"The number that I've become will put you inside" could refer to his assassin's quote "I killed one man to save 100,000." The rest of the song is pretty self-explanatory it's describing how it must have felt to bleed to death in a friends arms on your bathroom floor, something I think we can all relate to. Rated 1 in the best albums of 2008, and 123 of all-time album. Released 24 January 2008 on Enemies List (catalog no. The amplification of his final words ("Help me, my dear friend!") could either refer to the reverberating effect of screaming in a bathroom, or rather something that would be amplified through history (they're pretty famous last words). Deathconsciousness, an Album by Have a Nice Life. The accompanying fanzine details the dark and forgotten history of the Antiochean cult - an. Rhythmic, primal and expansive, DEATHCONSCIOUSNESS offers a meditation on death, loss and unrequited love, with repeated listens revealing new layers of depth and meaning. The number that I've become will put you inside.Īt this point in the song the assassination has already taken place and Marat is dying. Deluxe reissue of extremely collectable double vinyl LP includes a 75-page zine. Can you hear my faintest breath, is it amplified? The other lines could have a lot of different meanings so I'm not going to attempt it. Ocean ringed with tile = obviously bathtub. So please, please, please, release me. I know that's not your style but it certainly will be mine if I can't make this right. We will all be out, soon, an ocean ringed with tile.
HAVE A NICE LIFE DEATHCONSCIOUSNESS ALBUM COVER SKIN
Once again describing the skin condition and how, being confined to the tub, his diseased limbs "rooted" him to where he was. unconscious trees with roots deep in the ground He spent the majority of this time in an ice bath as it was the only thing that would soothe his condition. JPM had a deliberating skin condition for the three years leading up to his assassination. All copies of the vinyl ship with this so no need to purchase separately if you have ordered the vinyl. We get frequent requests to purchase this separately so we are putting it up for order here.
Composed over a five year period, Deathconsciousness was produced with only the most basic equipment, is accompanied by a 70 page booklet describing a. This is the 70 page book/zine that comes with Have a Nice Life’s Deathconsciousness vinyl. Here's a line-by-line interpretation of how I see it relating to JPM: Tim Macuga and Dan Barretts musical project is as much an ambitious and frustrating piece of conceptual art as it is a crushing and soaring rock record. It's probably using his death as a metaphor, but I'm not going to get in to that because it's mostly all subjective. My InterpretationFrom my understanding of this song, it's describing the death of Jean-Paul Marat (also on the album cover).