NP: Sympathy for the Devil

David Morris fqmorris at gmail.com
Sun Dec 23 19:45:52 CST 2012


I agree with Henry's aesthetics, but wonder where Joe got his literary
influence re. The Master and the Margarita?

The Devil of the song and the novel are classic Tricksters.  Not so much
evil as recklessly playful.  Just riding the roller coaster of Humanity.

David Morris

On Sunday, December 23, 2012, Joe Allonby wrote:

> I understood the lyrics to be inspired by "The Master and the Margarita".
>
>
> On Fri, Dec 21, 2012 at 7:01 AM, Henry M <scuffling at gmail.com<javascript:;>>
> wrote:
> > Hey, Godard liked the son well enough to feature it a movie!
> >
> > Has anyone who knows this song considered that the last verse subverts
> > the name that one is likely to have guessed beforehand, namely "the
> > devil?" All of the conflated opposites at the suggest that the writer
> > believes that things are not as they seem, and that, while people are
> > more comfortable calling the entity that causes tragedies "Lucifer" or
> > "the Devil," the entity that is often described by some people, e.g.
> > the Westboro Baptist church, as one that will send your soul to hell,
> > i.e. "lay your soul to waste" if you don't pay tribute, i.e. "use all
> > your well-learned politess" is God, not Lucifer.
> >
> > It makes the song a whole lot more interesting, IMO.
> >
> > Yours truly,
> > ٩(●̮̮̃•̃)۶
> > Henry Musikar, CISSP
> > http://astore.amazon.com/tdcoccamsaxe-20
>
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