Reminds me of a scene from the book, On a Pale Horse. Death is collecting souls from a battlefield, and War comes to happily talk about how the war is going. War is basically praising a child who just died killing a guy, and Death yells at him for the obvious horror of that. And War just gets calm and cold and says: "If you so despise me and what I do, then then fix the problems that lead to me. War is the last resort of those who have nothing else. Never forget that." Gives the same vibes.
I wish that it was true that war was the last resort of those who have nothing else. But it's not. War is just politics through non political means. It's the poor dying for the rich, or for religion, or for those who control them.
"Those who trade freedom for security deserve neither." "Better to die on your feet than to live on your knees." "Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same." "Freedom is never given; it is won."
I have only recently discovered Leslie Fish’s music, near the beginning of the lockdowns. Throughout this past year, the music has brought me a sense of wonder and appreciation for our world and the wonderful stories in it, despite our current circumstances. Ever since I was a child, mythology and the world religions (including my own faith) fascinated me, but I had never found anyone in my young generation willing to talk about them. Mostly because they assume the past has nothing to offer. Ms Fish is different, her music awakens the old world and rekindles the ancient spark of magic left by our ancestors. The muses truly speak through Leslie Fish!
Which generation? I am between 15 and 25, and I am taking a class in classical mythology (Greek and Roman mythology) and love learning about differences in mythology and religions. I think it's more the older generation discourages us from looking at things that are "fables" because its "not real". Yet it affects history so much, same with religion.
@@juliannedewitt4288 no its about understanding the human condition. We will always fight and make war, without that drive for freedom we will not progress
I'm between 15 and 25 as well and I really enjoy talking about and analyzing old religions and myths, particularly the greek and roman ones. I am not religious myself though, beyond a vague sense of 'everything comes from something and everything goes back to it once it dies'.
@@EllAntares Sto means "I stand", thus the name means "I always stand". Also, I since changed my name from Solace the Satanist Girl. Just for the record :P
So, if I understand correctly, the Old God and the Man that no Man Obeys are basically the representation of war and the representation of Humanity respectively. After all, no one obeys Humanity itself. It has no laws, no authority. But Humanity itself can feel that it is being destroyed by war, and asks the Old God to make war cease to end the suffering it causes. But in the end, Humanity yearns for freedom more than for the willingness to pay the price for total peace, and asks the Old God to undo what he had done, which he does, except making so that no man "rules in the world at all", thus taking away the fifth reason "some king's lies" forever, making all Mankind forever fight for life, freedom, wealth or land but never for the lies of rulers.
That would be a beautiful interpretation but I doubt is the intent and certainly not how I interpreted it. I saw it that the first Four reasons were within the power of the Gods, but the Fifth was purely a creation of Man himself and not within their power to permanently abolish. Man acknowledged the Five causes of War and deemed Four entirely inadequate and thus asked for Peace; and so the Old God took away all the causes of War, including the one he himself was the God of and the one he had no power over as a consequence. The One Lord simply had no need for the Man created 'Lies of Kings' once he controlled the Four God given causes of War. I believe the Old God to be a god of Knowledge, Wisdom, and Freedom. We speak casually of 'Painful Truths' but the hardest one is that Freedom has a Price.
@@ThePodVon It's specifically the author's intent that The Old God is a representation of all the gods of war of the past, Ares, Mars, Thor, Tyr, Perun and more.
So, I had a somewhat neat idea that I felt like sharing. The god says he remembers what the human forgets, yeah? So what if, the whole song was a circle. Humanity dislikes war because it brings death an destruction, so they ask the god to get rid of it, which results in yet another situation they don't like, so the god takes away the ruler. But then over a (long) period of time humanity returns to their starting position, some people take power, there's lords and war again, which in turn results in humanity asking the god to make the wars stop, starting the circle all over again. & then the god's like "I remember how this went like the last time, you're gonna regret this, I was the one who gave it to you in the first place, after you asked no less." (which is why the good "remembers what the human forgets" & also why he is a god of war)
There's a BBC iirc interview with a Palestinian rebel that stuck with me. Journalist asks him why he doesn't make peace, stop fighting, He asks if he means for him to surrender, accept the status quo, and the interviewer says surely that is better than all the death and suffering the fighting causes His reply was that to them, life without freedom on their own lands is not worth living
I have always thought something similar. The Man appeals to the Old God of Knowledge and Wisdom assuming that those will be the key to Peace. The Old God reminds the Man of what he has forgotten, that the Old God is also a God of War. The Old God removes all Five causes and eventually the Man begs for release from his wish. The Old God restores only Four and bids the Man to remember this. Of course, Man will once again forget this Knowledge and Wisdom as he himself restores the Fifth. I feel the key here is the reference to 'Four of Five'. The Man and the Old God are not referencing the same 'Four'.
@@sabotabby3372 Ghassan Kanafani of the Poopular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Why not just talk? No. I have never seen any talk between a colonialist and a national liberation movement But despite this, why not talk? Talk about what? Talk about the possibility of not fighting Talk about stop fighting, why? Talk to stop fight to stop the death and the misery, the destruction and the pain The misery and the destruction and the pain and the death of whom? Of Palestinians. Of Israelis. Of Arabs Of the Palestinian people who are uprooted, thrown in the camps, living in starvation, killed for twenty years and forbidden to use even the name "Palestinians"? They are better that way than dead though Maybe to you. But to us, it's not
@@ThePodVon Quite possible. Though the old man himself is listing his 4 when he laments the peace the god created. The one he isn't "missing" is the war "because of some kings lies" . Which is most likely the one thing humanity itself will bring back in time. Then again, one could also wonder what cause of war is the one the man sees as able to appease the dead. Life in itself or freedom as something precious ? depending on the answer, the song can shift somewhat in its possible interpretations.
Very interesting art choices, effective as all heck. I hadn't remembered this version had an added chorus and I really like those voices backing up Leslie. Definitely would love more of these as time permits.
I truly love this song. It's the first of Leslie's songs I ever heard, and it's so beautiful, that it inspired me to write and record my own songs. Not that I'd dream of being as good as this song, but this music just gets my creative juices flowing. Thank you for this song.
i'm glad i found this buried song. there are many gems on this platform that are buried waiting to be found. often you have to wade through the mediocre and trash to find them and it gets tiresome. often you ask is it worth it to continue but when you finally find that sparkly dazzling gem it confirms that yes, yes it was worth it. and this is such a gem. a fine addition to my collection.
Honestly love Leslie, I don't know much about her, but man do I love Carmen Miranda's Ghost. That album really helped me through my worst days, and some of my favorite songs were her songs from that album.
I sent this to a friend and he said the line "Not all wisdom brings joy" is confusing and at first I didn't understand why he thought so as I automatically assumed the Wisdom of War as a necessity was what the song was referencing. I have no clue if this is the correct interpretation but ether way I love playing this music while I write between these songs , Vindsvept - The Scarlet King, and Carmen Miranda's Ghost I have had major moments of inspiration so thank you!
Understanding terrible truths (such as the necessity of war), is still wisdom, but since those truths are in fact terrible, there's no joy in that wisdom
I will also say, sometimes wisdom is just understanding that the answer you've found, even if it's not a great answer, is the best one currently available. And that also is not a realization that is filled with joy either. But sometimes an important one.
I started listening to Leslie Fish because of Kipling's "Dane-geld" poem which I love. I stayed for the good music and even better lyrics. Thanks for a new favourite singer!
