Difference between revisions of "Interpretations:Asheville"

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== Inanimate longing ==
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This song reminds me a little of "I Am Not Your Broom."  Except instead of being sort of literal like "Broom" (with an inanimate object singing to a person), "Orange Peel" lends itself to a more metaphorical interpretation.  The orange peel represents everything that's been left behind, and the song imagines the resentment and hate that all of these left behind things (apple cores, candy wrappers, people) must feel.  It's a surprisingly potent little 90 seconds, and the mandolin gives an extra little tug at the heart strings.  This one could stand next to much of their more traditional album work.
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[[User:Northsidejonny|Northside Jonny, Sept 2007]]
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Revision as of 22:23, 28 September 2007

It is my fervent hope that someday John Linnell will learn that the word "orange" has two syllables. Not "arnj."


I think that the video for this song spells it out clearly. This song seems like it is about a person who feels less than whole after a relationship fallout. This person is pining about how the other person took the best part and ended up leaving.

Even without seeing the video on the Venue Songs DVD, the song resonated with me because I have just begun to heal from a recent divorce.

Mandark


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Inanimate longing

This song reminds me a little of "I Am Not Your Broom." Except instead of being sort of literal like "Broom" (with an inanimate object singing to a person), "Orange Peel" lends itself to a more metaphorical interpretation. The orange peel represents everything that's been left behind, and the song imagines the resentment and hate that all of these left behind things (apple cores, candy wrappers, people) must feel. It's a surprisingly potent little 90 seconds, and the mandolin gives an extra little tug at the heart strings. This one could stand next to much of their more traditional album work.

Northside Jonny, Sept 2007


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