Difference between revisions of "Notes"
| Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
* Song ideas: | * Song ideas: | ||
| − | ** | + | ** "Feral employee" -- berserk cubicle worker |
| − | ** "Barbarian invasions" - Comparing society's artificiality to the Roman empire and the way it crumbled; personification of said crumbling (barbarian invasion). | + | ** "Barbarian invasions" -- Comparing society's artificiality to the Roman empire and the way it crumbled; personification of said crumbling (barbarian invasion). |
| − | ** | + | ** "All Along The Watchtower" -- bonus track |
** "Tuesday Black Tuesday" -- a parody of "Sunday Bloody Sunday" about the stock market crash of the '20s. | ** "Tuesday Black Tuesday" -- a parody of "Sunday Bloody Sunday" about the stock market crash of the '20s. | ||
** "Overdose of Dali" -- needs chorus | ** "Overdose of Dali" -- needs chorus | ||
Revision as of 22:54, 6 March 2008
- "The artificial, man-made structure of life breaking down into chaos."
- "Regressing from the digital age into older mediums."
- Tracks:
- Define society's infrastructure - Surrealism
- Define society's nuances (life in general)
- One closing track
- Song ideas:
- "Feral employee" -- berserk cubicle worker
- "Barbarian invasions" -- Comparing society's artificiality to the Roman empire and the way it crumbled; personification of said crumbling (barbarian invasion).
- "All Along The Watchtower" -- bonus track
- "Tuesday Black Tuesday" -- a parody of "Sunday Bloody Sunday" about the stock market crash of the '20s.
- "Overdose of Dali" -- needs chorus
- "Emby" -- based on Shakespeare's Macbeth
- "The Plastic Revolution" -- people stop using plastic because of toxic side effects. Ties in with the theme of society's regression.
- "Canadian Pie" -- I just want to do it.
- "Computer Wizard" -- computer geek as some kind of weird Christ-figure
- "Back to the Abacus" -- technology breaks down and people go back to simple machines
- Seeboard: Non-public miscommunication
- "...in that, with the crumbling of this artificial structure of society, man will be able to take the first faltering steps to further exploring his own spirituality."