This is a very good and meaningful song, truth of war is that it is an ugly necessity of our existence but one that shouldn't be done lightly. The song also makes it where any old god fits in it as well, from the faiths that still stay around like the Abraham ones, Hinduism, to even the old ones that fall into history and mythology. It is an ancient truth that rings out. For there to be peace, men prepare for war and fight to defend and preserve freedom and what they hold to be true and just. We may never agree on the reasons, after all, for war there has to be disagreement, but when war is finish, peace is seen. When peace is seen for too long, men make the conditions for strife and suffering, calling for war of some form to set it right once more
Very rarely in life, I find something new and instantly I fear losing it. This song is now one of those things, so I'm desperately rushing to memorise the lyrics. What amazes me even more, these words are engraving themselves upon my tongue like few others have...
Call me completely crazy, but I swear there's a nod to the melody of this song in "City On The Mesa" from the Horizon Zero Dawn OST. Not directly copied, but... like an echo, almost. A little gesture towards a song that'd fit the local king as well as being a warning he'd be better off keeping in mind. (Watsonian perspective: a remnant of a song one of the Old Ones liked enough to copy it onto a personal device someone later unearthed?) Just imagine someone writing music for videogames being enough of an SF&F fan to have listened to filk, what a thought! Anyway, I'm *so* glad to see an official lyrics vid for this after so many years.
I love the Introduction because it tells that the human is already a Slave so he sees any progress as good progress. He does not see the wider picture.
Ancient Greeks had a stories like this... In Greek myth, a king named Sisyphus had a clever plan to cheat death, by trapping the God of Death known as Thanatos in his own chains... This interestingly resulted in nobody dying, which made war very awkward and the God of War known as Ares among other gods were very pissed off about this because why do wars if no one is dying... So they freed Thanatos but Sisyphus again survived death again by convincing Persephone to let him out of the Underworld due to his wife not giving him a proper funeral... Then the god Hermes dragged him back to the Underworld and by this point the gods were so over Sisyphus' bullshit that they sent him to Tartarus where he is famously punished into pushing a boulder to get it to the top of the hill except every time he gets close the boulder rolls back down to the bottom and he must try again... And that's where the term 'sisyphean' comes from to describe a task that is requiring continuous effort that is overall pointless... Aside from that there's also another person sent to Tartarus I know of where their punishment was basically to be starving/thirsty forever and like, whenever they'd reach for water it'd move away from them, and whenever they'd grab fruit or some other food it's immediately rot and wither away... That was King Tantalus (who, come to think about it, is probably where the word 'tantalizing' comes from which actually makes a lot of sense because if something is tantalizing it looks very nice but is essentially just out of your reach... And that's exactly Tantalus' problem in Tartarus...)
I think you missed the point of the song. War isn't good, in fact its contemptible. But without war we would be slaves to tyranny, and freedom is worth killing and dying for.
@@Florp777 I think this is more of a semantic argument. I don't think of good or bad as right and wrong. I would say that having liberty and freedom is good and tyranny is bad. However in a situation where ultimate survival(avoiding extinction of a group) depends on tyranny, then it is better to have a tyrant until the situation has passed. It is the right thing to do in that moment to do evil. As a very simple example. Rule of law. Law and rulers inherently oppress natural rights like the right to steal and the right to kill. The situation is that society would struggle to function and other rights would be damaged without that oppression. Its fine if we're a tiny village or hunter gatherer society, not so much if we want to develop the technology to leave the planet. However once we were to leave the planet, assuming we can solve individual scarcity and manufacturing, then the situation where we need that oppression passes and we can return to tiny village or hunter gatherer style of society. Right and wrong are paths to the goal. Good, Bad, and Better are moral judgements on actions, with Better being the goal we can never reach.
There were quite a few things I did not understood initially. Then were was two. One about why God took away 5 reasons and gave back 4 when man asked only to take away 4. I also thought that man wanted to keep lies of some ruler in place instead of their lives. This song is surprisingly deep and I do enjoy thinking about it. It is a refreshing take on an industry in general which annoys me with just how overwhelmingly stupid everyone is. This has the opposite effect on me, I wonder how man could be so wise as to create something like this. In my view songs like these are the best that humanity has to offer as songs like these are truly worth listening to.
The thing that the god could not give back is Life. The people who had died under the honest supreme ruler were already dead and could not be restored. Also, the war that resulted from the 4 being given back would end many lives. When the man initially says "four of those five...are not enough to appease the dead," the one he is leaving out is Life--because being returned to life would obviously appease the dead. When the god says "four of those five you may still regret," the one he is leaving out is "some king's lies." No one wants to fight a war for a king's lies, but Wealth, Land, Freedom, and Life are all things that people are willing to fight for.
@@celiamalm129 He said life is one of the sources of war. And when he said he would give back 4 of the five sources of war, it depends on how you interpret life as a source. Is it the value of life and to preserve life? Or is it life itself which can cause war? If it is the prior, the old god likely would have given that back. Despite dying and starving under the king, they did not treat life as a source of war because that was part of the deal and could not. Freedom seems like it would factor in here, and in a sense it does. Freedom is typically defined as freedom of something or from something. If you cannot declare your freedom from anything, you can be enslaved by anything. So freedom is kind of broad and is usually paired with explanations as to what you are freed from. Because freedom itself as a word is far too broad. It needs to have a cultural, societal, explicit or implicit elaboration. Therefore, depending on the nature of the restrictions as part of the deal, well it can vary... If it means that freedom itself, whatever that may be, simply cannot be used as the only excuse to wage a war, then perhaps that means that life is an appropriate excuse to wage war. So from the human's perspective, freedom would be a selfish reason to wage war, unless it had to do with freedom from death because the ultimate prioritization here is an attempt to minimize death and maximize life. So this would work as some kind of overriding factor, where freedom itself is deemed as unworthy a cause to wage war, unless it is multifaceted and considers the reason of life. Of course another interpretation could be, that because freedom from death is life, it could be that the restriction on freedom as a source for war, could function in a way that makes it so that life as a source for war simply cannot ever be brought to fruition because in this case, an aspect of the broad term freedom intermingles with the desire for life. But since the restriction states that war cannot be waged for the cause of freedom, this means that it cannot be waged for the cause of life. In this particular song, This is represented by an incompetent or cruel rule, in which the aspect of freedom is kind of straightforward here. But you can see how these two intermingle within the song. After there is forced peace, there is just as much, if not more death due to other sources such as starvation. The desire then is for freedom from said factors, but no one can wage war for the cause of freedom. So would this mean that the goal of preserving life could not be achieved because wars cannot be waged for the cause of freedom, or, do the restrictions work in a different way which I already explained would be that the source of life would override any restrictions regarding freedom, and even if freedom could be associated with the war for life, it is not the highest exalted reason, therefore is simply overridden and does not play in as a factor? Or, as I also explained, are the restrictions like, if one of the boxes are checked that aren't justified, the whole thing is unjustified? Can you not wage war if any of the categories are part of the cause for war? In that case, if the cause for freedom happens to align with your cause for life, well, the freedom overrides what is deemed as and acceptable cause for the dead. And because things are intertwined, such as wealth and land can also play a part in the minimizing of death, because of these core factors that are restricted, the cause for life simply is always impossible to justify, because it relies on so many of the others, which are banned. So then the human would see that wars are waged for these purposes solely for greed, but what he forgets, is that it is not so simply defined, and he is only focusing on the worst aspects of them. And in such, he forgets how they could possibly be used as a good or justified reason. The reason I brought all that up, is because it's a question I had and it never really was answered in the story. Because the old god simply removed all five of the reasons, including life. Though I was pondering what the potential ramifications could have been, the song conveniently kind of just ignores whatever restrictions it was trying to play, by making