Difference between revisions of "Drones (song)"

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  title=Game of Drones: Album seven finds Muse at their ridiculous best... | date=2015-05-20 | fetch=2015-05-20 | desc=Album Review| auth=Gavin Haynes | pub=NME | url=http://www.nme.com/features/muse-interview-on-modern-warfare-the-conspiracies-that-drive-new-album-drones-and-matt-bellamys-nigh?recache=2&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=muse | dom=nme.com| type=ext
  title=Game of Drones: Album seven finds Muse at their ridiculous best... | date=2015-05-20 | fetch=2015-05-20 | desc=Album Review| auth=Gavin Haynes | pub=NME | url=http://www.nme.com/features/muse-interview-on-modern-warfare-the-conspiracies-that-drive-new-album-drones-and-matt-bellamys-nigh?recache=2&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=muse | dom=nme.com| type=ext
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NME described the track as having "a kind of unity of purpose that seems to mark the moment at which, eighteen years and six albums since they set out from Teignmouth together, Bellamy seems to have dropped his pretence at being a hyper-camp rockstar, and gone full-bore into being the globally anxious social commentator his interviews have always suggested."


==Lyrics==
==Lyrics==

Revision as of 13:55, 26 May 2015

Muse song
Name Drones
Album/single Drones
Length 2:51
Alternative titles
First live performance
Latest live performance
Recorded 2014/2015 - The Warehouse Studio, Vancouver, Canada
Writer/composer Matthew Bellamy
Producer Muse, Robert "Mutt" Lange


The song is only acapella with superimposed layers and a spiritual atmosphere. Matthew summarizes his point and everything ends with an "Amen".[1]

The song features a sample of "Missa Papae Marcelli" by "Pierluigi da Palestrina" with lyrics written by Matthew Bellamy.[2] but the NME says they sampled a song by "Giovanni Gabriel"

Matt said about the song that: "It's a lament for the victims, it ends on this ghostly chorus of the frogotten, they will never see justice, and they have been killed by a robot, there's something inherently tragic about humanity there".[3]

NME described the track as having "a kind of unity of purpose that seems to mark the moment at which, eighteen years and six albums since they set out from Teignmouth together, Bellamy seems to have dropped his pretence at being a hyper-camp rockstar, and gone full-bore into being the globally anxious social commentator his interviews have always suggested."

Lyrics

Incomplete

My mother, my father,

My sister and my brother My son and my daughter killed by drones

Can you feel anything? Are you dead inside? Now you can kill from the safety of your home With drones. Amen

References

  1. L'édition du Soir by Philippe Richard. (2015-05-18). Que vaut le nouvel album de Muse?. Ouest-france. Retrieved 2015-05-18 from ouest-france.fr/.
  2. Claudia Rossi. (2015-05-19). Muse, ecco il nuovo ‘Drones': un’opera rock oscura, tra JFK e Orwell. Il Fatto Quotidiano. Retrieved 2015-05-19 from ilfattoquotidiano.it.
  3. Gavin Haynes. (2015-05-20). Game of Drones: Album seven finds Muse at their ridiculous best.... NME. Retrieved 2015-05-20 from nme.com.


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