Red Right Head

Red Right Head



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Red Right Head
Track #5 from Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds' eighth studio album Let Love In .
The notion of a Red Right Hand goes back to John Milton’s Paradise Lost where it also plays the role of an undefined threat. There are discussions among scholars whether it concerns the hand of Satan or the punishing hand of God himself.
To back up the lyrics, the whole song has a threatening allure with the organ theme and Cave’s deep ominous voice.
In verses one and two, a tall handsome stranger ‘with a red right hand’ is used to personify an omnipresent danger. In verses three and four it is revealed what this danger actually is. It is the allure (remember that the man is tall and handsome) of material wealth which draws away your focus from more important things like self-respect. The tall handsome man sustains this danger as a ‘catastrophic plan’ in which you (that is the average person) are a ‘microscopic cog’. In this way, the man represents consumer society: something which is very everyday, but in its essence utterly scary and life-crushing.
The song was used as a theme song for the the horror movies Scream 1 & 2 and the soundtrack of 3 still contains tunes that are a reminiscence of this song. It’s also the theme song for the BBC show Peaky Blinders .
Crazy how that song WASN’T written for peaky blinders because it fits Tommy perfectly…
In 2017 live in Philadelphia nick Cave introduced this song by saying “ this song was written about 20 years ago and has been waiting for its subject matter to come along. It finally has” referring to President Trump. He changed the line “ he’ll appear out of nowhere but he ain’t what he seems” to “ you’ll see him on the Internet you’ll read his angry little tweets”
don’t fuck with the Peaky Blinders.
Brilliant lyrics, a poem by a poet, I am there on that street .
the red right hand is also the symbol of the Irish region of Ulster (Northern Ireland) and featured in the flags of many Unionist Northern Irish groups.
this section is now under a new Management by order of the fookin peaky blinders

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds- Red Right Hand ( HQ Audio ). - YouTube
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This article needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources:   "Red Right Hand"  –  news   · newspapers   · books   · scholar   · JSTOR ( August 2014 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )

^ Cutchin, Joshua. "Southern Gothic: Ten unconventional songs to put you in the Halloween mood" . Joshua Cutchin: Weird Words & Brass Beats . Retrieved 10 August 2017 .

^ Trakin, Roy (8 February 2018). "Case Study: How a 1994 Nick Cave Song Became a Favorite of Music Supervisors" . Variety . Retrieved 1 February 2020 .

^ Graves, Wren (8 October 2019). "Nick Cave says Snoop Dogg's "Red Right Hand" cover left "a giant smile on my face " " . Consequence of Sound . Retrieved 1 February 2020 .

^ Elferen, Isabella van; Weinstock, Jeffrey Andrew (2015). Goth Music: From Sound to Subculture . Routledge. p. 27. ISBN   978-1-317-96298-4 .

^ "Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Tour Statistics - setlist.fm" . www.setlist.fm . Retrieved 10 August 2017 .

^ Phull, Hardeep (22 June 2016). "The unlikely story behind 'Peaky Blinders' theme song" . New York Post . Retrieved 1 October 2020 .

^ Original Seeds Vol. 2: Songs that inspired Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, Kim Beissel, CD liner notes, Rubber Records Australia, 2004

^ Newstead, Al (23 May 2013). "Nick Cave Provides Soundtrack For Barossa Valley Tourism Campaign" . Tone Deaf . Retrieved 26 March 2020 .

^ "El Jimador" . Grand-Army.com .

^ "Peaky Blinders playlist" . Retrieved 16 November 2017 .

^ Jump up to: a b Britton, Luke Morgan (14 December 2017). "Listen to Iggy Pop and Jarvis Cocker's cover of 'Peaky Blinders' theme 'Red Right Hand ' " . NME .

^ Fennessy, Kathleen C. "Cover Magazine - Giant Sand" . AllMusic . Retrieved 2 February 2018 .

^ "Resetarits*, Lang*, Molden* – Weida Foan" . Discogs . Retrieved 2 February 2018 .

^ "British single certifications – Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Red Right Hand" . British Phonographic Industry . Retrieved 21 August 2020 .


" Red Right Hand " is a song by Australian rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds . It was released as a single from their eighth studio album, Let Love In (1994), on 24 October 1994. A condensed version was included in the single, while the longer version was included with the album. The title comes from John Milton 's epic poem Paradise Lost , in which it refers to the vengeful hand of God.

The song has become one of Cave's signature songs , being performed at most of his concerts; only " The Mercy Seat " has appeared in more of his live sets since 1984. [5] It has since become best known for its use in the first three films of the Scream trilogy and later as the theme song to the British crime drama series Peaky Blinders , which resulted in the song receiving a re-release single in 2014. It has been covered by Arctic Monkeys , PJ Harvey , Iggy Pop , Jarvis Cocker and Snoop Dogg , among others.

The liner notes for Murder Ballads state that the phrase "red right hand" is from a line in John Milton 's epic poem Paradise Lost that refers to divine vengeance. The opening song on the album, "Song of Joy," states of a murderer: "It seems he has done many, many more, / quotes John Milton on the walls in the victim's blood. / The police are investigating at tremendous cost. / In my house he wrote 'his red right hand'. / That, I'm told, is from Paradise Lost ."

The aforementioned appearance in Paradise Lost ( Book II, 170-174 ) is: "What if the breath that kindled those grim fires, / Awaked, should blow them into sevenfold rage, / And plunge us in the flames; or from above / Should intermitted vengeance arm again / His red right hand to plague us?". The term itself appears to be Milton's translation of the term "rubente dextera" in Horace 's Ode I.2,2-3

Co-writer Mick Harvey recalled that the song originated during the songwriting process for the band's 1994 album Let Love In . The lyrics describe "a shadowy, alluring, and manipulative figure, stalking the land and striking a combination of fear and awe everywhere he goes" who is "seemingly part deity, part demon". [6]

In 2004 researcher Kim Beissel claimed that "Red Right Hand" was loosely based on the 1987 Tom Waits song " Way Down in the Hole ". [7]

sales+streaming figures based on certification alone


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