[blind-democracy] Now I feel stupid.

  • From: "Roger Loran Bailey" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
  • To: blind-democracy <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 9 Jun 2021 20:17:23 -0400

This is interesting. I really do not pay much attention to music anymore. I haven't for years. However, because of a recent minor dispute in an automobile with a guy who was giving me a ride I posted a link here to a Led Zeppelin song to get your opinions about the subject of that dispute. That got me started on something. First I posted a link to a Led Zeppelin song that I thought Carl might like and then I found myself nostalgia tripping. I started looking up pieces of music that I remembered from my distant past and listened to them while, I suppose, reliving my youth. Well, earlier today I was looking for a Black Sabbath song that I could not remember the name of. I did remember a line from it though. The line was, Take your body to a copse. I Googled that phrase. On the whole entire Internet I found only two hits that had web pages with that phrase in it. One of those hits was a thread in a discussion list and the subject line was, misheard lyrics in songs. I started reading the thread and various people were offering anecdotes about how they had heard lyrics wrong and had thought a song was saying one thing for years when it was actually saying something else. At least a couple of people said that even after they learned that they had heard a song wrong they still thought of it as saying what they misheard and that every time they thought about the song they thought about it with the wrong lyrics. I was reminded of something I once heard a radio disk jocky laughing about in a bar. I suppose he couldn't laugh about this on the air. There is a song with the title Imminence Front. The title is repeated several times in the song itself. What he was laughing about was someone who called in to request the song and had obviously misheard it. The caller was calling it Livin' In Huts. Anyway, as I was reading this thread I came to the post that contained the phrase, Take your body to a copse. She was saying that in the Black Sabbath song, Behind the Walls of Sleep, there was a      that said, turns your body to a corpse and for years she had heard it as take your body to a copse. Good grief! Had I been hearing it wrong in that same way all along too? Well, I had a title now, so I Googled Behind the Walls of Sleep and I found the You Tube video of exactly the song I had been looking for. Just before the video, though, there was another hit that had the lyrics to the song. Looking at those lyrics I saw that, indeed, the line in question did read, turns your body to a corpse. So then I listened to the video. I am not going to provide a link to it here this time unless someone asks for it because I expect that you guys will be saying the same thing about how you can't listen to that heavy metal music. But I listened to it and still enjoyed it and I listened very carefully when the line in question came up. Yes, it was saying turns your body to a corpse and with that corrected it actually fit into the song as a whole much better and made the song make more sense. I can see how the mistake was made too. It was Ozzy Osbourne's British accent. His accent deemphasized the R sounds to the point that they could hardly be heard and I suppose my mind just substituted the words that most closely matched the sounds I was hearing. Nevertheless, I feel stupid now. This means that for about fifty years now I thought it was saying one thing when it was actually saying something else. Fifty years! Wouldn't that make you feel stupid?


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Irvin D. Yalom “Truth," Nietzsche continued, "is arrived at through disbelief and skepticism, not through a childlike wishing something were so! Your patient's wish to be in God's hands is not truth. It is simply a child's wish—and nothing more! It is a wish not to die, a wish for the eveastingly bloated nipple we have labeled 'God'! Evolutionary theory scientifically demonstrates God's redundancy—though Darwin himself had not the courage to follow his evidence to its true conclusion. Surely, you must realize that we created God, and that all of us together now have killed him.” ― Irvin D. Yalom, When Nietzsche Wept

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