Keep All Your Friends: Difference between revisions
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== Lyrics == | == Lyrics == | ||
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=== Sheet music === | |||
<gallery mode="packed"> | |||
File:Keep-All-Your-Friends-sheet1.jpg|pg.1 | |||
File:Keep-All-Your-Friends-sheet2.jpg|pg.2 | |||
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== Chronology== | == Chronology== | ||
* {{RLink|Corrected}} | * {{RLink|Corrected}} |
Revision as of 19:19, 11 September 2023
Lyrics
'And we will be fed With breakfast in bed And served by a fat millionaire'
'A contradiction is the norm for breaking — Dialectically'
'It’s not the social content It’s always the political form' ('Keep all your friends..')
To fail to perceive the difference Is to fail to perceive the difference Between the meaningless pattern Of political occurrence And historical meaning In social life
To stipulate the difference Is to fail to perceive the difference Between boundary postulation And boundary location
'And we will be fed With breakfast in bed And served by a fat millionaire'
Sheet music
-
pg.1
-
pg.2
Chronology
Corrected Slogans
- ? - vocals
- Jesse Chamberlain - vocals
- ? - vocals
- Mayo Thompson - guitar, vocals
- Home From Home Kit D'exposition
Kangaroo?
- Lora Logic - vocals
- Mayo Thompson - vocals
Interpretations
Art & Language, 1981[1]
The first and last verse is a song from the Land of Cockayne. The rest is fragmentary and ‘theoretical’, left-wing sounding ... But class antagonistic? Is it the social content of our lives that determines its political form? Is the former strongly involved with the latter or can they be separated?
Live recordings
Show | |
---|---|
April 21, 2000 | video |
August 6, 2006 | |
December 13, 2006 |
References
- ↑ Art & Language and The Red Crayola, ‘Notes on the Songs’, booklet published in connection with L.P. Kangaroo?, Rough Trade records, London, 1981.