(Untitled)

Jan 20, 2011 10:55

I just got Johnny Cash's album The Man Comes Around. "Hurt" is really the most emo song ever written. (Yes, I know it's Trent Reznor.) From now on, if someone asks me what emo is, I will play this song. I love it so.

music babbling

Leave a comment

Comments 11

trinityvixen January 20 2011, 15:58:38 UTC
I was never a fan of "Hurt," the original version. It's, as you say, the very epitome of emo, and not nearly as fun as other NIN songs that are equally (if not more) emo. What Johnny Cash's version brings to it is the weight of age and pain in his singing. Trent Reznor singing it is a young dude whining about one problem on his otherwise still very open-ended, probably-going-to-get-better life. Johnny Cash singing it is filled with the remorse of a long life lived unhappily, full of remorse and pain.

Okay, so it's still emo, but it has some weight to it. I love it.

Reply

ivy03 January 21 2011, 04:40:08 UTC
Not to kill it with over analysis, but what strikes me is how lyrics which, in their original context, are clearly about drug abuse become about dying of a terminal disease. Suddenly talking about how everyone goes away in the end is not about how you drive everyone away but how we all face our own mortality alone. For Reznor, I think it's about wishing that you could fix yourself mentally so that you don't drive your last friend away. For Cash, the wish to start again is much more literal.

I mean, I have to give a hand to both Reznor and Cash, because it takes serious talent to dilute the despair self-hatred into its purest form.

Reply


moonlightalice January 21 2011, 04:31:44 UTC
It's super emo, but keep in mind the album it's from is a concept album--obviously based on personal experience but also exaggerated for maximum narrative effect.

Reply

ivy03 January 21 2011, 04:36:23 UTC
Well, when has anything he's done not been super emo? My brother described Pretty Hate Machine as "my eighth grade girlfriend just dumped me." (I kid because I love.)

Reply

moonlightalice January 21 2011, 04:38:17 UTC
Ha! Okay, so that's true, but it was also the '80s and his competition was The Cure and The Smiths.

Reply

ivy03 January 21 2011, 04:42:57 UTC
I love that album cause it sounds like a moment where it is still within the tropes of eighties pop music (the backing beats could be straight from anything on the radio--the beginning of one song always makes me think of "King of Wishful Thinking"), but it is also clearly transforming into something new.

I love transitional albums like that, like Genesis's eponymous album, or Supertramp's Crisis? What Crisis?

Reply


Leave a comment

Up