it simplified. Which, fair enough for it. I don't really blame it for that. It just leaves me questions that I want to ponder in a what if scenario. Which potentially is simply unavoidable for any type of song or story, because things just go a certain way and there are possible alternatives that you will simply ponder about. I think that the implication is that he cannot take away at least 3 of the sources without taking away the fourth or the rest. I think that may be rather vaguely implied that it was an all or nothing deal. And perhaps the human, assumed that giving up the capability to wage wars for the preservation of life, was a good enough price to pay for restricting the other seemingly greedy ideals. Meaning he thought that overall it would result in less deaths. It is kind of skimmed over and I'm not surprised that people missed it. Because, it's very loosely implied. And it's also retroactively implied, and when he says he removed all five reasons when the human said four of them weren't justified, then you retroactively reason. Well, that's how the deal simply must have worked. Unless you want to try and argue otherwise, but the rules are vague enough that we don't really have an answer one way or another, we just need to assume. Assume that the old god did not just arbitrarily take all five away when he didn't need to, because that kind of taints the whole lesson, because then it could be argued that the main consideration or take away from the story was only caused by an intentionally sabotaged "answer," essentially equating to a strawman. However, if the interpretation of life as a source of war, is the latter, in that life causes war, then your interpretation would make more sense. He either can't or refuses to give back the lives that were lost. The problem with this interpretation, is that if life is the cause of war, then when the old god said he would give back all but one source, that doesn't really make sense, because life would still be a cause of war at least when we regard their words and meanings in a manner of consistency. There is obviously still life, and It can still wage war. Yet he didn't give it back? I guess this could potentially be answered if the interpretation is that he is not being literal, and when he says he will give four back, It is symbolic of the lives that are lost, therefore again he is not being literal. What does that mean about the first part of the song? When life is considered one of the sources for war? My only answer is that even then he was implying that life causes war or is a cause for war, yet always seems to persist in the equation, and he was only truly able to take away four of the factors, but by proxy that affected life, (but then why didn't he say he took 4 away instead of all 5) and so that is essentially taking away life, because as we saw, people still died at huge rates, the source of war that was life, was actively being taken away, rather than strictly taken away and banished like the other four reasons. My problem with this is that it is quite a stretch and it is a bit extrapolated. I don't think it is well enough represented by the language of the song to imply this, it's just one of the potential conclusions you can come to when you really try and dissect the song. It's one of the potential logical conclusions, but that doesn't mean they're writing or the song itself necessarily portrayed it very well. Alternatively, the cause for war being life is different in the first half of the song, then the last half of the song, allowing him to equate not giving back life with the lives that were lost, even though this wouldn't really make sense in the first half of the song. The issue with this, is that again, this is extrapolated and it's simply inconsistent, and you can't blame anyone for not catching on to it. There is no notable change of language or categorization where you can notice a subtle shift in what is being talked about. There are not many reasons to believe either of these theories when dissecting the words and meaning of the song itself. These are only retroactive ways to justify what was said. The problem with the prior interpretation, is that it implies when he says he will give four of the five back, that the one he does not give back, are king's lies. However, this doesn't really tie into the song, it doesn't have a direct correlation, in fact, it is said that the cruel king did not ever even utter a lie. So why is the culmination of all this, the removal of a king's ability to lie? It doesn't make symbolic sense. There are no parallels drawn. It also makes me wonder, what is the purpose of even addressing the "king's lies"? Is it simply a red herring? This song does come across as vague and I do think that reflects on its writing. It is catchy though. My main question is though, what is the meaning of "the sun is also a warrior?" Does it mean simply that the sun gives life, or is required for life, yet can also kill... Does it actively kill or does it just have the capacity to kill potentially? And if so, how does that categorize one as a warrior? That would of course be based on one's subjective differentiating perception of what the word warrior means.
Well, politicians often lie to the public so they can get all the votes they want. That's a really harsh reality of life. We can't really get away with it, y'know.
Hi there! is there a way Leslie Fish can be reached for an interview? well I'm not a journalist or anything, just meaning to ask a couple of questions about the origins of Filk and whatnot.
Y'know, we tried doing a video with Kanef a few years ago, but I think both he (and the animator) lost interest and stopped following up - so I had to cancel it. Nowadays there's too many filk album projects we're trying to finish to spend money on anything else. If you want to make a video and post it on UA-cam, I'm guessing he'd be supportive - I know Leslie would be!
@@elig9401 The only filk video I ever made was one for Tom Smith's "Dark Country" a number of years ago (Still on my channel as my demo video), but I no longer have the hardware or software I used to edit the dang thing...
Yes! It is indeed a shame that UA-cam disables comments on all "art tracks", including Leslie's songs, without recourse. We miss the comments, and the ability to have meaningful interactions with listeners. But UA-cam has decided that they know better.
@@manauser362 Yeah. Feel free to Google for 'youtube art tracks comments disabled' and you'll find a lot more about it. I'd share links but YT hides the comments. ;-( - Eli
Are you the person who sang all the Valdemar songs? I've been listening to them for about a year now and they fill me with inspiration to write, and now i find this! This is a gold mine :D
You can also interpret this (loosely) as a conversation between the personification of Life (Peace) and Death (War) Life asks Death why so many need to die because their innocence can’t understand why such horrible things happen. Death sheds light for Life to illustrate that for all things, one cannot justly exist without the other. My interpretation, at least
It's different in each verse. The only one the man thinks is a good enough reason for war is Life. The god is pointing out that everything except a king's lies is something that the man will regret losing. Eventually, the god gives back everything except Life, which he can't give back because all the people who died are already dead.
I took the 5th, in a convoluted way, to be "some king's lies." The one lord does tell the truth, owns all land, all wealth, all freedom, and the power of life and death; the overthrowing war is to regain the last four, and doing so isn't based on a lie, so the 5th isn't in effect/isn't something the god needs to restore for the war to happen. It is also symmetric, because the man earlier says "four of those five are not enough to appease the dead;" presumably he's leaving out lies as being obviously not even worth mentioning as a worthy motivation.
@@TomG1555 My interpretation is he considered 'Life' a worthy justification for war, in the face of the alternative for their people if they didn't fight, whereas the other four weren't worthy in his eyes.
Really like the song ! But somehow I can't figure out a meaning for the one line that is also the title of the song. I must be so dumb. If anyone has an interpretation for it, feel free to share it with me ;)
Maybe how the Sun brings life but can also bring immense amounts of death so in this it is also a warrior even if it has often been worshipped as Life incarnate.
I came here from the Valhalla song. I see comments are turned off there so I hope I'm not being disrespectful. I was just curious if this anachronist society still exists and, if so, what name it goes by? I was hoping to look into it and see if it maybe had a branch near me I could check about joining.
Yes! That's the Society of Creative Anachronism - they're definitely still active! (And so sorry about the disabled comments, for details on that, just Google for "UA-cam comments are now disabled on all auto-generated music" and you'll see lots of other frustrated people -- including me.)
Im pretty sure the god was doing some trickery. The man admits that of the five reasons for war, he can only accept one of them. The one reason is probally freedom as its the thing that he starts war anew for. The god must have know this and so gave him a king that would deny freedom. Thus winning the man to his side and ensuring that, at least for a time, the people wouldn't wish to stop having wars.
No, the one reason is presumably life. Since the line following that one right after in the song is ‘are not enough to please the dead’. Which implies that the man believes that as long as people are killed war is wrong.
@@jameskowanko7574 This, the first half is "only defense of life is worth waring for" The second half is realizing the other 3 causes he might regret (freedom, wealth, land) are worth fighting for sometimes at the cost of life, though neither side defends "some kings lies" all the kings lies that might exist on some level come from the other 4, for though there were no lords in the immediacy as power structures redeveloped (what humans do) the kings lies too would return.
