Wordsworth
Out of Arm’s Way
Lyrics in music rarely get the scrutiny and attention they deserve. With an ear for meaning, ORR SHTUHL dives deep into the unsettling content of Islands’ latest album.
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THE FOOTNOTES TOO
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When I’m in my room
I love the shadows of my bad bones
I feel evil creeping in
Bones have long been a favorite vehicle of Islands lyricist and singer Nick Thorburn, dating back to the bone ca-marrow he coined with his old band (and Islands predecessor), the Unicorns. On Islands’ latest offering, Arm’s Way, death and evil certainly creepthrough bones, lungs, car-crash carcasses, and lots and lots of blood. Throughout the album’s 68 minutes, Thorburn’s words evoke a transformation into malevolence, one accepting, condoning, and eventually partaking in crime and sin. It’s a state of wickedness in which people hone their stabbing skills (Creeper), beat fellow humans to death (Pieces of You), and on one occasion wear another person’s skin (I Feel Evil Creeping In).
Not that our protagonist doesn’t feel bad about it. A strong current of moral struggle runs through Arm’s Way, as our narrator witnesses the slow rise of evil with alternate expressions of horror and ecstasy. He’s appalled when it surrounds him at first, as he witnesses murders (on Pieces of You and Creeper) and betrayal (J’aime Vous Voir Quitter)*. Soon he sees humans picking apart and destroying the natural world (Kids Don’t Know Shit), and eventually he succumbs to the hypnotic ease of iniquity (I Feel Evil Creeping In). By the album’s final track, Vertigo (If It’s a Crime), the once-upright narrator has gone completely Mr. Hyde, cementing the foundation of Arm’s Way: Man is naturally evil.
* * *
But first, let’s look at evil’s creeping onset on Arm’s Way. On the second track, Pieces of You, Thorburn speaks to the spirit of a murder victim as he recounts how an unnamed cadre of gnomes bludgeoned the victim to death. In the aftermath:
The recognition of immorality is a splash of cold water, after which follows a parade of violence and destruction. The four-on-the-floor dance tune Creeper is a 100-word vignette of the narrator attempting (and failing) to defend himself from a knife-wielding intruder. However, in addition to this close-combat violencethe second murder he witnessesmuch of the destruction crashing around us is against the natural worldanother of Thorburn’s go-to themes. Thus far, our narrator is still innocent, condemning others, unaware of the evil dormant inside him.
* * *
Islands’ debut album, Return to the Sea, is a loose concept album about a post-global-warming apocalypse. Its lyrics portray an Earth depleted of oxygen and food supplies, a melting Alaska, and icy Argentine. Humanity heeds no warning (we’ll burn those bridges when we come to them), for they have no time for science (we had to build a civilization / let the planet focus on the planet’s rotation). And when the oceans rise over our heads, let’s not forget what becomes of the ice caps pictured on the front coverthat’s right, islands.
Arm’s Way takes that environmental doom and gives it a philosophical bent: Because man is inherently evil, he eventually will destroy his environment.
In Kids Don’t Know Shit, the eponymous children are nurtured by the mysticism of astral constellations and branches weaving, forests leaving. Meanwhile, a cursory person, the cruel-world counterpart of the young dreamer, stops by to puncture the daydreamand utter the song’s title. Unlike the child murderers in Pieces of You, these children are true innocents, while the cursory person represents natural man. Closing out the first half of Arm’s Way, it gives us a final glimpse of pure innocence before we dive into the murkier immorality that composes the remainder of the album.
Thorburn replaces you are forgiven with you are forgotten. After swallowing the seed of enlightenment, he sings, then suddenly I was out of harm’s way / forgetting the desire to remember. Nature gets ravaged in Life in Jailin Thorburn’s words, it’s a self-help guide of a songwith two voices arguing for and against a life of inaction, surrender, and bliss:
In a psychedelic blur of remembering and forgetting, amnesia and illumination, the band erupts into a skewed cover of You Are Forgiven, the final movement of the Who’s epic A Quick One While He’s Away. But in keeping with Islands’ obsession with death and destruction, Thorburn replaces the final you are forgiven with you are forgotten.
With this line, the narrator sheds his outermost layer of innocence, the first real sign of his transformation. After swallowing the seed of enlightenment, he sings, then suddenly I was out of harm’s way / forgetting the desire to remember. Released from the weighty guilt that comes with striving for purity, the narrator is free, out of harm’s way. You are forgotten, he yelps over and over in elation.
