(2) Nena, “99 Luftballons”
shot out the walls of
(5) Scandal, “The Warrior”
—bang bang—
294-274
and will play in the final four

Read the essays, listen to the songs, and vote. Winner is the aggregate of the poll below and the @marchxness twitter poll. Polls close @ 9am Arizona time on 3/28/23.

Janet Dale on “99 Luftballons”

Heute zieh' ich meine Runden
Seh' die Welt in Trümmern liegen
Hab' 'nen Luftballon gefunden
Denk' an dich und lass' ihn fliegen 

West Berlin, West Germany 1982

As the final strains of the Rolling Stone’s “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” died out, Carlo Karges watched bunches of colorful balloons released from the stage floating over the cheering crowd. He wondered what would happen if they “were blown over to the East” crossing the Wall both surrounding and dividing the city “and triggered paranoia there?”
This was the scene at Waldbühne, an amphitheater built for the 1936 Summer Olympics where all the men’s and women’s gymnastics events were held.
It went on to become the perfect place for live concerts beginning in the 1980s featuring acts like Bob Marley, Def Leppard, Queen, David Bowie, Elton John, Depeche Mode, Tina Turner, Peter Gabriel, as well as the Rolling Stones that particular June night.   

*

This story as reported to The Spiegel is part of the lore of “99 Luftballons” the German-language hit by Nena that went to #1 on song charts in at least 8 countries. In the U.S., the song peaked at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 the week of March 3, 1984.
Guess what was #1 that week? “Jump” by Van Halen. And #3? “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” by Cyndi Lauper. Could it be anymore stacked? Sure. Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” was #4, but I digress.
Carlo Karges was the guitarist for the band, and he wrote the lyrics soon after attending the concert, while keyboardist Uwe Fahrenkrog-Petersen wrote the music. The new song was brought to lead singer Gabriele Susanne Kerner (the Nena of Nena) and it was added to their self-titled debut album and released in January 1983.

Cold War in Simple Terms

After World War II, the ongoing political rivalry and hostility between the United States (and its western bloc allies) and the Soviet Union (and its eastern bloc allies) was known as the Cold War.
Germany had been split into two with the Soviet Union controlling the eastern portion while the western portion was controlled by the U.S., Britain, and France. Because the pre-war capital city (Berlin) was located within the East, it too was divided the same way. East Berlin was controlled by the Soviet Union and West Berlin had sectors controlled by the U.S., Britain, and France.

In 1961, as tensions rose between the two powers, a physical barrier was constructed by the GDR which became known as the Berlin Wall. Not only did it divide the city, but it wrapped around the western-controlled sectors as well. Train lines, major and minor roads, woodlands, rivers, and lakes were also dissected.
Therefore, West Berlin effectively existed as a 185-square-mile island of about 2 million people floating in Soviet-controlled territory (East Germany).

Anatomy of Berlin Wall

  • Border

  • Outer strip

  • Concrete wall with rounded top

  • Anti-vehicle ditch

  • "Death strip" sand bank

  • Guard road

  • Lighting

  • Observation towers

  • Spikes or tank traps

  • Electrified fence with alarms

  • Inner wall

  • Restricted zone

 

Song Translated

In a recent article published in Forbes, an associate professor of political science at the University of New Haven explained: "People don't understand the irony of the song [“99 Luftballons”] when you juxtapose the peppy music with the actual lyrics." Matthew J. Schmidt went on to say the song is a protest song about the risk of a nuclear holocaust.
Even though there was an English version released (“99 Red Balloons”) it did not chart in the U.S. I don’t ever remember hearing this version until at least a decade later, and when I did—I knew it sounded “wrong.”
A new story line was added, the point of view was shifted, and the message of the song was lost in translation. My own thought translation of the original German lyrics goes something like this:

The audience is invited to listen to what could happen if 99 innocent balloons floating toward the “horizon” were mistaken for something else (like a UFO) by a “General” hellbent on confrontation.
A squadron of 99 jet planes might be sent to intercept the balloons. Then these balloons would be shot down by pilots pretending to be great warriors like “Captain Kirk.”   
Citizens would be completely caught off-guard and afraid of what was happening so 99 War Ministers (who think they are smart) would, as a show of power, stupidly declare WAR!
Who would think this could happen due to 99 innocent balloons?
This action causes a 99-year war, the original generals and war ministers are gone and there are no winners.
Finally, as the world is lying in ruins, the speaker finds a balloon and reflects on what has happened.

The song is thematically similar to the 1983 American blockbuster film War Games, which features instead of balloons, a computer game of Global Thermonuclear War nearly sending the world into nuclear annihilation.

Paranoia 

Carlo Karges did not overstate the paranoia of the time period. In the same Spiegel article he said, “…paranoia rules our lives…because whoever strikes first has the better cards.”
There have been flirtations with the threat of nuclear war (North Korea and the Russian invasion of Ukraine) and spy craft (Chinese Spy Balloon) over the past 5 years, which for those old enough to remember, harkens straight back to the Cold War dread of the 1980s.
You can hear this dread in “99 Luftballons” which almost begins like a fairytale as Nena sings (in German): “Do you have time to listen to a song I’d like to sing to you about 99 balloons floating toward the horizon and what could happen?”
Then the synth beat drops.
In the video Nena is fresh-faced with dark hair featuring Farrah Fawcett feathered sides and bangs teased toward the sky. She is wearing large dangling black heart earrings with a white skull & bones in the center, reminiscent of a DANGER! sign.  