@@EniochHL Leslie answers in the liner notes -- prometheus-music.com/print/Avalon_is_Risen_Booklet.pdf "...a hymn to Apollo, Mars or Mithra, this is another commentary on the hard realities of life." - Eli
A fascinating song, but I believe that all lords trace their ownership back to the spoils of war, and all laws are made by violence. How could one man come to own all things if he nor his servants could threaten anyone's life to get them?
Been thinking that too. I have a couple speculations. Maybe the ruler is a silver tongue who gained his power through guile, technical truths, and charisma, and with the causes of war removed nobody can unseat or outfox said ruler. Another idea is maybe the ruler is well meaning, but incompetent and unwilling to step down. The power was mutually offered under the promise of centralized efficiency but then refuses to give it up as his edicts fall apart.
War and violent coersion are not synonymous. But even without explicit use of physical force, it is entirely.possible to attain and keep power. War is specifically the organised and directed use of violence to achieve some goal.
There are plenty of things to threaten a man with, even if you can't kill them direcly. You could take his food. You could take his shelter. You could take his freedom. And you could take his family. You can't kill them. But you can make them unable to be part of the society. If everybody is too afraid to speak up, then you could even fake a 100% aprooval rating when you have 5% (and the 5% are those that directly enforce your will). Of course such situation could be broken by somebody being brave or desperate enough to publicly denounce you, but if war is impossible, toppling a tyrant is almost impossible.
“The great only appear great because we are on our knees” James Larkin aka Jim Larkin or just Big Jim. (1874-1947). Irish Republican. socialist and Trade Union leader. In other words the kind of guy regularly maligned by the political and media establishment and their fellow travellers.
I am a wise man. I understood the secret truth of Christianity. I understood the secret truth of Buddhism. And it did not bring me joy. Only grandchildren bring joy.
I just wrote a lengthy rant about why, despite being anti-war, I think we need to support Ukraine by continuing to send them weapons. And then I remembered this song. This. This is why they are fighting. They don't want to, but they have to. I wonder how many years it's been since my my college friends last sang this together, and it was just a song for fantasy worlds and not reality. 35 years? I still know it almost by heart, but it feels so different when you're 20 vs over 50.
I have found several of Leslie's songs to be powerfully applicable to various events during my life. Knowledge can destroy, Wisdom can bring sorrow, Kindness may necessitate killing, and Remember what is worth fighting for! History repeats because we forget its lessens. I once spent three days humming 'The Day it Fell Apart' as an emotional defence mechanism. ua-cam.com/video/e4y802_Ot-k/v-deo.html&ab_channel=quizzlie I lived in a small town, there was an explosion in the chemical plant, I happened to work (thank god not in a hospital but) at the environmental laboratory responsible for monitoring the cleanup of the site - a shit ton of contaminated water from putting out the fires. The Lab where I worked was 15 miles away from where I lived, the Plant was a half mile away - I was off work sick that particular day and I heard/felt the explosion. Other than that song, and the constant update reports we could get hold of about the injured, that week passed in a blur for me.
If Russia stops fighting, there is no more war. If Ukraine stops fighting, there is no more Ukraine. Just becuase war is terrible does not mean that Ukraine should stop fighting.
@@elig9401 Good question. I guess whichever version i heard like at least 15 years ago. There was no male part in the chorus and there was a bit more of a flow to it. This one has some distinct pauses that weren't there before. Now that i think on it, it might have been closer to 20 years ago? I think i got it from a friend on IRC chat.
seems to depict the communist utopia and the fact that it isn't as ideal as what it seems when using it as a simplistic solution without critically thinking about the reality of what it will actually mean and the real consequences of it
Not communism. In communism, there would be no lord. That is part of the point of communism. But failed attempts at communism did have such results. And in this age, any attemt to create a large communism is doomed to failure, so you are close enough.
"War is an ugly thing. But it is not the ugliest thing."
-John Stuart Mill
Not as ugly as your mom *huarr huarr huarr*
Ever have to use the word "pulchritudinous" or "pulchrid" because someone was so obnoxiously hopeful and positive?
@@jamescheddar4896
I live in Utah; they're called "Mormons", and I find them to be like the human equivalent of an annoying litter of puppies.
Dawson’s Christian brought me down this rabbit hole and I’m all for it
Ironically this rabbit hole has so far led me to Dawson's Christian
I’m in the same boat! It’s been a great dive.
So the same story mate 😅
Same and I am Here For It
Tale as old as time it would seem
Reminds me of a scene from the book, On a Pale Horse. Death is collecting souls from a battlefield, and War comes to happily talk about how the war is going. War is basically praising a child who just died killing a guy, and Death yells at him for the obvious horror of that. And War just gets calm and cold and says: "If you so despise me and what I do, then then fix the problems that lead to me. War is the last resort of those who have nothing else. Never forget that." Gives the same vibes.
Sounds amazing
Behold, a pale horse
Incarnations of Immortality was a great series in lots of ways. Shame Piers Anthony turned out to have so many issues. :/
I wish that it was true that war was the last resort of those who have nothing else. But it's not. War is just politics through non political means. It's the poor dying for the rich, or for religion, or for those who control them.
War is raw and costly dealings with the reaper of souls
"Those who trade freedom for security deserve neither."
"Better to die on your feet than to live on your knees."
"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same."
"Freedom is never given; it is won."
The first qoute is actually "Those who trade essential liberties for temporary security deserve neither freedom nor security" -Benjamin Franklin
The morale of the balled
“There’s no sin in fighting for the right reason”
"The Sun is also a warrior" is such a heavy line my goodness.
I choose to also interpret it as "the son is also a warrior," meaning that a person can be both constructive and destructive
@@candiman4243that makes a lot more sense. That particular verse was confusing me. Seemed a cheap filler but your interpretation makes more sense.
I have only recently discovered Leslie Fish’s music, near the beginning of the lockdowns. Throughout this past year, the music has brought me a sense of wonder and appreciation for our world and the wonderful stories in it, despite our current circumstances. Ever since I was a child, mythology and the world religions (including my own faith) fascinated me, but I had never found anyone in my young generation willing to talk about them. Mostly because they assume the past has nothing to offer. Ms Fish is different, her music awakens the old world and rekindles the ancient spark of magic left by our ancestors. The muses truly speak through Leslie Fish!
Which generation? I am between 15 and 25, and I am taking a class in classical mythology (Greek and Roman mythology) and love learning about differences in mythology and religions. I think it's more the older generation discourages us from looking at things that are "fables" because its "not real". Yet it affects history so much, same with religion.
@@juliannedewitt4288 no its about understanding the human condition. We will always fight and make war, without that drive for freedom we will not progress
Old music is way better
History is the best, i like mythology and religion stuff aswell since it links into history
I'm between 15 and 25 as well and I really enjoy talking about and analyzing old religions and myths, particularly the greek and roman ones. I am not religious myself though, beyond a vague sense of 'everything comes from something and everything goes back to it once it dies'.
If you like leslie fishs' work here, you should look up filk music. You'll find a lot of her stuff, and a lot more artists that you may enjoy.
It's so obvious what this song says, yet something that never hit me before. I love the wisdom in here...
Yo just wanted to say your username is great.
@@Soundwave._ Thanks, I appreciate it! Don't forget to hydrate, you beautiful bean :)
@@TreespeakerOfTheLand Right back atcha mate
fi was short of fidelis. what sto is short of?
@@EllAntares Sto means "I stand", thus the name means "I always stand".
Also, I since changed my name from Solace the Satanist Girl. Just for the record :P
So, if I understand correctly, the Old God and the Man that no Man Obeys are basically the representation of war and the representation of Humanity respectively. After all, no one obeys Humanity itself. It has no laws, no authority. But Humanity itself can feel that it is being destroyed by war, and asks the Old God to make war cease to end the suffering it causes.
