Tag Archives: 2002

Song Analysis #50: Coldplay – The Scientist

In one of my posts in which I pitted Keane vs. Coldplay during my week at One Week // One Band back in early July, I alluded to the one song by Chris Martin and co. that I actually like. Or maybe the right word is not ‘like’ but ‘relate’ to. It’s the song equivalent to kryptonite to me because of when it was released and what was going on in my life at the time.

My father was not well. Two years prior, he suffered a stroke that slowed him physically and cognitively. For a scientist, the worst fate of all was to be imprisoned by a mind that knew what it was thinking but that had such difficulty expressing the thoughts as quickly and brilliantly as it had once before. He didn’t say much in his final months. I knew he had difficulty finding the words sometimes, and he didn’t want to embarrass himself by accidentally mixing up his words. Most times, he said nothing. This was the same man who, without fail, called me every single night I lived at university because he cared about me and wanted to hear how my day was, just as when I had lived at home as a child.

Before leaving the house one morning, he kissed me on the head and told me to have a good day at work. Later that evening, he was gone.

I heard it again recently, and the discomfort of hearing the song again after so long came back, the tightness building in my stomach. Seeing that I have suffered through and am going through great change this year and hope can be difficult to find, I decided I didn’t have anything to lose to think more about ‘The Scientist’ now.

When I started Music in Notes 3 years ago, I knew one day I would have to write my thoughts on this song here. I just didn’t know when I would be ready to. I was too fragile to do so when I began the site.

Now is that time.

Title: ‘The Scientist’
Where to find it: ‘A Rush of Blood to the Head’ (2002, Parlophone)
Performed by: Coldplay
Words by: Chris Martin

First, the words:

Verse 1
Come up to meet you
tell you I’m sorry
You don’t know how lovely you are

I had to find you
Tell you I need you
Tell you I set you apart

Tell me your secrets
And ask me your questions
Oh, let’s go back to the start

Running in circles
Coming up tails
Heads on a science apart

Chorus
Nobody said it was easy
It’s such a shame for us to part
Nobody said it was easy
No one ever said it would be this hard

Oh, take me back to the start

Verse 2
I was just guessing
At numbers and figures
Pulling the puzzles apart

Questions of science
Science and progress
Do not speak as loud as my heart

Tell me you love me
Come back and haunt me
Oh, and I rush to the start

Running in circles
Chasing our tails
Coming back as we are

Chorus
Nobody said it was easy
Oh, it’s such a shame for us to part
Nobody said it was easy
No one ever said it would be so hard

I’m going back to the start

Now, the analysis:

Before I begin, I should point out that Chris Martin has previously revealed what ‘The Scientist’ is about. You can read it on page 5 of a 2002 Coldplay e-zine archived here. It would be fair to say that I was pretty disappointed by the actual meaning of the song, but that’s where Music in Notes comes in. As echoed by the many songwriters I’ve interviewed over the years, the most important thing you should remember about the medium of a song is how it relates to you and how it makes you feel.

Scientists have been able to show that music is a cue that stirs up memories, even those many years ago, as well as cue up memories in people whose memory is impaired, such as those with Alzheimer’s and dementia. So don’t ever feel sorry for thinking about and relating to a song one way that completely doesn’t match the way someone else thinks or relates to it at all. These memories you have of songs are individual and yours alone.

If we are to believe Chris Martin, that this song is really just about being attracted to girls and how as a guy you can’t get them off your mind, and even that process is connected to a memory. A fond memory of someone you wanted to be with but couldn’t. (I’m trying here, Chris. Really.) Even if you never saw the video and saw that there was a man and a woman in it, presumably the people involved in the tale of the song, you can see by reading the lyrics to ‘The Scientist’ that there is a healthy dose (probably a far too unhealthy dose, depending on the personality of the person reading) of regret in this song.

Two people have been separated: “it’s such a shame for us to part.” The beauty of this song, although not likely Chris Martin’s intention at all, is that it could apply to *any* two people. Two lovers. A husband and a wife. A parent and a child. Two best friends. We don’t know how or why this happened, but Chris Martin playing the protagonist wants to return to when it all began, desperately saying, “take me back to the start.

