Astronaut rhymes with parking lot. Songwriters (and poets) have problems most of us do not. I have been listening to Reunions, the newest album by Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit. Only Children is one of Jason’s songs, which you can watch here as a live duet. One verse says that:
“ ‘Heaven’s wasted on the dead,’
that’s what your mama said
and the hearse was idling in the parking lot.
She said you thought the world of me
and you were glad to see
they finally let me be an astronaut.”
Only Children is discussed in an article from May 15, 2020
at NPR titled Jason Isbell on the past lives that inspired his new album,
Reunions. He said:
“The first song that I wrote for the record, the one that
really kicked it all off, was a song called ‘Only Children.’ I was over in Greece,
me and my wife [the musician Amanda Shires] and a couple of our really close
friends, we were over there on vacation. Both of my friends are writers. We
were all just sitting around one night on this little villa on the side of a
mountain and we were singing and playing and reading the work we were doing for
each other.
That song came out of that situation. I started thinking,
now that I’m a professional creative person, this doesn’t happen as much as it
used to. You’d find yourself in rooms with other creative people just sitting
around playing songs for each other. That’s pretty rare once you get older and
your hobby becomes your job.
Interviewer: I’m reading the lyrics about living ‘hand to
mouth and reel to reel.’ That is written from the perspective of a guy who’s
made it to the other side, but as you say, you’re looking back at where you
came from?
There was a period in time when everybody around me was
desperate in a different way, and you could hear it in what they were doing.
And even peopled who didn’t have the gift, or hadn’t done the work to be really
good and writing songs or writing whatever, they still had that hunger. And
nowadays, surrounded by people who are all making a living doing what they want
to do, that hunger is kind of hard to find.”
“Heaven is wasted on the dead” appears on page 33 in the title story of Steve Stern’s 1995 book
Lazar Malkin Enters Heaven (that originally appeared in The Greensboro Review
in 1985).
On March 16, 2020 I blogged about another song from the
Reunions album in a post titled Be afraid, be very afraid. But do it anyway, do
it anyway.
An image of a parking lot came from Wikimedia Commons and an
image of an astronaut’s suit came from the Library of Congress.
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