio trickery. It was supposed to be an honest, no-overdubbing album. It didnât exactly end up that way, but that had been the plan.
(Paul McCartney about Let It Be (1969), The Lyrics, 2021)
This song is also an analogy for when something goes wrong out of the blue, as I was beginning to find happening around this time in our business dealings. Recording sessions were always good because no matter what our personal troubles were, no matter what was happening on the business front, the minute we sat down to make a song we were in good shape. Right until the end there was always a great joy in working together in the studio. So there we were, recording a song like âMaxwellâs Silver Hammerâ and knowing we would never have the opportunity to perform it. That possibility was over. It had been knocked on the head like one of Maxwellâs victims. Bang bang.
(Paul McCartney about Maxwell's Silver Hammer (1969), The Lyrics, 2021)
In much the way that Linda wanted to flee from New York societyâ the constrictions of Park Avenue and Scarsdale â I wanted to flee from what The Beatles had become. I was hoping to escape, she was hoping to escape. So we had this feeling that we had each pulled the other âout of timeâ. Though the song was written immediately after The Beatlesâ breakup, it was somehow included under the Lennon-McCartney rubric, where it doesnât belong. It was one of my first solo songs, but because of the deal, it got caught in the publishing net. That was very annoying. <âŚ> âŚthe central idea being that thereâs so often a split between the inner and outer. <âŚ> The elements of fear and loneliness are very much to the fore. âMaybe Iâm afraid of the way I love youâ is itself a troubling idea. While itâs true that Linda is the person Iâm addressing, itâs also true that Iâm dealing in fiction. Starting with myself, the characters who appear in my songs are imagined. <âŚ> In any event, this song isnât the conventional way of presenting a relationship, or of some of the contradictions that can arise from being in love. <âŚ> It shows the fragility of love.
(Paul McCartney about Maybe Iâm Amazed (1970), The Lyrics, 2021)
John went to the exhibition, and I think that was when he and Yoko met, towards the end of 1966. He climbed up a ladder to see what sheâd written on the ceiling, and got close enough to it to read it, and it said, âYes.â So he thought, âThatâs a sign; this is it,â and they fell madly in love. Once they were an item, there was the whole Beatles recording thing, where she would be there too. I think this started at the beginning of the âWhite Albumâ sessions â so, around the end of spring in 1968. And at first we all â all of us except John â found it pretty intrusive, but we went along with it and worked around her. And eventually I came to the realisation that, look, if John loves her, weâve just got to let it be, and weâve got to support this relationship. That was basically my feeling. Then, a year or two later, The Beatles broke up, and it was a bad period, a real low point, where everyone was taking potshots at everyone. And I felt that John and Yoko were particularly good in the potshot department, saying things in interviews, or comments that would make their way to you. They would say not always very pleasant things, and looking back on it, I sort of think, âWhy? Youâre annoyed, so say something unpleasant?â Over time, the situation eased off and my relationship with John got better, and I used to see him in New York or speak to him on the phone.
(Paul McCartney about Golden Earth Girl (1993), The Lyrics, 2021)
Iâm not sure I thought of it at the time, even though this was well after The Beatles disbanded, but I canât help connecting the oppressiveness associated with that phrase to the oppressiveness that coincided with the end of The Beatles. Not that The Beatles are over exactly. Itâs not like we were some little band that never had another record; even though half of us have died, the phenomenon continues stronger than ever. Everything I do seems to be painted with âBeatleââŚ
(Paul McCartney about Put It There (1988), The Lyrics, 2021)
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#sorry for the long quotes but I like if they's extensive#I like to see context#john lennon#paul mccartney#george harrison#ringo starr#interview: paul#you never give me your money#too many people#get back#dear friend#when winter comes#warm and beautiful#carry that weight#coming up#golden earth girl#golden slumbers#great day#accidental divorce#john and paul#paul and linda#paul and yoko#let it be#maxwell's silver hammer#maybe Iâm amazed#put it there#the songs we were singing
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so many times i want to post lyrics but the lyrics themselves don't fully hit if you aren't hearing exactly how they're being sung like lets just sit together in a quiet room and listen to the whole song with az lyrics open
#does this with every dry the river song#everyone do this with demons dry the river rn so you understand what i mean when i say#under the weight of belief you shiver and shake like a leaf#but death is a force not a man on a horse. ill keep you safe while you sleep
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Thinking about the sniper duo
#tog#the old guard#siggy draws#quynh#nicolo di genova#the old gays#genuinely they're all i can think about this week#what are they running from / shooting at?? idk they probably fucked up sdfghfds#the headcanon is: when you put these two together they have a lot of fun but they're a DISASTER.#here's a story: some rich man saw quynh and immediately decided she was going to be his wife#and ofc quynh had issues with this and wanted to smack the shit out of this guy right away.#which she did. which escalated into a duel of sorts. nicolo is just there on the side like 'oh shit'.#either quynh was in disguise or she was forced to wear the dress. either way she is Not happy about it.#cue little brother who can lift his own weight and sprint to the rescue#maybe i should make this into a fic omg#can you fucking tell i started this by listening to anime osts ended it with disney songs
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