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Length: 4:49
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we can fade away or start over again
in a high five season in a cut-price land
the southern cross don't shine on that invisible hand
where will you live when the fields are falling?
where will you live when the feedlots calling?
everybody standing in the treetops saying
where will you live? where will you live?
everyone dosen't have to beg or borrow
were going to move into a new tomarrow
where will you live? where will you live?
invisable hand clutching at the throat
statistical sham an emperor's rags its sad its so sad
because equality's the only plea green fields are burning
the reefs on fire and bellies are swollen they're hurting
a willing victims I don''t think so
we won't be pinned agains't the wall
there is no slogan that can feed you
where will you live when the fields are falling?
where will you live when the feedlots calling?
everybody standing in the treetops saying
where will you live? where will you live?
tearing up your ticket for the new titanic
heat haze refugee no-one panic
where will you live when the water comes over?
where will you live? where will you live?
take a deep breath don't have to drown in sorrow
take a deep breath for a new tomarrow
the bow will break the cradle fall
we won't be jammed against your wall
People that don't like political songs don't like the politics being supported by the song and the vast majority of political songs are of a liberal nature when it comes to rock songs. I doubt many C&W fans complain about rightwing politics in C&W songs.
I Agree completely! ...like shooting at Bud Light cans with an AR=15! ...eh?
I saw them on the Blue Sky Mining tour and they were the best sounding live show I've ever seen. Even to this day. They borrowed the horn section from the Hunters and Collectors and created this crisp, clean sound that sounded better than a CD!
You Lucky Duck! I wish I was there too!
I've seen Midnight Oil twice in concert and they were and remain excellent. I saw them in San Francisco when they were really popular and was so impressed by the wall of sound that they created. At a time when I seeing a lot of fantastic live shows they really stood out in a way that surprised me at the time. I saw them on their most recent tour and again, they were fantastic.
I saw them on the Blue Sky Mining tour and they were the best sounding live show I've ever seen. Even to this day. They borrowed the horn section from the Hunters and Collectors and created this crisp, clean sound that sounded better than a CD!
To continue on that, what is wrong with songs being political?
Every artist has the right to express opinions and raise social and - yes - political issues. I am not saying that every artist must be political, but banning politics from art is a social lobotomy.
Shall we ban Bob Dylan, then?
People that don't like political songs don't like the politics being supported by the song and the vast majority of political songs are of a liberal nature when it comes to rock songs. I doubt many C&W fans complain about rightwing politics in C&W songs.
So many negative comments below... I guess everyone's entitled to their opinion, but for the record: 1. Peter Garrett is not solely responsible for the politics and lyrics of the band. Guitarist Jim Moginie is the band member credited (alone or as co-writer) on every song on "Capricornia," while Garrett has songwriting credits on only a third of the songs (including this one). Drummer Martin Rotsey also writes quite a bit (and has written a book about the band on tour), and is quite articulate about the band's vision. Agree or disagree with them, but I think you have to respect a group that rocked out for a quarter of a century and stayed consistent in terms of personnel and messages while never standing still musically. And by the way, some of their lyrics are quite positive: "Forgotten Years," "Outbreak of Love," and "Golden Age" come to mind. 2. It's so intellectually lazy to slap a label on something you don't like rather than state your disagreement. Again, believe what you will, but instead of the label "leftist" or "socialist," maybe some of you could state which of the following ideas you disagree with (issues taken from a long time frame of Oils' songs): - nuclear weapons are dangerous - indigenous peoples were robbed by colonial powers - corporations should value human life above profit - industrialization and globalization may have negative impacts on some people - pollution poses a threat to the environment, and by extension, to our health and future - regardless of borders and ideologies, humans have a lot in common with each other - governments and corporations should be viewed critically rather than trusted blindly So, yeah, call me a liberal. You could counter that I over-simplified their views - I concede that I simplified them. But their lyrics are more artful than explicitly political, so I haven't simplified the lyrics by much. They're not detailed manifestoes. The songs just raise the issues. 3. Don't like his voice? Fine. I get so tired of that knock against good music. Who among us doesn't like some singer with a questionable voice? Dylan, Springsteen, Jagger, Vedder, Stipe, Cobain, Joplin... Tom Waits, Richard Butler, Billy Bragg, John Hiatt... You like or dislike based on more than the voice, no? 4. If you think their songs all sound alike, blame a lack exposure to their music. They've got the rock anthem down, sure, but also the danceable songs, the hard core industrial sound, the moody atmospheric piano and acoustic guitar, twangy psychedelic, the brass and woodwind ooom-pah instrumental, and the use of the didgeridoo (sp?) in a rock song... I would say that most of their albums have a distinctive character that can't be appreciated if you only know a few songs from different albums.
16 years and this could have been written today. Great mix, Bill. Mahalo.
These kiwis were climate advocates back in the '80's, my friend.
Aussies, mate (Kiwi talking here ;) )
I have to disagree with Bill that these guys were ahead of times with the message in this song. The data-based confirmation of the decades-old human-caused climate change theory was first widely reported in the 1980s. By the 1990s, the news was there for anyone who wanted to bother to listen. Unfortunately, both left and right largely ignored the ever-increasing drum beat.
These kiwis were climate advocates back in the '80's, my friend.