* * *
I Feel Evil Creeping In opens with one last glimpse of conscious, detached observation of the wave of evil overtaking him bone by bone (When I’m in my room / I love the shadows of my bad bones / I feel evil creeping in). The narrator reflects on a series of his foul deedsin past tense, as though laying out a logical argument for turning to the dark side:
Finally in Vertigo (If It’s a Crime), he succumbs to the second and final surrender. Walking to the gallows, the narrator is totally consumed by the evil, and even mutters the quip, Is it a crime to pass the blame? This phrase is wonderfully ambiguous; on one hand it’s an indictment of the malicious society presented to us throughout the album. But more practically, it’s a sneering, backhanded admission of guilt. He’s guilty of whatever he’s going to hang forbut he wonders, couldn’t they just have pinned it on someone else?
* Hardcore Islands and Unicorns fans will want to know more about J’aime Vous Voir Quitter, which Thorburn confirmed is about departed bandmate Jaime J’aime Tambeur Thompson. (The title translates to I love watching you leave.) Some songs on the album could be interpreted to be about Thompson as well, but the ties are residual, if not completely coincidental. Quitter seems to exist separately from many of the album’s themes: in Thorburn’s words, a memento of an era that’s passed. ↩
I love the shadows of my bad bones
I feel evil creeping in
Bones have long been a favorite vehicle of Islands lyricist and singer Nick Thorburn, dating back to the bone ca-marrow he coined with his old band (and Islands predecessor), the Unicorns. On Islands’ latest offering, Arm’s Way, death and evil certainly creepthrough bones, lungs, car-crash carcasses, and lots and lots of blood. Throughout the album’s 68 minutes, Thorburn’s words evoke a transformation into malevolence, one accepting, condoning, and eventually partaking in crime and sin. It’s a state of wickedness in which people hone their stabbing skills (Creeper), beat fellow humans to death (Pieces of You), and on one occasion wear another person’s skin (I Feel Evil Creeping In).
Not that our protagonist doesn’t feel bad about it. A strong current of moral struggle runs through Arm’s Way, as our narrator witnesses the slow rise of evil with alternate expressions of horror and ecstasy. He’s appalled when it surrounds him at first, as he witnesses murders (on Pieces of You and Creeper) and betrayal (J’aime Vous Voir Quitter)*. Soon he sees humans picking apart and destroying the natural world (Kids Don’t Know Shit), and eventually he succumbs to the hypnotic ease of iniquity (I Feel Evil Creeping In). By the album’s final track, Vertigo (If It’s a Crime), the once-upright narrator has gone completely Mr. Hyde, cementing the foundation of Arm’s Way: Man is naturally evil.
But first, let’s look at evil’s creeping onset on Arm’s Way. On the second track, Pieces of You, Thorburn speaks to the spirit of a murder victim as he recounts how an unnamed cadre of gnomes bludgeoned the victim to death. In the aftermath:
They found your bones in the homesIn an interview with Paper Thin Walls, Thorburn said the song is based on a true story about a childhood acquaintance from his hometown in rural Canada, who, with a group of fellow teenagers, beat someone to death with a lead pipe. Portrayed as gnomes the young murderers offer a disturbing, pregnant image. Outwardly they’re innocent creatures, like the garden-variety gnomes found adorning the kitschy lawns of retirees; beneath their peaceful exterior lives an inner evil. Did they regret anything? Thorburn begs. It’s a cold, cold world we swam into.
of a thousand little gnomes
who’d taken pieces for decoration.
They’d open up their mouths;
they seemed like peaceful little mouths.
Inside they found a mouthful of feces.
The recognition of immorality is a splash of cold water, after which follows a parade of violence and destruction. The four-on-the-floor dance tune Creeper is a 100-word vignette of the narrator attempting (and failing) to defend himself from a knife-wielding intruder. However, in addition to this close-combat violencethe second murder he witnessesmuch of the destruction crashing around us is against the natural worldanother of Thorburn’s go-to themes. Thus far, our narrator is still innocent, condemning others, unaware of the evil dormant inside him.
Islands’ debut album, Return to the Sea, is a loose concept album about a post-global-warming apocalypse. Its lyrics portray an Earth depleted of oxygen and food supplies, a melting Alaska, and icy Argentine. Humanity heeds no warning (we’ll burn those bridges when we come to them), for they have no time for science (we had to build a civilization / let the planet focus on the planet’s rotation). And when the oceans rise over our heads, let’s not forget what becomes of the ice caps pictured on the front coverthat’s right, islands.
Arm’s Way takes that environmental doom and gives it a philosophical bent: Because man is inherently evil, he eventually will destroy his environment.
In Kids Don’t Know Shit, the eponymous children are nurtured by the mysticism of astral constellations and branches weaving, forests leaving. Meanwhile, a cursory person, the cruel-world counterpart of the young dreamer, stops by to puncture the daydreamand utter the song’s title. Unlike the child murderers in Pieces of You, these children are true innocents, while the cursory person represents natural man. Closing out the first half of Arm’s Way, it gives us a final glimpse of pure innocence before we dive into the murkier immorality that composes the remainder of the album.
