Is this album (or Swans in general) considered Christian music?
Are lyrics like this
>praise the lord, praise god
>Jesus christ the lord save us now
>we are children of god
intended to be sarcasm, really straight praises to Jesus/Christianity, or something else?
What is the meaning of tracks like "Beautiful Child"?
Swans lyrics
hurrrrrrrrrrr
I think so. Gira soupery goes well with the bands moto of hate and love while at the same time blipid forencating a weird relationship with fans on lyrics,
all old people believe in god and religion
dude. God is not real. ATHIEST4LIVE
A lot of early/mid Swans is written from different perspectives (abusers/victims in Filth, for example), so I don't imagine it's really either. I remember an interview where he said that their religious stuff (esp Children of God) were simply a commentary on religion, not really pro or anti.
The transcendental themes on The Glowing Man seem to be genuine though, as he frequently talks about that as a key part of what they're trying to do with their sound, "reach something higher" when they get into it.
Micheal Gira is a Christian, but he's also vague and makes his very sincere music appear to be sarcasm to appeal to his fedora hipster fans
Tl:DR
Thanks for a serious reply.
Sorry if nobody cares about your shitty thread faggot. Go whine back to
“I don’t know what interest I have in religion except the spiritual outcome of it,” says Gira, who admitted in an interview he had recently attended church. “That was something that I probably shouldn’t have talked about in public. I’m not a follower of religion, I would never be a dogmatic person about religion, but I think that certain aspects of it have great value.”
Shut the fuck up
>t.samefag
>getting this butthurt for no fucking reason
might want to get your head checked you autist
Once since again, shut the fuck up
Once again*
Gira writes of the pain of being human. The pain every human faces because of our very nature. He writes of the weaknesses our species repeatedly succumbs to. He continues this theme by ironically praising God to help us in our weakness.
>We believe in love / God save us now.
The second line is an ironic response to the first.
We turn to love and faith in weakness. Gira is calling to God to show how this admits our weakness further. A desperate measure of devoting our love to God in our weakness buries us further in the pit.
>And I open the door
>And there they lie twisted
>And misshapen
>They suffer for love
>And they're sick to death
>Of the dreams they used to have
>And they're sick to death
>Of their beautiful lie
As he witnesses the pain of placing our destiny in the hands of love and faith, Gira cries "God save us now." As if god is going to a better job of saving us than he did before. These calls to God are plainly mocking of blind faith. He believes a man turns to blind faith for he is too weak to help himself.
By the end of the song all Gira can ask God is "please," stretching out his last drop of faith in his deepest weakness. Clouded by faith, he is no longer able to help himself. His weakness leaves him no option but to pray to God, though he's already knows praying to God put him where he is now.
I'd probably cry "God save us" at that point too. lol
>Caring this much for quality in Sup Forums
Fucking dingus
To add to your point about The Glowing Man, Gira stated that Frankie M is about his altered state of being he achieves when playing music. According to him, it's like a spiritual entity named Frankie takes over his body. Gira is a very spiritual guy, but probably not very religious.
kek
(its Joseph from The Glowing Man for ppl who don't know better, the lyrics make perfect sense when you realise this)
Shit you're right, got the name mixed up
>intended to be sarcasm, really straight praises to Jesus/Christianity, or something else?
Gira did an interview about Children of God, where he mentioned without irony that it was dedicated to his love of Jesus Christ.
So yes, it is a Christian album.