Here Is No Why

Album: Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness (1995)
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  • The useless drag of another day
    The endless drags of a death rock boy
    Mascara sure and lipstick lost
    Glitter burned by restless thoughts of being forgotten
    And in your sad machines
    You'll forever stay
    Desperate and displeased with whoever you are
    And you're a star
    Somewhere he pulls his hair down over a frowning smile
    A hidden diamond you cannot find
    A secret star that cannot shine over to you
    May the king of gloom, be forever doomed
    And in your sad machines
    You'll forever stay
    Burning up in speed
    Lost inside the dreams, of teen machines
    The useless drags, the empty days
    The lonely towers of long mistakes
    To forgotten faces and faded loves
    Sitting still was never enough
    And if you're giving in, then you're giving up
    'Cause in your sad machines
    You'll forever stay
    Burning up in speed
    Lost inside the dreams, of teen machines Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 10

  • Ricrock44 from Mission TxWhatever the song's about, cool freaking song.
  • Andrew from NcI always felt like this song played homage to Bowie/Ziggy Stardust. Also the Kurt Corgan history is interesting. Heart Shapped box is about love letters Kurt found from Corgan that Courtney had kept. They allegedly had an affair and they had an on again off again romantic relationship before she met Kurt.
  • David from Ancona, ItalyAnd NO, this song isn't about Kurt Cobain at all. It's about Billy Corgan himself, as he explained on many interviews. We all love Kurt but you people should really stop seeing Kurt Cobain references everywhere. If you knew a little more about Smashing Pumpkins you also would know Billy didn't exactly like Kurt Cobain as a person, because Kurt always kept distance with him and didn't want to bond with him (Billy said that on the Chris Isaak Hour talk show: http://www.mojvideo.com/video-smashing-pumpkins-live-on-the-chris-isaak-hour-part-1/1021f01336bdce9f8dcf).
  • David from Ancona, Italy"Billy definitely followed Kurt Cobain. Kurt wasn't even cold in the ground, so to speak, before Billy started going out with Courtney. All of the other comments fit, too."

    Laura I'm sorry but Courtney Love was Billy Corgan's Girlfriend in the pre-Gish and Gish period (1990-1991), way before she met Kurt Cobain.
  • Matt from Houston, TxIt could describe others too. possibly layne staley. don't be as narrow minded to say it could be one thing on your beliefs. Not that I dismiss it. I am just saying, you could interpret it with many other things
  • Laura from Weymouth, MaRoonie, why on earth not? Billy definitely followed Kurt Cobain. Kurt wasn't even cold in the ground, so to speak, before Billy started going out with Courtney. All of the other comments fit, too.
  • Roonie from Huntington, WvWhy on earth would they write so many songs about Kurt Cobain? I think its rediculous to say that this song is about him. This song isnt even close to describe Cobain. Cobain was a grunge rocker, not glam.
  • Derek from Qld, AustraliaI agree with the kurt cobain theory. Whenever i hear the line "somewhere he pulls hair down over a frowning smile" i always think of kurt doing exactly that at the end of the Heartshaped Box video clip.
  • Connor from Flint, MiIn interviews, Billy has described this song as an autobiographic view of the "mysanthropic me," that is, himself as an adoslescent obsessed with glam rock. Many of the lyrics ("and in your sad machines you'll forever stay") do refer to rock (Billy often uses the word "machines" to signify guitars), but the context here does not involve music as a career. "mascara sure and lipstic lost" invokes the signature dress styles of glam rockers.

    "he pulls his hair down over a frowning smile" and "sitting still was never enough" is more dispositional... the teen rocker evidently defines himself in terms of some restlessness and dissatisfaction.

    There's a lot of nostalgia in this song, but it's all recalled with fondness. I personally believe he's smiling at the naivete of a manufactured darkness.

    There is, actually, a valid other interpretation of this song, though Billy has publicly denied it up and down. MCIS is filled with a lot of subtle and not so subtle references to the Holocaust. Here is one of the most explicit. "Here is no why," was a phrase recalled by Primo Levy from an SS Guard, and he has used it to sum up all the brutal irrationality of Auschwitz.

    The official line, though, is that the song was originally called "No Is Here Why" and was "mixed up in the transcription," according to the Pumpkins in an interview with Bill Weinman (Chicago Reader 10/21/95).

    Myself, I don't buy it.
  • Marvin from East Brady, PaI was always under the belief this was about Kurt Cobain, who couldn't handle his rise to stardom and committed suicide. The only way out of his "sad machine" was to commit suicide. This came out within a year of his death, as did the similarly themed "Let Me In" by R.E.M. (who I think dedicated their '94 album Monster to the fallen Cobain and River Phoenix)
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