Difference between revisions of "United States of Eurasia (song)"
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The song title was found by Muse fans from a picture on Twitter of Matt holding a score.<ref name="mu20090522"> | The song title was found by Muse fans from a picture on Twitter of Matt holding a score.<ref name="mu20090522"> | ||
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title = New Album Title | desc = Muse news | date = 2009-05-22 | auth = Muse | pub=Official Muse website | url = http://www.muse.mu/index.php?sec=news-407 | dom = muse.mu | type = ext | title = New Album Title | desc = Muse news | date = 2009-05-22 | fetch = 2009-05-22 | auth = Muse | pub=Official Muse website | url = http://www.muse.mu/index.php?sec=news-407 | dom = muse.mu | type = ext | ||
}}</ref> The name comes from the book ''The Grand Chessboard'' by Zbigniew Brzeziński, who puts forward the view that Eurasia must be controlled by the USA to secure oil supplies.<ref name="mj200907">{{cite/mojo200907}}</ref> | }}</ref> The name comes from the book ''The Grand Chessboard'' by Zbigniew Brzeziński, who puts forward the view that Eurasia must be controlled by the USA to secure oil supplies.<ref name="mj200907">{{cite/mojo200907}}</ref> | ||
Revision as of 20:54, 5 July 2009
Muse song | |
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Name | United States of Eurasia |
Album/single | The Resistance (4) |
Length | Unknown |
Alternative titles | - |
First live performance | - |
Latest live performance | Unknown |
Recorded | Milan, Italy, 2009 |
Writer/composer | Matthew Bellamy, Dominic Howard, Christopher Wolstenholme |
Producer | Muse |
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Description
A song featuring stringed instrumentation.
Additional information
The song title was found by Muse fans from a picture on Twitter of Matt holding a score.[1] The name comes from the book The Grand Chessboard by Zbigniew Brzeziński, who puts forward the view that Eurasia must be controlled by the USA to secure oil supplies.[2]
In addition, it draws influence from Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell,[2] in which Eurasia arbitrarily changes between ally and enemy of Big Brother country Oceania. This is where the idiom "We have always been at war with Eurasia/Eastasia" came from, typically employed in response to the most obvious political uses of the exposure effect to convince a populace that a ruling figure or party said or did the opposite of that which was in fact actually said or done.