He wants to start over with a clean slate, so he can hear the other person’s secrets and answer this person’s questions. As we get to know someone and journey through life with them, you learn more and more about the other person. But there really is no going back when if something painful or awful is revealed, or harsh words have been spoken that can’t be unsaid. It is just is. Once you reach that point, there is no turning back. You can’t un-hear what you’ve heard or un-feel that emotion. Depending on the connection, there may be a chance to mend fences, to heal, to find a way back. But there wasn’t one in this case.

All important relationships, the ones that are worth keeping and preserving, are based on love and trust. The strong ones keep going. And they keep going because both people want it to keep going, and in equal measure. You might say that as his child, I had no choice but to ‘keep’ my father. But in all honesty, despite all the terrible things that had happened in my life, I still really loved him. When he died, a part of me died too. That’s what I get from ‘The Scientist’. Martin sings, “I was just guessing / at numbers and figures / pulling the puzzles apart,” blindly stumbling through the reality of loss, his science, to try to find reason for his emotions.

Martin comes to the terrible conclusion that he has lost a loved one. No matter how harsh the harsh reality that exists now in his life, he cannot and does not give in to the reality, as the scientific explanations are nothing in the face of his emotions. They “do not speak as loud as my heart.” I suppose the easiest way to judge this song is to consider it being about someone that has physically died, from the lines “tell me you love me / come back and haunt me.” But I think that’s a lazy explanation. We all know that the important players of our lives can haunt us in our minds, whether we’re awake or while we’re asleep and dreaming, and whether they’re living or not. I find the song being especially emotional and cutting for this duality.

Nobody said it was easy, nobody said it would be this hard.” I think the best we all can hope for is to keep putting love out into the world, while never forgetting that other person who meant so much to us, and before we ever come to the point where we are irrevocably wrested apart from them, however that happens, either by choice or not. I don’t like that old saying, “If you love something, let it go. If it comes back to you, it’s yours forever. If it doesn’t, then it was never meant to be.” It sounds so negative. It sounds like we as humans have no control of the situation at all.

But we do. We have a choice. We have the choice to love and care for one another. “What I do, that will be done to me.” At this time in my life, I have to believe that despite how badly I’ve been hurt, that there is meaning to all of this. And if I keep loving and caring, the love I am supposed to receive will come back to me.

Lastly, the song, in its promo form from 2002.

Song Analysis #13: Sheryl Crow – Soak Up the Sun

Title: ‘Soak Up the Sun’
Where to find it: ‘C’mon C’mon’ (2002, A&M)
Performed by: Sheryl Crow
Words by: Sheryl Crow

I know all the lyrics to this song by heart. Why? I roomed with a friend one year and he was working as musical director of an a capella group, and he arranged this song for their singers. He must have played the hell out of that song, oh, hundreds of times and I could heard it through the walls of our flat.

When I went out for a run last Sunday, I queued this song up on my mp3 player and wham, bam! The song had a completely different meaning to me than it did years ago. Just wow. A quote from one of my favourite films seems particularly apt right now: “Sometimes we don’t see certain things until we’re ready to see them in a certain way”. Indeed.

First, the words:

Verse 1
My friend the communist
Holds meetings in his RV
I can’t afford his gas
So I’m stuck here watching TV

I don’t have digital
I don’t have diddly squat
It’s not having what you want
It’s wanting what you’ve got

Chorus
I’m gonna soak up the sun
I’m gonna tell everyone
To lighten up (I’m gonna tell ’em that)
I’ve got no one to blame
For every time I feel lame
I’m looking up
I’m gonna soak up the sun
I’m gonna soak up the sun

Verse 2
I’ve got a crummy job
It don’t pay near enough
To buy the things it takes
To win me some of your love
Every time I turn around
I’m looking up, you’re looking down
Maybe something’s wrong with you
That makes you act the way you do

Chorus
I’m gonna soak up the sun
I’m gonna tell everyone
To lighten up (I’m gonna tell ’em that)
I’ve got no one to blame
For every time I feel lame
I’m looking up

