"High Hopes" by Kodaline, Thursday, March 3, 2022 [partial re-post]
BROKEN BOTTLES IN THE HOTEL LOBBY. While In A Perfect World is a great everyday listen, you have to be careful watching the music video for "High Hopes." It's a beautiful love story between an older man and a somewhat younger woman. The couple meets when she runs away from her wedding and she saves him from trying to kill himself in his car. They begin their relationship when he takes her to his meager cottage. The two build their relationship, but the tone of the video changes when they are lying in bed and he notices the scars on her back. Then, as the guitar solo starts, the couple is shot by a man carrying a shot gun. The two are in a pool of blood. The man wakes up in the hospital and sees her bed is empty. At the end of the video, she hugs him from behind. Lead singer Steve Garrigan wrote "High Hopes" after a bad breakup. I think the graphic nature of this video is meant to be metaphorical. The woman saves the older man from his destructive ways. They fall in love but when he discovers her scars, the relationship reaches levels of problems that lead to another person/outside factor "shooting" both partners. And the end of the video could either mean she left him and he's remembering her, and the embrace is just holding on to memories, or it could be that she left for a while but comes back to him. Either way, the video is a bit shocking, so I didn't play it for my students.
I KNOW IT'S CRAZY TO BELIEVE IN STUPID THINGS. Last year, Garrigan released his memoir, titled High Hopes: Making Music, Losing My Way, Learning to Live, in which the singer talks about his shyness and became the lead singer of the immensely popular Irish band. Sure, Kodaline doesn't have the 17 million monthly listeners that U2 has, but 8 million a month certainly isn't bad. I'm curious to read the book, to see what Garrigan has to say about the song that was birthed out of a break-up years ago, why he used this song as a spring-board to write about his career as a rock star. For me today, though, "High Hopes" got me thinking about how futile it seems to get ahead. It seems that I'll always be plugging along at the same type of job, even if I get more education. Every year the resources dry up just a little bit more, and you're left feeling as if you should be grateful for your job in the ever growing "hard economical times." Still, why are more duties added to the contract and no extra pay? I think back to my hopeful outlook just graduating from university and how oblivious I was to how the world actually works. And yet, the world keeps spinning around the sun.
Read “High Hopes” by Kodaline on Genius
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