Pale Horse

Album: Oceania (2012)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Billy Corgan explained to Music Radar: "Pretty much from beginning, this was one of those ones where you have a good riff, and you say, 'I'm going to write a song around it.' The original demo, which was very stiff and choppy [sings] – 'Da-da-da-da-dum' – with a drum machine or something, but you actually say, 'I really like that feeling.' So then it becomes 'Can we convert that to the band?' Right away, the band said it was a really great song.

    A lot of times when you have that kind of riff, you don't want to get too tricky," he continued. "It creates a hypnotic effect. You don't want to change keys too much, so I leaned back on some of those artists who used space well. In old Pumpkins ideology, if you started with that riff, the song would get bigger and louder. In this ideology, it actually gets smaller, and that's how you get the dynamic back up."
  • The song is named after one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, which is found in chapter six of Revelations, the final book of the Bible. The Christian apocalyptic vision is of the four horsemen, two being agents of war and two of famine and pestilence, setting a divine apocalypse upon the world before the Last Judgment.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Tommy James

Tommy JamesSongwriter Interviews

"Mony Mony," "Crimson and Clover," "Draggin' The Line"... the hits kept coming for Tommy James, and in a plot line fit for a movie, his record company was controlled by the mafia.

Steely Dan

Steely DanFact or Fiction

Did they really trade their guitarist to The Doobie Brothers? Are they named after something naughty? And what's up with the band name?

David Gray

David GraySongwriter Interviews

David Gray explains the significance of the word "Babylon," and talks about how songs are a form of active imagination, with lyrics that reveal what's inside us.

JJ Burnel of The Stranglers

JJ Burnel of The StranglersSongwriter Interviews

JJ talks about The Stranglers' signature sound - keyboard and bass - which isn't your typical strain of punk rock.

Tim McIlrath of Rise Against

Tim McIlrath of Rise AgainstSongwriter Interviews

Rise Against frontman Tim McIlrath explains the meanings behind some of their biggest songs and names the sci-fi books that have influenced him.

George Clinton

George ClintonSongwriter Interviews

When you free your mind, your ass may follow, but you have to make sure someone else doesn't program it while it's wide open.