So many negative comments below... I guess everyone's entitled to their opinion, ... But their lyrics are more artful than explicitly political, so I haven't simplified the lyrics by much. They're not detailed manifestoes. The songs just raise the issues.
To continue on that, what is wrong with songs being political?
Every artist has the right to express opinions and raise social and - yes - political issues. I am not saying that every artist must be political, but banning politics from art is a social lobotomy.
Shall we ban Bob Dylan, then?
Wake up from what exactly? The fantasy that humans have any hope of stopping the rhythms of this planet at any cost? You mean that one?
They're not the rhythms of the planet, FFS. 10 or 50 thousand years of climate change in 100 years? That's the rhythm of human carbon emission.
Yeah, wake up indeed.
You are missed brother.
Wake up from what exactly? The fantasy that humans have any hope of stopping the rhythms of this planet at any cost? You mean that one?
When we humans caused most of the problem, hell yes, WAKE UP!!!!!
Wake up from what exactly? The fantasy that humans have any hope of stopping the rhythms of this planet at any cost? You mean that one?
Says another ignorant asshat that knows nothing of the science of climate change.
I'm not a fan of preaching either, but he's right and this is the most important issue of our generation. The Aussies are well acquainted with the horrors that Climate Change is bringing. Big storms and drowning cities are the least of it. We should all be worried about low precipitation and unprecedented droughts leading to food and water shortages leading to mass migrations and wars. It's past time for everyone to wake up. WAKE UP PEOPLE!!!
Yes, that was an annoying comment from me, but right on target. We should be screaming this from the trees. It's also a good song, love the guitar. Fight the good fight brother!
Wake up from what exactly? The fantasy that humans have any hope of stopping the rhythms of this planet at any cost? You mean that one?
Truly a stand up guy. Love you brother.
WOW! I'm glad to hear they are touring again. Hope they make it to Chicago. We saw them several times in the 80's and they were amazing. What energy.
Businessgypsy wrote:
Some people get pleasure from enemas. Go figure. Your results may vary.
I'm not a fan of preaching either, but he's right and this is the most important issue of our generation. The Aussies are well acquainted with the horrors that Climate Change is bringing. Big storms and drowning cities are the least of it. We should all be worried about low precipitation and unprecedented droughts leading to food and water shortages leading to mass migrations and wars. It's past time for everyone to wake up. WAKE UP PEOPLE!!!
Yes, that was an annoying comment from me, but right on target. We should be screaming this from the trees. It's also a good song, love the guitar. Fight the good fight brother!
macmarine wrote:
Yet it came out in the early 90s … I remember driving through the Australian outback alone for a couple of days while listening to this song on FM radio over and over b/c the Aussies were so proud of this band making a big splash all over the world. Good times …
There is nothing I like about this song...
Or this band for that matter. 1 from me.
Preach on brother. It's a shitty derivative of Beds are Burning which was ok, but this is horribly mediocre.
There is nothing I like about this song...
Or this band for that matter. 1 from me.
Yet it came out in the early 90s … I remember driving through the Australian outback alone for a couple of days while listening to this song on FM radio over and over b/c the Aussies were so proud of this band making a big splash all over the world. Good times …
Yep. There is bad singing which I can take, sometimes even like. I love Waits, Dylan and Cohen who obviously cannot sing and that is one thing, but this guys voice is just straight up annoying and irritating to an unlistenable level.
Shazam! Love it! Amen!
Everybody in my church loves this song... we be dancing...
terrible
can't stand it
boy you said it
not bad though
pretty good
i like it
Why we never-ever hear of
"3 Doors Down" here...?
Any reason?
Same reason we don't hear Nickleback, I suppose. (they both suck)
Melted all the wax out of mine.
This song is soooo good for the ears...
Sure is. I love the guitar sound in this tune. Another hidden gem unearthed by RP. Not many people here seem to appreciate it, though.
There's not a stick big enough for this tuneless dreck. The carrots are useful as earplugs though.
Let's be positive about stuff eh? Encourage what we like - more carrot than stick.
drife wrote:
Stingray wrote:
BULLSHIT!!!
Stingray wrote:
BULLSHIT!!!
Businessgypsy wrote:
BULLSHIT!!!
Businessgypsy wrote:
Some people get pleasure from enemas. Go figure. Your results may vary.
Businessgypsy wrote:
Some people get pleasure from enemas. Go figure. Your results may vary.
Midnight Oil with just 2...!
No, this is none of them!
PS
Out of context - but just thinking...
Why we never-ever hear of
"3 Doors Down" here...?
Any reason?
Some people get pleasure from enemas. Go figure. Your results may vary.
This song is soooo very groovy... we be dancing...
I hear dat !
amen
This song is marvelous... love it... such a diamond...
OK, OK, OK - I love 'em, too! OK, already?!?
A much better band then their handful of U.S. hits would suggest. Nobody wants their music to be political anymore - at least not without running the risk of alienating someone or sounding sanctimonious. These guys were guilty of neither!
makes me wnat to go to melbourne and be a bohemian
I almost went there until I read your post! lmao. Works as an instrumental, though.
the lyrics finally click
i give it a 12
i'm so easy
whae-whae-whae 1
I really would want to like this song but his voice makes me aggressive in an instant.
Maybe this is what art is supposed to do: Generate strong feelings. So ok, it IS art. But I'm sure these guys would prefer strong feelings towards their message and not their music. Shame.