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Fridge Horror[]
- Nick Cave has a great example of this. In his murder ballad duet with Kylie Minogue, "Where the Wild Roses Grow", he sings from the perspective of a deranged man who is madly in love with a girl (Kylie, in this case). In the end he kills her. That was obvious, no fridge in that one. But let's have a look at the last lines of the song.
Kylie: |
Nick: |
- How do you interpret the very last line? Some beautiful metaphor for him taking her life away? Not quite. The "Rose between her teeth" is a very lyrical way to say that he smashed the "rock in his fist" right into her goddamn mouth, having blood splattering all over her face, leaving her mangled head resembling a rose. Jesus Christ, Nick, go see a therapist.
- For those who don't already know their John Milton by heart, "Song Of Joy" has a great example too; the Unreliable Narrator tells us that the serial killer who slaughtered his family "quotes John Milton on the walls in his victims' blood/In my house he wrote "His Red Right Hand"/And that, I'm told, is from Paradise Lost." It's creepy. Then you look up the lyric sheet, where Nick has made sure to note that the narrator's monologue is full of Milton quotes. And any doubts of the killer's identity is go out the window, and you're left wondering just how well the "family man" he's addressing knows his Milton... the fact that the monologue is also full of Nick Cave quotes doesn't make it any less creepy.
The sun to me is dark and silent as the moon |