I think this song is about Religion.The Train is the Religion, wich you choose and if you believe in the "wrong" Religion, then you'll go to hell. And by telling everyone about the "paradise" means to preach the Religion to everyone.
+xMelliferax kinda obviously about religion i believe utsu p has said in previous songs that he dosent believe in god or gods makeing him an atheist this song is a bash on the brainwashing that is religious culture.
It's Utsu-P and Gumi, in a good way of course. But I don't think it's talking about just religion but also government, politicians, and any con man that will promise us "paradise" i.e. happiness security salvation whatever you fancy IF we give them more power; that power being more power over us. When you start outsourcing our moral compass and decision-making more often than not you'll find yourself in a scary place wondering how you got there. And that is the "happiness" train, so come bring all the family and your coworkers there and board the train! But don't forget to pay your ticket lol.
メリット冷願 Which might be symbolic for religions trying to gain dominance over each other? Which is the right choice? Choose wrong and it's all over for you.
アッチムイテホイ ("Hey look over there") is not equivalent to rock, paper, scissors, it's a part of the rock paper scissors game that shows up as an extra thing we don't usually do in "western" countries. The actual equivalent of "rock, paper, scissors" is "jan, ken, pon". Then, say one party picks rock and the other paper, then the person who picked paper will say "acchi muite hoi" and point their finger left or right. They get the point(win the round?) if the person looks in the same direction as they pointed. So it's a bit misleading to say that "acchi muite hoi" is the same as "rock, paper, scissors" cause it's really not.
I feel like this song is about religion and how it's used to control people. It speaks of a country of dreams, tells people to tell everyone (which could represent converting the people around you to your religion) and it speaks of happy fools and how delightful it is to believe, which implies that the religion isn't real and was used to control people. The song also says that if you pick the wrong train you go to hell, with trains seeming to be an analogy for all the different religions. It says that Budda, Christ and Allah (all major religious figures) all jumped on the train, which seems to entail that due to someone saying they picked the religion, the religion is right. The point of religion is to provide comfort and meaning to life and to encourage people to be better, it shouldn't matter which God you worship as long as you worship god and use that to do good.
My interpretation is about preaching about choosing whether to go to heaven or not. It's like the crazy version of a preacher singing, using a train as a metaphor for the passage to heaven or hell. :3
2021 Utsu-Metal is not dead!!
The drawing style makes me think of Nashimoto-P
I think this song is about Religion.The Train is the Religion, wich you choose and if you believe in the "wrong" Religion, then you'll go to hell. And by telling everyone about the "paradise" means to preach the Religion to everyone.
+xMelliferax thats exactly what i was thinking. the mormons would hate this song soooo much
haha ikr xD
+xMelliferax kinda obviously about religion i believe utsu p has said in previous songs that he dosent believe in god or gods makeing him an atheist this song is a bash on the brainwashing that is religious culture.
Mellifera_x3 you think?
There are just as many brainwashed athiests as there are religious people.
I loved it before I knew the lyrics, I don't even have words to describe how I feel about this song now, lol
In a good or bad way? XD
It's Utsu-P and Gumi, in a good way of course. But I don't think it's talking about just religion but also government, politicians, and any con man that will promise us "paradise" i.e. happiness security salvation whatever you fancy IF we give them more power; that power being more power over us. When you start outsourcing our moral compass and decision-making more often than not you'll find yourself in a scary place wondering how you got there. And that is the "happiness" train, so come bring all the family and your coworkers there and board the train! But don't forget to pay your ticket lol.
Domingo Oneirous That was... a surprisingly lucid, yet solid answer. //claps
I love the part when she sings "ah eh la la sasa !" or something like that \o/
To me at 2:27, it sounds like she's saying "Hurry up"
its called Kakegoe
Well now, I'll never unhear that xD
Also note: the last line, アッチムイテホイ ("Hey look over there") is the phrase equivalent to "rock, paper, scissors".
メリット冷願 Which might be symbolic for religions trying to gain dominance over each other? Which is the right choice? Choose wrong and it's all over for you.
@@ChargeQM
That's kinda cool. Idk if that's what he actually tried to convey but it'd be cool if it was this.
アッチムイテホイ ("Hey look over there") is not equivalent to rock, paper, scissors, it's a part of the rock paper scissors game that shows up as an extra thing we don't usually do in "western" countries. The actual equivalent of "rock, paper, scissors" is "jan, ken, pon". Then, say one party picks rock and the other paper, then the person who picked paper will say "acchi muite hoi" and point their finger left or right. They get the point(win the round?) if the person looks in the same direction as they pointed. So it's a bit misleading to say that "acchi muite hoi" is the same as "rock, paper, scissors" cause it's really not.
at the end her scream becomes perfect
All Religions Teach Us To Do The Right Things.
No Religion Teach Us To Be Antis And Racist.
Good Job Utsu-P
Uhm, 人間 (ningen) means human :)
Keikaku means plan
@@fireship3007 Naka de genjitsu, kami wa keikaku wo motteinai; atashi zutto ni kare wa warau.
All hail the conductor!! \o0o/
癖になるわ
HAPPY PARTY TRAIN TO GO
Amazing!
最高
Forgot that the eng subs was there in the video... busy following Gumi singing using the romaji -___-
wish i could find higher quality
2:28 EAT?
Dang it! I'm sooo into Gumi...
I feel like this song is about religion and how it's used to control people. It speaks of a country of dreams, tells people to tell everyone (which could represent converting the people around you to your religion) and it speaks of happy fools and how delightful it is to believe, which implies that the religion isn't real and was used to control people. The song also says that if you pick the wrong train you go to hell, with trains seeming to be an analogy for all the different religions. It says that Budda, Christ and Allah (all major religious figures) all jumped on the train, which seems to entail that due to someone saying they picked the religion, the religion is right. The point of religion is to provide comfort and meaning to life and to encourage people to be better, it shouldn't matter which God you worship as long as you worship god and use that to do good.
Ty for subbing the song
swag
Very nice!
not gonna lie.. those little people gumi are creepy.. lol.
So is this about committing suicide by jumping in front of a train? Some parts kind of seem like it but others don't.
My interpretation is about preaching about choosing whether to go to heaven or not. It's like the crazy version of a preacher singing, using a train as a metaphor for the passage to heaven or hell. :3
no actually but there IS another song about that by the same artist with the same singer. its called "theres no disorder in the train schedule"
伸びないなあ...
Holy shitsnacks this waesome
i like it, but its fˆˆking creepy >w
Is there any off vocal version to this?
Does anyone know what the face says?
+Alba Pie kami - god
Thank you!
+Alba Pie or in Chinese , also God XD
Shes talking about lsd man
Sounds like she's saying "korea" over and over. Idk
7,777 view ^^
+Yusrries Shaah Liar, I was the 7,777 view.
The conductor is Slenderman.