Thorburn replaces you are forgiven with you are forgotten. After swallowing the seed of enlightenment, he sings, then suddenly I was out of harm’s way / forgetting the desire to remember. Nature gets ravaged in Life in Jailin Thorburn’s words, it’s a self-help guide of a songwith two voices arguing for and against a life of inaction, surrender, and bliss:
Blow my money on my favorite companyThe last two lines are from the carpe diem side of the argument; however, the narrator on the pro-surrender side hearkens to Return to the Sea, portending the ozone’s depletion at humanity’s handsand throwing up his own hands in defeat. It’s environmentalism à la Radiohead’s No Surprises, in which Thom Yorke settles for a quiet life, a handshake of carbon monoxide. Thorburn’s take on this sentiment also gives us one of his finest turned phrases:
They can blow holes in my ozone
So pour that propane on my clothes
I like it when my skin glows
Besides, there’s nothing to live for
Unless you live a little more
Like you’re going to die
Pour concrete on meA natural-world trio of songs follows: In the Rushes, We Swim, and To a Bond. In the second, Thorburn trots out the old river-as-a-lifetime metaphor, while the third song depicts the narrator and a companion escaping an attack while swimming. But Rushes is most intriguing: It features a Siddhartha-like enlightenment scene in which the narrator follows a disturbing noise into a marsh, only to find a seed that tastes like a light going off inside my mind.
Delicately, baby
So I can live my sedimental life
Sedentarily, what a life
In a psychedelic blur of remembering and forgetting, amnesia and illumination, the band erupts into a skewed cover of You Are Forgiven, the final movement of the Who’s epic A Quick One While He’s Away. But in keeping with Islands’ obsession with death and destruction, Thorburn replaces the final you are forgiven with you are forgotten.
With this line, the narrator sheds his outermost layer of innocence, the first real sign of his transformation. After swallowing the seed of enlightenment, he sings, then suddenly I was out of harm’s way / forgetting the desire to remember. Released from the weighty guilt that comes with striving for purity, the narrator is free, out of harm’s way. You are forgotten, he yelps over and over in elation.
I Feel Evil Creeping In opens with one last glimpse of conscious, detached observation of the wave of evil overtaking him bone by bone (When I’m in my room / I love the shadows of my bad bones / I feel evil creeping in). The narrator reflects on a series of his foul deedsin past tense, as though laying out a logical argument for turning to the dark side:
My blood is dirtyHe then confesses to another crime: abandoning his crew swimming in a turgid sea in the wake of a sinking ship. It was me who committed the felony, he wails, though not necessarily out of guilt. All these realizationsorderly, Hobbesian pointslead to this enlightened conclusion:
And I like it, I like it that way
I could see the whole city
When I pushed you out of my fucking way
When I behave nobody caresThat dichotomy leads to the first of two major surrenders: the surrender of adhering to social norms. After seeing a child beaten to death, after being scorned for dreaming at the stars, and now after enjoying the spoils of evil, he asks: Why be good?
When I behave badly nobody dares cross me
Finally in Vertigo (If It’s a Crime), he succumbs to the second and final surrender. Walking to the gallows, the narrator is totally consumed by the evil, and even mutters the quip, Is it a crime to pass the blame? This phrase is wonderfully ambiguous; on one hand it’s an indictment of the malicious society presented to us throughout the album. But more practically, it’s a sneering, backhanded admission of guilt. He’s guilty of whatever he’s going to hang forbut he wonders, couldn’t they just have pinned it on someone else?
The jury’s out, a-creepin’ aboutIn the end, everyone’s to blame: the judge, the jury, the victims, and the perpetrator. You see enough sin, and you start to believe in the futility of good. Philosophically, that is the easy way outas is a life of careless, effortless evil, abandoning societal norms, and the final punishment that comes with it: death. The narrator shows us that if those bad bones are already in your body, if pushing someone out of your way feels so natural, then there’s no need to spend your life in jail. The freedom of death awaits.
And yet I am a guilty man
If it’s a crime they’ll hang me every time
I tried to set things straight
I feel that I was too late to be cleared of the crime
* Hardcore Islands and Unicorns fans will want to know more about J’aime Vous Voir Quitter, which Thorburn confirmed is about departed bandmate Jaime J’aime Tambeur Thompson. (The title translates to I love watching you leave.) Some songs on the album could be interpreted to be about Thompson as well, but the ties are residual, if not completely coincidental. Quitter seems to exist separately from many of the album’s themes: in Thorburn’s words, a memento of an era that’s passed. ↩
—Published June 18, 2008
