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Out of curiosity I looked it up: There are lyrics out there, and it's not 'war', just 'whoa' and the song seems to be about a conformist man's need to 'descend' to the level of his 'nature' soul and earthier passions and out of his 'head' and conditioned responses to some more primitive instinctual level. I'm not sure why it might suggest anything Irish! The instrumental opener sounds Louisiana/Cajun to me, and the descending intervals of the chant Native American. It's a 'computer nerds feel the call of repressed nature' sort of thing.
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D bloody P again.
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Out of curiosity I looked it up: There are lyrics out there, and it's not 'war', just 'whoa' and the song seems to be about a conformist man's need to 'descend' to the level of his 'nature' soul and earthier passions and out of his 'head' and conditioned responses to some more primitive instinctual level. I'm not sure why it might suggest anything Irish! The instrumental opener sounds Louisiana to me, and the descending intervals of the chant Native American. It's a 'computer nerds feel the call of repressed nature' sort of thing. I didn't say it "suggested" anything Irish. I said it had an Irish flare, patricularly the opening. This Irish girl feels this way and I can also hear the Native American tone as well. I simply said I liked the tune, I wasn't expecting it to be broken down and analyzed. The last thing I think of when I listen to this song is the repressed nature of a computer nerd. I prefer to just listen and enjoy it. It would appear you've chosen to take my answer the wrong way. All I did was to point out what the lyrics meant, which is just what the band themselves would want me to do. The song stands in a long tradition of 'modern man needs to become more in tune with his dark instincts'. God forbid anyone should listen to song's lyrics. But what would I know, living in Ireland.
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