This song’s been getting a lot of play time in the car’s CD player lately. The discordantness of the music is hard to get used to at first, then it just…grows on you. Then you start listening to the lyrics and realize holy shit, they’re saying something. Something political, even.
B.Y.O.B. — System of a Down
Bring Your Own Bombs. © 2005 System of a Down
(my comments in italics)
Why do they always send the poor?
sending the poor to fight the war, instead of the middle and/or upper classes
Barbarisms by Barbaras
With pointed heels
Victorious victories kneel
For brand new spankin’ deals
this is interesting because it seems to point towards the current Bush administration and its various atricious actions, then having some moral victories that are set aside in favor of new “better” action
Marching forward hypocritic and
Hypnotic computers
You depend on our protection
Yet you feed us lies from the tablecloth
Those in support of the current policies continuing forward as automatons that ignore their hypocrisy. However, those same people depend on protection of their freedoms by the poor (those sent to war) and they still lie to them (lies from the tablecloth could reference watching the evening news while eating dinner)
Everybody’s going to the party have a real good time
Dancing in the desert blowing up the sunshine
I think, fairly apparently, that’s got to be the war in Iraq. This is also the verse where the song switches from hardcore metal to a catchy pop-like tune. An interesting foil to what’s actually happening, which isn’t dancing in the desert or anything nice like the pop-tune of this chorus.
Kneeling roses disappearing into
Moses’ dry mouth
Breaking into Fort Knox stealing
Our intentions
back to the hard metal with this verse. Kneeling roses could refer to those masses continuing to blindly back Bush (reference to burning bush and Moses’ dry mouth being Bush?). And now the representative of our nation (bush) and his followers (who have disappeared within his presence) breaking into our inner selves/integrity (symbolized by Fort Knox?) and stealing our intentions and misrepresenting them.
Hangers sitting dripped in oil
Crying freedom
Handed to obsoletion
Still you feed us lies from the tablecloth
The military posts seeped with the desert oil, still saying it’s all for freedom, but without finding any WMD’s, it’s obsolete, yet the evening news tells us it’s still about the freedom of the Iraqi people.
Everybody’s going to the party have a real good time
Dancing in the desert blowing up the sunshine
Everybody’s going to the party have a real good time
Dancing in the desert blowing up the sunshine
Back to the catchy pop-tune, referring back to the war and where all the “people” are
Blast off
It’s party time
And we don’t live in a fascist nation
the followers’ self denial, that all’s good, and our nation isn’t in the wrong at all
Blast off
It’s party time
And where the fuck are you?
and all those war supporters, why aren’t they in the war? (at the party)?
Where the fuck are you?
Where the fuck are you?
mmm. self-evident.
Why don’t presidents fight the war?
Why do they always send the poor?
Pretty damn good question.
The rest of the song is repeats of chorus, melodies and verses. Fairly evidently anti-war and interestingly so. I just find myself liking this song more and more. I’m certain other people have other interpretations of the lyrics, so more discussion of them would be cool.