But in the end, Humanity yearns for freedom more than for the willingness to pay the price for total peace, and asks the Old God to undo what he had done, which he does, except making so that no man "rules in the world at all", thus taking away the fifth reason "some king's lies" forever, making all Mankind forever fight for life, freedom, wealth or land but never for the lies of rulers.
That would be a beautiful interpretation but I doubt is the intent and certainly not how I interpreted it.
I saw it that the first Four reasons were within the power of the Gods, but the Fifth was purely a creation of Man himself and not within their power to permanently abolish.
Man acknowledged the Five causes of War and deemed Four entirely inadequate and thus asked for Peace; and so the Old God took away all the causes of War, including the one he himself was the God of and the one he had no power over as a consequence. The One Lord simply had no need for the Man created 'Lies of Kings' once he controlled the Four God given causes of War.
I believe the Old God to be a god of Knowledge, Wisdom, and Freedom. We speak casually of 'Painful Truths' but the hardest one is that Freedom has a Price.
@@ThePodVon It's specifically the author's intent that The Old God is a representation of all the gods of war of the past, Ares, Mars, Thor, Tyr, Perun and more.
So, I had a somewhat neat idea that I felt like sharing. The god says he remembers what the human forgets, yeah?
So what if, the whole song was a circle. Humanity dislikes war because it brings death an destruction, so they ask the god to get rid of it, which results in yet another situation they don't like, so the god takes away the ruler. But then over a (long) period of time humanity returns to their starting position, some people take power, there's lords and war again, which in turn results in humanity asking the god to make the wars stop, starting the circle all over again. & then the god's like "I remember how this went like the last time, you're gonna regret this, I was the one who gave it to you in the first place, after you asked no less." (which is why the good "remembers what the human forgets" & also why he is a god of war)
There's a BBC iirc interview with a Palestinian rebel that stuck with me.
Journalist asks him why he doesn't make peace, stop fighting,
He asks if he means for him to surrender, accept the status quo, and the interviewer says surely that is better than all the death and suffering the fighting causes
His reply was that to them, life without freedom on their own lands is not worth living
I have always thought something similar.
The Man appeals to the Old God of Knowledge and Wisdom assuming that those will be the key to Peace.
The Old God reminds the Man of what he has forgotten, that the Old God is also a God of War.
The Old God removes all Five causes and eventually the Man begs for release from his wish.
The Old God restores only Four and bids the Man to remember this.
Of course, Man will once again forget this Knowledge and Wisdom as he himself restores the Fifth.
I feel the key here is the reference to 'Four of Five'. The Man and the Old God are not referencing the same 'Four'.
@@sabotabby3372 Ghassan Kanafani of the Poopular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Why not just talk?
No. I have never seen any talk between a colonialist and a national liberation movement
But despite this, why not talk?
Talk about what?
Talk about the possibility of not fighting
Talk about stop fighting, why?
Talk to stop fight to stop the death and the misery, the destruction and the pain
The misery and the destruction and the pain and the death of whom?
Of Palestinians. Of Israelis. Of Arabs
Of the Palestinian people who are uprooted, thrown in the camps, living in starvation, killed for twenty years and forbidden to use even the name "Palestinians"?
They are better that way than dead though
Maybe to you. But to us, it's not
@@ThePodVon
Quite possible. Though the old man himself is listing his 4 when he laments the peace the god created. The one he isn't "missing" is the war "because of some kings lies" .
Which is most likely the one thing humanity itself will bring back in time.
Then again, one could also wonder what cause of war is the one the man sees as able to appease the dead. Life in itself or freedom as something precious ?
depending on the answer, the song can shift somewhat in its possible interpretations.
That’s just human nature
Very interesting art choices, effective as all heck. I hadn't remembered this version had an added chorus and I really like those voices backing up Leslie. Definitely would love more of these as time permits.
Glad you liked it! Yup, there are two versions of the album.
I just put the "full" version back on Spotify a few months back. -- Eli
I truly love this song. It's the first of Leslie's songs I ever heard, and it's so beautiful, that it inspired me to write and record my own songs. Not that I'd dream of being as good as this song, but this music just gets my creative juices flowing. Thank you for this song.
i'm glad i found this buried song. there are many gems on this platform that are buried waiting to be found. often you have to wade through the mediocre and trash to find them and it gets tiresome. often you ask is it worth it to continue but when you finally find that sparkly dazzling gem it confirms that yes, yes it was worth it. and this is such a gem. a fine addition to my collection.
Honestly love Leslie, I don't know much about her, but man do I love Carmen Miranda's Ghost. That album really helped me through my worst days, and some of my favorite songs were her songs from that album.
@@lesliefish4753 oh ive followed you on facebook! Im happy you replied!
I sent this to a friend and he said the line "Not all wisdom brings joy" is confusing and at first I didn't understand why he thought so as I automatically assumed the Wisdom of War as a necessity was what the song was referencing. I have no clue if this is the correct interpretation but ether way I love playing this music while I write between these songs , Vindsvept - The Scarlet King, and Carmen Miranda's Ghost I have had major moments of inspiration so thank you!
Understanding terrible truths (such as the necessity of war), is still wisdom, but since those truths are in fact terrible, there's no joy in that wisdom
I will also say, sometimes wisdom is just understanding that the answer you've found, even if it's not a great answer, is the best one currently available. And that also is not a realization that is filled with joy either. But sometimes an important one.
I started listening to Leslie Fish because of Kipling's "Dane-geld" poem which I love. I stayed for the good music and even better lyrics. Thanks for a new favourite singer!
Thank you for healing
Wow! An old classic in new format. Very good!
So very glad to see these songs being re-released by the Grandmaster of Filk. Thank you very much.
It's so refreshing to hear a bit of sense and intelligence every once in a while.
Thanks for your ongoing gifts of this precious music, Eli!
Tyranny is not an acceptable cost of peace.
This is a very good and meaningful song, truth of war is that it is an ugly necessity of our existence but one that shouldn't be done lightly. The song also makes it where any old god fits in it as well, from the faiths that still stay around like the Abraham ones, Hinduism, to even the old ones that fall into history and mythology. It is an ancient truth that rings out. For there to be peace, men prepare for war and fight to defend and preserve freedom and what they hold to be true and just. We may never agree on the reasons, after all, for war there has to be disagreement, but when war is finish, peace is seen. When peace is seen for too long, men make the conditions for strife and suffering, calling for war of some form to set it right once more
An increasingly relevant message!
Very rarely in life, I find something new and instantly I fear losing it. This song is now one of those things, so I'm desperately rushing to memorise the lyrics. What amazes me even more, these words are engraving themselves upon my tongue like few others have...
“War was always here. Even before man was, war waited for him. The ultimate trade awaiting its ultimate practitioner"
The video looks awesome. Of course, the song is also awesome, but THAT was expected. :D
Thank you for making this music video! I have wanted to share this song with many people over the past few years.
This title is also kind of relatable in the context of this current heatwave.
A song that more people need to hear and think a while on.
Have shared on Facebook but dropping a comment here also, great work with the lyric video.
Love what you did with the video! This is such a great song! I do a lot of her songs, I've just started working on this, there's a LOT of lyrics!😂🥰
Oh wow - do you sing her songs, or have you done videos of them, too? Would love to see anything you've posted.
how does this not have 10mil views???
