The new
songs bring along whole new electronic effects while keeping some of their
previous ground stones, namely Bellamy’s beautiful vocals and piano
performances. Creativity and uniqueness were not forgotten; how often do you
listen to a physics’ law description in a song?
But all of
this wouldn’t make up a great album, were it not for the deep meaning behind
the lyrics. The album’s name and the references to entropy maximization aren’t just
random mumblings intended to look cool. Far from it: they convey clever
criticism on the unsustainable way humanity has been exploiting the environment
for its own benefit. A topic already present in their previous album, now given
a central role.
From this
album, the song Animals struck me
particularly hard. At this point I must say that the song’s interpretation I’m
about to share is truly my own. I haven’t read it anywhere and so it’s totally
possible for it to have nothing to do with what the band wanted to express.
Still, the liberty to interpret music to our own accord is one of its many
qualities.
At first
glance I thought the song was about social classes’ differences and the way the
richest exploit the poor. The song does seem to encode a powerful negative
feeling against the capitalist system in general: “You’re out of control (…)
Analyse/ Advertise/ Expand”. The narrator also seems to realize, halfway
throughout the song, that he himself is part of the system, adjusting his
discourse to “We’re animals (…) we’re out of control”. While this seems to make
perfect sense, I believe the lyrics yet go deeper. I’m convinced that the title
bears a double meaning and that the narrator is in a way speaking on behalf of
all the other animals in the planet. From this perspective, “Animals, we’re
animals” attempts to make us realize that we share this planet, as well as
bring our attention to our recklessness and brutality, features we often
associate with wild beasts. “buy yourself an island” and “Buy yourself an ocean”
stand for both our capitalistic perspective of life and the way we treat the
environment and its natural resources as if they’re rightfully ours. Simply
pick a random line of the lyrics and you’ll find heavy criticism on our
attitudes.
The last
lines are specially haunting to me. “Kill yourself / Come on and do us all a
favour”. Is that what the other animals think of us? Is that what the planet
would say, were it capable of thought and speech?
Not long
ago I saw this movie called Chronicle (which
I strongly recommend while we’re at it) in which a calm and bullied kid obtains
super powers and starts to get progressively more aggressive towards other
people. In the end, his feelings of superiority are so strong that he loses
perception of the value of human life: “I am an Apex predator. Does the lion
feel bad killing the gazelle? Do people feel remorse when they kill a fly?” These aren’t just pretty catch phrases; they
really underline the reasons behind our reckless actions. Have we grown so
important (in our minds) that nothing else matters?
Filipe Baptista de Morais
Filipe Baptista de Morais
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