*Potential lyrical spoilers ahead (for those who don't have Decon & Ghost yet)-
Hey all,
I just wanted to share an observation I noticed; the last lyric or song of each DTP album seems to link directly into the next! Tell me if you think this is drawing a long bow, but:
1. The last song on Ki, 'Demon League', lyrically seems to be all about the problem of addiction ("the demon call"); old habits that can resurface etc. Obviously that theme connects to the title of the next album;
2. Addicted - the last main lyric in 'Awake!' is "get up, get up, now deconstruct!" which links to the next one;
3. The last song on Deconstruction is called 'Poltergeist' - another word used to mean 'Ghost';
4. Now this is the one I could be wrong about, but if you listen really closely to the last 10 seconds of 'As You Were', it sounds like he says "here's the Ki". He may have meant "here's the key", but it makes sense in light of all the above that he says "here's the Ki" because the idea is that these 4 albums are basically all part of a circle of some kind; a journey in which each connects to the other. He's saying "now you're done with Ghost, go straight back into the experience - here's the Ki..."
Well, that's my theory. Has anyone else noticed these little connections before?
Cheers!
Hey all,
I just wanted to share an observation I noticed; the last lyric or song of each DTP album seems to link directly into the next! Tell me if you think this is drawing a long bow, but:
1. The last song on Ki, 'Demon League', lyrically seems to be all about the problem of addiction ("the demon call"); old habits that can resurface etc. Obviously that theme connects to the title of the next album;
2. Addicted - the last main lyric in 'Awake!' is "get up, get up, now deconstruct!" which links to the next one;
3. The last song on Deconstruction is called 'Poltergeist' - another word used to mean 'Ghost';
4. Now this is the one I could be wrong about, but if you listen really closely to the last 10 seconds of 'As You Were', it sounds like he says "here's the Ki". He may have meant "here's the key", but it makes sense in light of all the above that he says "here's the Ki" because the idea is that these 4 albums are basically all part of a circle of some kind; a journey in which each connects to the other. He's saying "now you're done with Ghost, go straight back into the experience - here's the Ki..."
Well, that's my theory. Has anyone else noticed these little connections before?
Cheers!
"Can we sack Phil?"
J. Hetfield
J. Hetfield