,,, this is mandalorian music if ever I’ve heard it
What I find interesting is that I found this song slightly before I really got into the filk genre
Call me completely crazy, but I swear there's a nod to the melody of this song in "City On The Mesa" from the Horizon Zero Dawn OST. Not directly copied, but... like an echo, almost. A little gesture towards a song that'd fit the local king as well as being a warning he'd be better off keeping in mind. (Watsonian perspective: a remnant of a song one of the Old Ones liked enough to copy it onto a personal device someone later unearthed?) Just imagine someone writing music for videogames being enough of an SF&F fan to have listened to filk, what a thought!
Anyway, I'm *so* glad to see an official lyrics vid for this after so many years.
This a masterpiece.why didn't I seen this before
To get this recommended to you...
Godspeed 🐸
Is the chorus what brings this song all together
DnD Character idea:
An Aasimar Paladin who is like this
Happy solstice
Thank you.
I love the Introduction because it tells that the human is already a Slave so he sees any progress as good progress. He does not see the wider picture.
Well done. Great video for a great song!
Excellent song!
thank you for all you have done......been a huge fan since 86
incredible song
I love this
Ancient Greeks had a stories like this... In Greek myth, a king named Sisyphus had a clever plan to cheat death, by trapping the God of Death known as Thanatos in his own chains... This interestingly resulted in nobody dying, which made war very awkward and the God of War known as Ares among other gods were very pissed off about this because why do wars if no one is dying... So they freed Thanatos but Sisyphus again survived death again by convincing Persephone to let him out of the Underworld due to his wife not giving him a proper funeral... Then the god Hermes dragged him back to the Underworld and by this point the gods were so over Sisyphus' bullshit that they sent him to Tartarus where he is famously punished into pushing a boulder to get it to the top of the hill except every time he gets close the boulder rolls back down to the bottom and he must try again...
And that's where the term 'sisyphean' comes from to describe a task that is requiring continuous effort that is overall pointless...
Aside from that there's also another person sent to Tartarus I know of where their punishment was basically to be starving/thirsty forever and like, whenever they'd reach for water it'd move away from them, and whenever they'd grab fruit or some other food it's immediately rot and wither away... That was King Tantalus (who, come to think about it, is probably where the word 'tantalizing' comes from which actually makes a lot of sense because if something is tantalizing it looks very nice but is essentially just out of your reach... And that's exactly Tantalus' problem in Tartarus...)
A new favorite song... oh my lol
What is this song about? Where can i read more about it? Brazilian here
A little late,but the message is basically that war is necessary for freedom.
“War is based” - Leslie Fish
I think you missed the point of the song.
War isn't good, in fact its contemptible. But without war we would be slaves to tyranny, and freedom is worth killing and dying for.
"Killing tyrants is based" - Leslie Fish
@@OspreyKnightso…it’s good. Considering that in such a sense, war is the equaliser and ability by which man remains free.
@@OspreyKnight That means it's good. Chemotherapy is good even though it makes you sick.
@@Florp777 I think this is more of a semantic argument.
I don't think of good or bad as right and wrong.
I would say that having liberty and freedom is good and tyranny is bad.
However in a situation where ultimate survival(avoiding extinction of a group) depends on tyranny, then it is better to have a tyrant until the situation has passed.
It is the right thing to do in that moment to do evil.
As a very simple example. Rule of law.
Law and rulers inherently oppress natural rights like the right to steal and the right to kill. The situation is that society would struggle to function and other rights would be damaged without that oppression.
Its fine if we're a tiny village or hunter gatherer society, not so much if we want to develop the technology to leave the planet.
However once we were to leave the planet, assuming we can solve individual scarcity and manufacturing, then the situation where we need that oppression passes and we can return to tiny village or hunter gatherer style of society.
Right and wrong are paths to the goal.
Good, Bad, and Better are moral judgements on actions, with Better being the goal we can never reach.
As soon as I put this music my budgie, Gorgie, began to tweet. Guess I'm going to listen often since he likes it so much lol
Yes this is good very good
There were quite a few things I did not understood initially. Then were was two. One about why God took away 5 reasons and gave back 4 when man asked only to take away 4. I also thought that man wanted to keep lies of some ruler in place instead of their lives. This song is surprisingly deep and I do enjoy thinking about it. It is a refreshing take on an industry in general which annoys me with just how overwhelmingly stupid everyone is. This has the opposite effect on me, I wonder how man could be so wise as to create something like this. In my view songs like these are the best that humanity has to offer as songs like these are truly worth listening to.
The thing that the god could not give back is Life. The people who had died under the honest supreme ruler were already dead and could not be restored. Also, the war that resulted from the 4 being given back would end many lives.
When the man initially says "four of those five...are not enough to appease the dead," the one he is leaving out is Life--because being returned to life would obviously appease the dead.
When the god says "four of those five you may still regret," the one he is leaving out is "some king's lies." No one wants to fight a war for a king's lies, but Wealth, Land, Freedom, and Life are all things that people are willing to fight for.
@@celiamalm129 He said life is one of the sources of war. And when he said he would give back 4 of the five sources of war, it depends on how you interpret life as a source. Is it the value of life and to preserve life? Or is it life itself which can cause war? If it is the prior, the old god likely would have given that back. Despite dying and starving under the king, they did not treat life as a source of war because that was part of the deal and could not.
Freedom seems like it would factor in here, and in a sense it does. Freedom is typically defined as freedom of something or from something. If you cannot declare your freedom from anything, you can be enslaved by anything. So freedom is kind of broad and is usually paired with explanations as to what you are freed from. Because freedom itself as a word is far too broad. It needs to have a cultural, societal, explicit or implicit elaboration. Therefore, depending on the nature of the restrictions as part of the deal, well it can vary... If it means that freedom itself, whatever that may be, simply cannot be used as the only excuse to wage a war, then perhaps that means that life is an appropriate excuse to wage war. So from the human's perspective, freedom would be a selfish reason to wage war, unless it had to do with freedom from death because the ultimate prioritization here is an attempt to minimize death and maximize life. So this would work as some kind of overriding factor, where freedom itself is deemed as unworthy a cause to wage war, unless it is multifaceted and considers the reason of life.
Of course another interpretation could be, that because freedom from death is life, it could be that the restriction on freedom as a source for war, could function in a way that makes it so that life as a source for war simply cannot ever be brought to fruition because in this case, an aspect of the broad term freedom intermingles with the desire for life. But since the restriction states that war cannot be waged for the cause of freedom, this means that it cannot be waged for the cause of life. In this particular song, This is represented by an incompetent or cruel rule, in which the aspect of freedom is kind of straightforward here. But you can see how these two intermingle within the song. After there is forced peace, there is just as much, if not more death due to other sources such as starvation. The desire then is for freedom from said factors, but no one can wage war for the cause of freedom.
So would this mean that the goal of preserving life could not be achieved because wars cannot be waged for the cause of freedom, or, do the restrictions work in a different way which I already explained would be that the source of life would override any restrictions regarding freedom, and even if freedom could be associated with the war for life, it is not the highest exalted reason, therefore is simply overridden and does not play in as a factor?
Or, as I also explained, are the restrictions like, if one of the boxes are checked that aren't justified, the whole thing is unjustified? Can you not wage war if any of the categories are part of the cause for war? In that case, if the cause for freedom happens to align with your cause for life, well, the freedom overrides what is deemed as and acceptable cause for the dead. And because things are intertwined, such as wealth and land can also play a part in the minimizing of death, because of these core factors that are restricted, the cause for life simply is always impossible to justify, because it relies on so many of the others, which are banned. So then the human would see that wars are waged for these purposes solely for greed, but what he forgets, is that it is not so simply defined, and he is only focusing on the worst aspects of them. And in such, he forgets how they could possibly be used as a good or justified reason.
