Driving to a tedious meeting about planning applications today The Ranger pumped up the stereo, and up popped one of his old favourites, (Nothing But) Flowers by Talking Heads, from their 1988 album Naked.
In a moment of epiphany, he realised that this old foot-tappin' tune was in fact all about the Town and Country Planning Acts, or at least whatever passes for that in America. It seemed almost unbelievable, but could he have stumbled upon the only known example of a song about planning?
The lyrics, in typical Talking heads fashion, are a little enigmatic, and subject to a number of interpretations.
...Once there were parking lots
Now it's a peaceful oasis
you got it, you got it
This was a Pizza Hut
Now it's all covered with daisies
you got it, you got it
I miss the honky tonks,
Dairy Queens, and 7-Elevens
you got it, you got it
And as things fell apart
Nobody paid much attention
you got it, you got it...
Clearly a musical discussion of the merits of greenfield sites versus light industrial (B1) and retail (A1 and A3) usage.
On the face of it, it's a simple song in praise of modern civilisation and the developments that have raised us from our agricultural ancestors. One reviewer who took this view said
It's denouncing the "hippy" or nature freak lifestyle. Sounds great at first, but you end up missing the creature comforts...
It doesn't take too much further analysis to realise that this is probably not the song's true message. What that is, is less clear. Is it suggesting that we should go back to a natural way of living? Is it pointing out the folly of looking back nostalgically at a mythical bucolic past? Or does it just invite us to reflect on what we have given up, and what we have gained in return? Probably some of all these things and more.
The insight that The Ranger had on the road to Cowes today, whilst singing along lustily, was that (Nothing But) Flowers could be seen as a satire on the faux-rustic trappings we like to adorn our high-tech lives with. Perhaps it's appropriate that it takes a Virtual Ranger to notice this. Do this exercise if you want to understand. Swap all the 'urban' sentiments with 'rural' ones and vice versa; and you get a very unoriginal country ballad bemoaning the loss of the countryside and the encroachment of the urban sprawl.
David Byrne sings "[when] I was an angry young man/ I'd pretend/ That I was a billboard/ Standing tall/ By the side of the road/ I fell in love/ With a beautiful highway...". Surely he is parodying the way a child might pretend to be a tree, and fall in love with the countryside? When applied in that more usual way these sentiments seem utterly unremarkable to us.
Remarking 'I remember when all this was fields' has become a jocular indicator of rambling reminiscences, so commonplace is that feeling. But what if things were reversed? What if there were no more urban sprawl and roadside takeaways? Would we miss them? What would our reminiscences sound like then? Perhaps (Nothing But) Flowers is trying to show us.
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Posted on 29th October 2007 at 10 14 pm
The thoughts and writings of The Virtual Ranger, since 1995 the host and mascot of Naturenet, the UK's most popular independent environmental website; along with interjections from his real-life alter ego, Matthew Chatfield, and others. Featuring not only Naturenet and countryside related stuff, but, as on Naturenet, plenty of other material - more or less at random - that takes The Ranger's fancy. But you can be confident that soon enough he'll be rather sarcastic.
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