Pre-bridge
I’m gonna soak up the sun
While it’s still free

I’m gonna soak up the sun
Before it goes out on me

Bridge
Don’t have no master suite
But I’m still the king of me
You have a fancy ride, but baby
I’m the one who has the key
Every time I turn around
I’m looking up, you’re looking down
Maybe something’s wrong with you
That makes you act the way you do
Maybe I am crazy too

Chorus
I’m gonna soak up the sun
I’m gonna tell everyone
To lighten up (I’m gonna tell ’em that)
I’ve got no one to blame
For every time I feel lame
I’m looking up

I’m gonna soak up the sun
I’m gonna tell everyone
To lighten up (I’m gonna tell ’em that)
I’ve got no one to blame
For every time I feel lame
I’m looking up

Outro
I’m gonna soak up the sun
Got my 45 on
So I can rock on

Now, the analysis:

There’s definitely more to this song than meets the eye, and it’s very interesting in that respect, because I am positive when the song came out years ago, it came across to most people as a poppy, peppy, sunny, song of fluff. The official video that goes with it does not help matters. But it’s not a straightforward love song but rather one that shows the voice of the song appealing to her other half to stop being depressed and look on the bright side of life. (No Monty Python jokes, please.)

One theme of this song is money can’t buy you happiness. Our protagonist “can’t afford his gas” to get to her boss’ meeting, she’s watching tv without digital cable (oh, the horror!), yet she fully recognises “It’s not having what you want / It’s wanting what you’ve got”, probably one of the best lines about life ever written. It’s very true. We get so caught up with keeping up with the Joneses and coveting our friends’ gadgets and lifestyles that we forgot all too often that our lives, as they are, are pretty damn good. My grandmother used to repeat the adage, “you have health, you have everything.” I used to hate it when she repeated that phrase over and over again, but I’ve come to the point where I agree with her entirely. No-one’s lives are perfect, but what we do have, whatever it is we have, is pretty good. We’re alive. We have things to look forward to when we get up every morning.

But if you’re suffering from depression, you don’t feel that. I’ve been through some pretty bad times. Important people in my life passing away. Being in hospital and very poorly. Even these days every once in a while, I’ll get up and wave my fist at the sun when I’m particularly blue. It’s like the sun is mocking me. Everyone else is happy that the sun is shining…but I haven’t gotten the memo. For those moments, it’s a struggle, but in order to live, you’ve got to force yourself and think “I’m looking up” in “every time I feel lame”.

Which leads me to what I think this is a unique twist to the song: the person singing it has troubles in her life too, she’s not perfect either! But she’s coping, as evidenced in the bridge. She’s not wealthy, but she’s in control, which is most important to her (“Don’t have no master suite / But I’m still the king of me”). She sees her other half with “a fancy ride” but insists “I’m the one who holds the key”. Is the key happiness for him, her being able to give him this happiness? It’s not literally the key to drive the car, of course. “Every time I turn around / I’m looking up, you’re looking down”: she’s trying to be positive, but he’s always down in the dumps. “Maybe something’s wrong with you / That makes you act the way you do” – hmm, is this the depression? Is she spelling it out for him? It’s almost like she’s trying to give him an out. But to bring levity to the situation, she ends the bridge with “Maybe I am crazy too”. Crazy in love? Crazy in love with him? Not sure.

The pre-bridge is pretty amazing too. “I’m gonna soak up the sun / While it’s still free”: some of the best things in life are free and you can take advantage of them. “I’m gonna soak up the sun / Before it goes out on me”: she’s going to live her life to the fullest because one day, like it does for everyone, life for her will end. Yes. This is definitely worth deeper thought than you imagined for a piece of surf pop fluff, isn’t it? It’s the song equivalent of an antidepressant: she’s trying to get her guy to look at the bright side of things. She knows how difficult it is to do it, and therefore she’s the best person to show him, because she’s been through it too.

And then at the end of the song comes my favourite part of the song. “I’m gonna soak up the sun / Got my 45 on /
So I can rock on”. Music keeps her going. As it does for me too.

Lastly, the song, presented in that carefree, surfer-y promo video that does the meaning behind the song no favours!