LoveNotHate wrote:
ASPartOfMe wrote:
LoveNotHate wrote:
"Zombie" makes me think of PTSD.
"it's in your head ..." the zombie flashbacks of when you were hurt
"In your head, in your head
Zombie, zombie, zombie-ie-ie
What's in your head, in your head
Zombie, zombie, zombie-ie-ie, oh"
The song was an anti war song.
WikipediaYour link doesn't say it's an "anti-war song".
"In your head" seems to indicate "war flashbacks/memories".
"Zombie" seems to indicate antagonism from "something that won't die" (memories that won't die)
So, PTSD , recurring flashbacks of the war. Cranberries hit song 'Zombie' was inspired by true-story of IRA child murder and victim's father was completely unaware of itQuote:
The dad of a young IRA bomb victim said he was “completely unaware” that the tragic story of his son inspired the Cranberries hit song ‘Zombie’.
Tim Parry, 12, was killed alongside three-year-old Jonathan Ball in an IRA bombing in Warrington in 1993.
The death were caused by two bombs which went off in quick succession at lunchtime.
One exploded outside Boots and McDonald's and the second outside an Argos.
The area was crowded with shoppers and witnesses said that shoppers fled from the first explosion into the path of the second.
It was later found that the bombs had been placed inside cast-iron litter bins, causing large amounts of shrapnel - 54 other people were injured, four of them seriously.
he father of one of the dead boys, Colin Parry appeared on BBC Good Morning Ulster to pay tribute to the Limerick singer and said he was touched by the lyrics after finding out they were about his 12-year-old son Tim .
Mr Parry said he was unaware that the hit song, released in 1994, was written in memory of the two young boys.
He said: “Only yesterday did I discover that her group, or she herself, had composed the song in memory of the event in Warrington.
“I was completely unaware what it was all about."
"they are fighting With their tanks, and their bombs And their bombs, and their guns" and "It's the same old theme
Since nineteen-sixteen" are referring to a then still ongoing conflict which the bombing was a part of.
IMHO "Zombie" and "in your head" are referring to the mindset of the bombers and those participating in that conflict unaware or not caring about the pain they are causing which would make it an anti war song.
If it relates to you as a PTSD song that is fine, art should be and will be interpreted by the listener based on their needs regardless of the original intent.
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