The reason I brought all that up, is because it's a question I had and it never really was answered in the story. Because the old god simply removed all five of the reasons, including life. Though I was pondering what the potential ramifications could have been, the song conveniently kind of just ignores whatever restrictions it was trying to play, by making it simplified. Which, fair enough for it. I don't really blame it for that. It just leaves me questions that I want to ponder in a what if scenario. Which potentially is simply unavoidable for any type of song or story, because things just go a certain way and there are possible alternatives that you will simply ponder about.
I think that the implication is that he cannot take away at least 3 of the sources without taking away the fourth or the rest. I think that may be rather vaguely implied that it was an all or nothing deal. And perhaps the human, assumed that giving up the capability to wage wars for the preservation of life, was a good enough price to pay for restricting the other seemingly greedy ideals. Meaning he thought that overall it would result in less deaths. It is kind of skimmed over and I'm not surprised that people missed it. Because, it's very loosely implied. And it's also retroactively implied, and when he says he removed all five reasons when the human said four of them weren't justified, then you retroactively reason. Well, that's how the deal simply must have worked. Unless you want to try and argue otherwise, but the rules are vague enough that we don't really have an answer one way or another, we just need to assume. Assume that the old god did not just arbitrarily take all five away when he didn't need to, because that kind of taints the whole lesson, because then it could be argued that the main consideration or take away from the story was only caused by an intentionally sabotaged "answer," essentially equating to a strawman.
However, if the interpretation of life as a source of war, is the latter, in that life causes war, then your interpretation would make more sense. He either can't or refuses to give back the lives that were lost.
The problem with this interpretation, is that if life is the cause of war, then when the old god said he would give back all but one source, that doesn't really make sense, because life would still be a cause of war at least when we regard their words and meanings in a manner of consistency. There is obviously still life, and It can still wage war. Yet he didn't give it back? I guess this could potentially be answered if the interpretation is that he is not being literal, and when he says he will give four back, It is symbolic of the lives that are lost, therefore again he is not being literal. What does that mean about the first part of the song? When life is considered one of the sources for war? My only answer is that even then he was implying that life causes war or is a cause for war, yet always seems to persist in the equation, and he was only truly able to take away four of the factors, but by proxy that affected life, (but then why didn't he say he took 4 away instead of all 5) and so that is essentially taking away life, because as we saw, people still died at huge rates, the source of war that was life, was actively being taken away, rather than strictly taken away and banished like the other four reasons. My problem with this is that it is quite a stretch and it is a bit extrapolated. I don't think it is well enough represented by the language of the song to imply this, it's just one of the potential conclusions you can come to when you really try and dissect the song. It's one of the potential logical conclusions, but that doesn't mean they're writing or the song itself necessarily portrayed it very well.
Alternatively, the cause for war being life is different in the first half of the song, then the last half of the song, allowing him to equate not giving back life with the lives that were lost, even though this wouldn't really make sense in the first half of the song. The issue with this, is that again, this is extrapolated and it's simply inconsistent, and you can't blame anyone for not catching on to it. There is no notable change of language or categorization where you can notice a subtle shift in what is being talked about.
There are not many reasons to believe either of these theories when dissecting the words and meaning of the song itself. These are only retroactive ways to justify what was said.
The problem with the prior interpretation, is that it implies when he says he will give four of the five back, that the one he does not give back, are king's lies. However, this doesn't really tie into the song, it doesn't have a direct correlation, in fact, it is said that the cruel king did not ever even utter a lie. So why is the culmination of all this, the removal of a king's ability to lie? It doesn't make symbolic sense. There are no parallels drawn.
It also makes me wonder, what is the purpose of even addressing the "king's lies"? Is it simply a red herring?
This song does come across as vague and I do think that reflects on its writing. It is catchy though.
My main question is though, what is the meaning of "the sun is also a warrior?" Does it mean simply that the sun gives life, or is required for life, yet can also kill... Does it actively kill or does it just have the capacity to kill potentially? And if so, how does that categorize one as a warrior? That would of course be based on one's subjective differentiating perception of what the word warrior means.
Whatns this little gem of a song doing here
Love it
This gives me Chad Mitchell Trio vibes very very good
I need a Colm McGuinness cover of this. I beg of you to colab with them.
I would kill for a guitar tab for this :)
Love this song
So "some king's lies" was the one not removed ?
Well, politicians often lie to the public so they can get all the votes they want. That's a really harsh reality of life. We can't really get away with it, y'know.
For life was not removed
All were removed.
Then all but "some king's lies" were given back.
That was my impression, but we still war over king's lies....@@frantisekvrana3902
@@frantisekvrana3902 No, all but Life was given back. The people who had already died were dead.
UA-cam decided to toss me a good recommendation and I'll take it happily 😊
I came through a link shared by Freya Aswinn herself
Hi there! is there a way Leslie Fish can be reached for an interview? well I'm not a journalist or anything, just meaning to ask a couple of questions about the origins of Filk and whatnot.
Me too
The flashing lights/sunspot effects are troublesome but the rest of the video is great.
when some say all war and violence is evil...play this song to her
Yes pacifism is no virtue
But weakness in disguise
@@gewuerzwanze5627 Pacifism is a virtue, but not everyone's virtue.
Damn right!
@@tantamounted, pacifism is not a virtue, and only leaves the innocent defenseless
Pacifism plus militancy is a necessary balance.
I haven't listened to the mainstream pop trash for years. Why should I when can listen to these gems.
Can you do a similar video on "The moon is also a satellite?"
Y'know, we tried doing a video with Kanef a few years ago, but I think both he (and the animator) lost interest and stopped following up - so I had to cancel it.
Nowadays there's too many filk album projects we're trying to finish to spend money on anything else. If you want to make a video and post it on UA-cam, I'm guessing he'd be supportive - I know Leslie would be!
@@elig9401 The only filk video I ever made was one for Tom Smith's "Dark Country" a number of years ago (Still on my channel as my demo video), but I no longer have the hardware or software I used to edit the dang thing...
It's a shame you have comments disabled on most of your videos. So many cool songs someone might have to say something about.
Yes! It is indeed a shame that UA-cam disables comments on all "art tracks", including Leslie's songs, without recourse.
We miss the comments, and the ability to have meaningful interactions with listeners. But UA-cam has decided that they know better.
@@elig9401 I see. I'm glad to hear it was just UA-cam's dumb decision though. Thanks.
@@manauser362 Yeah. Feel free to Google for 'youtube art tracks comments disabled' and you'll find a lot more about it. I'd share links but YT hides the comments. ;-(
- Eli
Are you the person who sang all the Valdemar songs? I've been listening to them for about a year now and they fill me with inspiration to write, and now i find this! This is a gold mine :D
She does and go forth and conquer writing music. Trust me, she will be interested in hearing your songs.
@@chriswhittle4564 aw i write books and stories not songs but thank you :D
War is inevitable evil
2A should include thermonuclear warheads!
violates ur nap
You can also interpret this (loosely) as a conversation between the personification of Life (Peace) and Death (War)
Life asks Death why so many need to die because their innocence can’t understand why such horrible things happen. Death sheds light for Life to illustrate that for all things, one cannot justly exist without the other.
My interpretation, at least
What does the 4 out of 5 stand for?
It means that 4 out of the 5 reasons for war which he took he will give back.
It's different in each verse. The only one the man thinks is a good enough reason for war is Life. The god is pointing out that everything except a king's lies is something that the man will regret losing. Eventually, the god gives back everything except Life, which he can't give back because all the people who died are already dead.
...so what's the the cause that the old god did NOT give back?
My opinion? Freedom. They had to take that for themselves.
