Fate/Stay Night Heaven's Feel III. spring song
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Fate/Stay Night Heaven's Feel III. spring song
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Voting has concluded, so I think it’s time to share my Spring Bonnet 2024, worn by Spring Song and inspired by friendship bracelets! I used so many different laces, and made the hat base from poster board! 👒 Fun fact, I had to take this photo in the rain! 🤣 ☔️ I hope you all have a very happy holiday! 🐣
DAY 12 • A SONG WITH MY FAV LYRICS
Rammstein's lyrics are often dark, provocative and metaphorical. They play on double meanings, irony and social criticism, touching on themes such as violence, perversion, destructive love, war, religion and social taboos.
The group uses raw, hard-hitting German, sometimes minimalist, which reinforces the impact of the words. Their style oscillates between the poetic and the shocking, flirting with literary references and crude images. Till has a particular talent for telling stories that are both fascinating and disturbing, often inspired by fairy tales, news stories or his own imagination.
For those of you who've been following me for a while, you'll know that there's a song I really like and whose lyrics I adore. It's a rather special song because there's a much longer version which has been worked on over and over again to fit the music, despite Till's frustration. And I'd love to read that longer version.
This song is 'Spring' from Rosenrot album (2005)
I love this song, it exudes a dark and disturbing atmosphere, touching on themes such as social pressure, morbid voyeurism and collective cruelty. It seems to evoke the way in which an individual on a bridge can become a spectacle for the crowd, which oscillates between unhealthy curiosity and incitement to the irreparable.
This song is a critique of modern voyeurism, a metaphor for the way people 'consume' the suffering of others, particularly through the media or social networks. The desire to "see" takes precedence over humanity and solidarity. The man on the bridge had no intention of jumping, but collective pressure pushes him to do so. This echoes the way in which society can crush individuals instead of reaching out to them. The narrator and the crowd illustrate how anonymity and the group effect can turn people into monsters.
Till says about this song : "The text of "Spring" made me think that other people's misfortunes, whether it be the misfortune of an individual or an entire nation, sell well in the newspapers and increase the TV audience. As I said, it is normal that each person interprets the text in his own way, with an open mind. This idea is your point of view. I was inspired to write poetry by a newspaper story published shortly before I wrote the text. One Sunday afternoon in one of the big cities, a man wanted to commit suicide and throw himself from a skyscraper. And since people were wondering whether he would jump or not, they crowded below and created a traffic jam. There were those who shouted: "Jump!" The days when we helped each other in trouble are in the past, and this is a tragedy that was clearly demonstrated by the disaster in New Orleans. The song is about a man who stands on a bridge because he wants to watch the sunset, and people passing by think that he wants to commit suicide and cannot decide, and they start shouting to him to jump."
Bought a childhood toy on eBay. Spring Song. She doesn't have the perfume smell anymore, but I'll always remember it.
ライダー手直し
Albert Edelfelt (1854-1905, Finnish) ~ Dalin´s Spring Song, 1883
[Source: kansallisgalleria.fi]
Sweetheart Sisters Spring Song is also looking good.