Exogenesis: Symphony (song)
Muse song | |
---|---|
Name | Exogenesis: Symphony
|
Album/single | The Resistance (9, 10, 11) |
Length | 12:51
|
Alternative titles |
|
First live performance | - |
Latest live performance | - |
Recorded | Lake Como and Milan, Italy, 2008-2009 |
Writer/composer | Matthew Bellamy, Dominic Howard, Christopher Wolstenholme |
Producer | Muse |
<flashmp3>http://www.musewiki.org/images/Exogenesis I – Overture.mp3|rightbg=0xDEF|leftbg=0xDEF|bg=0xFFF</flashmp3> <flashmp3>http://www.musewiki.org/images/Exogenesis II – Cross Pollination.mp3|rightbg=0xDEF|leftbg=0xDEF|bg=0xFFF</flashmp3> <flashmp3>http://www.musewiki.org/images/Exogenesis III – Redemption.mp3|rightbg=0xDEF|leftbg=0xDEF|bg=0xFFF</flashmp3>
Song Nav | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
< | Insert current song | > |
Description
"Exogenesis: Symphony" is the last song on The Resistance,[1] and is split into three four-minute tracks, each separately named. It features an orchestra of "about 40 musicians" throughout, being described by Matt as "almost purely classical in style"[2] The song tells the story of humanity leaving a destructive Earth behind to populate elsewhere in the Universe.[3]
Part I: Overture
The first part of the song starts off mellow.[4]
Part II: Cross Pollination
In the Muse Q&A in November 2008, Dominic Howard stated that the song would change genres throughout, indicating a significantly different middle section.[4]
Part III: Redemption
The third part of the song will be "very heavy indeed".[4]
Additional information
The term exogenesis is the technical name for panspermia, the hypothesis that life is seeded across the universe from other sources, for example, arriving to Earth on comets, hence "cross pollination".
The song was first mentioned in March 2008 as a "15-minute space-rock solo"[5] and mentioned by the band numerous times after that. Prior to that, it had been alluded to by Matt in 2007 as "a few bits and pieces that we kind of set to one side that were ... a little bit too progressive and symphonic for [Black Holes and Revelations]", suggesting that the band may have first attempted to record it in 2005.[6]
The orchestral elements of the song are arranged by Matthew Bellamy. He stated he wanted to do this himself as he "never wanted to collaborate with a string arranger as they may make it 'theirs'".[1]
Lyrics
Incomplete
...the edge of all our fears We are counting on you, It's up to you, Spread out close to the stars, You must rescue us all, Spread... Let's start over again, Why can't we start it over again?
References
- ↑ a b Matthew Bellamy via Muse Answers. (2008-11-22). Question 23. Official Message Board. Retrieved 2008-11-22 from board.muse.mu.
- ↑ Ray Wilkinson. (2009-07). Progressive stadium rock three dream up album five. Mojo magazine, 1802. Retrieved 2009-07-05 from www.muselive.com. [verify]
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namednme20090722
- ↑ a b c Dominic Howard via Muse Answers. (2008-11-28). Question 6. Official Message Board. Retrieved 2008-11-22 from board.muse.mu.
- ↑ Muse: next album to have '15-minute space-rock solo' (2008-03-12). NME. Retrieved from nme.com.
- ↑ Lindsay McDougall. (2007-08-02). [Interview with Matthew Bellamy]. The Breakfast Show. Retrieved 2007-08-02 from abc.net.au. [verify]