I took the 5th, in a convoluted way, to be "some king's lies." The one lord does tell the truth, owns all land, all wealth, all freedom, and the power of life and death; the overthrowing war is to regain the last four, and doing so isn't based on a lie, so the 5th isn't in effect/isn't something the god needs to restore for the war to happen. It is also symmetric, because the man earlier says "four of those five are not enough to appease the dead;" presumably he's leaving out lies as being obviously not even worth mentioning as a worthy motivation.
@@TomG1555 My interpretation is he considered 'Life' a worthy justification for war, in the face of the alternative for their people if they didn't fight, whereas the other four weren't worthy in his eyes.
@Leslie Fish Does anyone else know the meaning to the chorus? It’s quite hard to decrypt.
@@lifelongstudents233 what about it is confusing for you
Really like the song ! But somehow I can't figure out a meaning for the one line that is also the title of the song. I must be so dumb. If anyone has an interpretation for it, feel free to share it with me ;)
Maybe how the Sun brings life but can also bring immense amounts of death so in this it is also a warrior even if it has often been worshipped as Life incarnate.
The sun (god), symbolically the lifegiver, is also a god of war
I came here from the Valhalla song. I see comments are turned off there so I hope I'm not being disrespectful. I was just curious if this anachronist society still exists and, if so, what name it goes by? I was hoping to look into it and see if it maybe had a branch near me I could check about joining.
Yes! That's the Society of Creative Anachronism - they're definitely still active!
(And so sorry about the disabled comments, for details on that, just Google for "UA-cam comments are now disabled on all auto-generated music" and you'll see lots of other frustrated people -- including me.)
@@elig9401 Thanks mate! I'm glad to hear that it's a youtube being stupid thing rather than something worse.
Im pretty sure the god was doing some trickery. The man admits that of the five reasons for war, he can only accept one of them. The one reason is probally freedom as its the thing that he starts war anew for. The god must have know this and so gave him a king that would deny freedom. Thus winning the man to his side and ensuring that, at least for a time, the people wouldn't wish to stop having wars.
you can't have freedom while denying the people's rights
No, the one reason is presumably life. Since the line following that one right after in the song is ‘are not enough to please the dead’.
Which implies that the man believes that as long as people are killed war is wrong.
@@jameskowanko7574 This, the first half is "only defense of life is worth waring for" The second half is realizing the other 3 causes he might regret (freedom, wealth, land) are worth fighting for sometimes at the cost of life, though neither side defends "some kings lies" all the kings lies that might exist on some level come from the other 4, for though there were no lords in the immediacy as power structures redeveloped (what humans do) the kings lies too would return.
@@janehrahan5116 "we starve and die under his command"
The god explicitly removed ALL FIVE of war's sources, no trickery required
I'm guessing the God is Apollo 🥰
Sounds like Mithras to me (Sun and War), but there's a lot of sun/warrior gods in many mythologies
I was put in mind of Baldor, but I'm not a hundred percent sure.
@@EniochHL Leslie answers in the liner notes -- prometheus-music.com/print/Avalon_is_Risen_Booklet.pdf
"...a hymn to Apollo, Mars or Mithra, this is another commentary on the hard realities of life."
- Eli
@@EniochHL the sun-warrior dichotomy makes sense if you notice that historically most wars were fought during the summer months
@@gewuerzwanze5627 spring and summer, war season began at spring
A fascinating song, but I believe that all lords trace their ownership back to the spoils of war, and all laws are made by violence. How could one man come to own all things if he nor his servants could threaten anyone's life to get them?
Been thinking that too. I have a couple speculations.
Maybe the ruler is a silver tongue who gained his power through guile, technical truths, and charisma, and with the causes of war removed nobody can unseat or outfox said ruler.
Another idea is maybe the ruler is well meaning, but incompetent and unwilling to step down. The power was mutually offered under the promise of centralized efficiency but then refuses to give it up as his edicts fall apart.
War and violent coersion are not synonymous. But even without explicit use of physical force, it is entirely.possible to attain and keep power.
War is specifically the organised and directed use of violence to achieve some goal.
There are plenty of things to threaten a man with, even if you can't kill them direcly.
You could take his food. You could take his shelter. You could take his freedom. And you could take his family.
You can't kill them. But you can make them unable to be part of the society.
If everybody is too afraid to speak up, then you could even fake a 100% aprooval rating when you have 5% (and the 5% are those that directly enforce your will). Of course such situation could be broken by somebody being brave or desperate enough to publicly denounce you, but if war is impossible, toppling a tyrant is almost impossible.
@@egoalter1276 You cannot keep power without the sword, foxes and snakes do not last long, Lions rule
@@alexmag342 I would very strongly disagree with that. The core of power is in gaining and maintaining loyalty, not gathering and excercising force.
“The great only appear great because we are on our knees” James Larkin aka Jim Larkin or just Big Jim. (1874-1947). Irish Republican. socialist and Trade Union leader. In other words the kind of guy regularly maligned by the political and media establishment and their fellow travellers.
I am a wise man. I understood the secret truth of Christianity. I understood the secret truth of Buddhism. And it did not bring me joy. Only grandchildren bring joy.
I just wrote a lengthy rant about why, despite being anti-war, I think we need to support Ukraine by continuing to send them weapons.
And then I remembered this song.
This. This is why they are fighting. They don't want to, but they have to.
I wonder how many years it's been since my my college friends last sang this together, and it was just a song for fantasy worlds and not reality. 35 years? I still know it almost by heart, but it feels so different when you're 20 vs over 50.
I have found several of Leslie's songs to be powerfully applicable to various events during my life.
Knowledge can destroy, Wisdom can bring sorrow, Kindness may necessitate killing, and Remember what is worth fighting for!
History repeats because we forget its lessens.
I once spent three days humming 'The Day it Fell Apart' as an emotional defence mechanism.
ua-cam.com/video/e4y802_Ot-k/v-deo.html&ab_channel=quizzlie
I lived in a small town, there was an explosion in the chemical plant, I happened to work (thank god not in a hospital but) at the environmental laboratory responsible for monitoring the cleanup of the site - a shit ton of contaminated water from putting out the fires.
The Lab where I worked was 15 miles away from where I lived, the Plant was a half mile away - I was off work sick that particular day and I heard/felt the explosion.
Other than that song, and the constant update reports we could get hold of about the injured, that week passed in a blur for me.
If Russia stops fighting, there is no more war. If Ukraine stops fighting, there is no more Ukraine. Just becuase war is terrible does not mean that Ukraine should stop fighting.
Also remember, "A Ramboing" - that can be relevant too.
@@RedwoodTheElf In a sort of "RIP AND TEAR!!!" way.
977 like
Wait, is this all an allegory for nuclear weapons???
I liked the original version better.
Just curious, which of the numerous versions of Leslie's performance do you associate as being 'the original'? ;-)
@@elig9401 Good question.
I guess whichever version i heard like at least 15 years ago.
There was no male part in the chorus and there was a bit more of a flow to it.
This one has some distinct pauses that weren't there before.
Now that i think on it, it might have been closer to 20 years ago?
I think i got it from a friend on IRC chat.
Is leslie a religious person??? Interesting
seems to depict the communist utopia and the fact that it isn't as ideal as what it seems when using it as a simplistic solution without critically thinking about the reality of what it will actually mean and the real consequences of it
To me it seems to be about war and peace actually
@@Bruh-hq1hx educate yourself on the reality of communism and you'll understand.
Not communism. In communism, there would be no lord. That is part of the point of communism.
But failed attempts at communism did have such results.
And in this age, any attemt to create a large communism is doomed to failure, so you are close enough.
Its a shame the old gods arent as powerful as it use to be
nature can't be stamped out and babylon always falls