She walks through a desolate forest surrounded by landmines or maybe after an imagined nuclear fallout (this was 3 years before Chernobyl). There are colorful balloons on the ground and smoke bombs going off behind the band.
By the end, night falls in the forest and the smoke bombs are replaced by actual firebombs going off as the whole band continues to perform the song.

More Cold War Songs

  • “Heroes” David Bowie

  • “Crazy Train” Ozzy Osbourne

  • “1999” Prince

  • “2 Minutes to Midnight” Iron Maiden

  • “New Year’s Day” U2

  • “It’s a Mistake” Men at Work

  • “Two Tribes” Frankie Goes to Hollywood

  • “Hammer to Fall” Queen

  • “Forever Young” Alphaville

  • “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” Tears for Fears

  • “Land of Confusion” Genesis

  • “We Didn’t Start the Fire” Billy Joel


West Berlin, West Germany 1985

The airplane banked so far to the left, the tops of buildings appeared in the tiny window, as if we were watching a tilted T.V. and I thought my whole family was going to fall into the city. Minutes later, our collective bodies bounced as the wheels hit the Tempelhof runway instead.
This is my memory of our arrival, approximately four years before the Wall would be torn down. Of course, 7-year-old me didn’t know or understand the geopolitics of it all at the time, it was just another place we were going to live because my father was an “Army man.”
My father, mother, baby sister, and I lived in the American sector at Marshallstrasse 5, adjacent to Clay headquarters and Truman Plaza, which featured a shopping center, movie theater, library, Burger King, and other small American shops sponsored by the US Department of Defense to supply soldiers and their families.
The walk to Thomas A. Roberts elementary school was less than 5 minutes. It’s one of the places I remember most during the 24-months my father was part of the Berlin Brigade. I also remember the Youth Activities (YA) Center where I played air hockey and the Cole Sports Center where I had gymnastics lessons.   

Escape to the West

Even though the official purpose of the Berlin Wall (“Antifascistischer Schutzwall”) was to keep “Western fascists” or ideas from entering East Germany to undermine “the socialist state,” in reality it existed to keep East Germans from escaping to the West.  
From August 1961 to November 1989 between 140 and 170 people were killed or died trying to get over, under, or around the Wall. But also during the same time period, more than 5,000 managed to escape across the border.
Less than a year after we arrived in the city, an East German dump truck weighed down with seven tons of gravel dodged gunfire from guards and smashed through four barriers at Checkpoint Charlie located less than a mile away from the Brandenburg Gate at the center of the city . Not only was the driver, his girlfriend, and their 8-month-old baby successful in making it to the West, but they were uninjured.
Their escape was called one of the “most spectacular” by police and their identities were withheld and under longstanding West German practice, the three were allowed to stay.

Games We Play

Behind our apartment building at Marshallstrasse 5 was a large area for children to play featuring a sandbox, wooden swing set, and a slide. The grass was well-maintained, and a smattering of native pines provided nice shade.
A few times I remember playing “war” against kids who lived in a nearby apartment building. My best friend Janessa and I would spend the morning gathering fallen pinecones, collecting them in the two-level wooden fort attached to the slide.
In the end, we would always end up having to surrender because we would run out of ammunition.
Janessa and I would also play “spies.” She would use her mother’s large accounting calculator and I would use my Speak & Math as “transmitters” We’d make up scenarios and then spend time watching and recording the “movements” of people going in and out of nearby buildings or cars leaving and returning to parking lots.
Even though our parents managed to keep what was happening all around us at a distance, obviously it filtered down in ways they never realized. 

Reflections

At the end of 1987, my father was assigned to a new duty station, so we left West Berlin. Unlike our arrival, this time we drove. After all our paperwork was secured, we exited the city through Checkpoint Bravo and drove the 110-miles through East Germany to Checkpoint Alpha at the East/West (Inner) German Border.
I remember being in the backseat with a coloring book and crayons as our car went through the first checkpoint. East German guards in green uniforms looked into our car windows and possibly the trunk. I remember holding up a picture I was coloring so a guard could see it.
I have no memory of the actual drive or crossing the second checkpoint. I know stopping along the Autobahn was prohibited. Maybe I fell asleep while we listened to Armed Forces Network radio.  
Recently my father asked if I remembered the spy who lived in our apartment building in Berlin.
No, of course not.
He went on to tell me about a man who would leave for weeks at a time, changing out the German license plate on his non-descript Volkswagen whenever he left.
My mind was blown, but maybe it shouldn’t have been. That’s just what it was like living in West Berlin during the Cold War—brushing against history, and not even realizing it.


The author in her military-furnished bedroom at Marshallstrasse 5 circa 1986. She is wearing a pink German sweatsuit and there is an East German cabbage-patch type doll on her desk. She has recently begun research on a memoir focusing on her time living in West Berlin during the Cold War.

THE WALLS OF HEARTACHE, OR HOW I LEARNED TO LIKE THINGS: ALEX BERGE ON “THE WARRIOR” 

WHO’S THE HUNTER?

Technically, in this case, I suppose I am.
It was deep autumn, 2004. I was home from college for Thanksgiving. The sun set quickly by five o’clock and I was on my way to meet my parents and sister at a local restaurant called the Courtyard that my parents started frequenting just after moving to the Cleveland area and just before I was born. That year was 1984. 
I found 106.5, the very controlled eighties and nineties station that played great, safe pop music. I loved 106.5 because it was easy. You know the kind. I turned into the parking lot as Eddie Money was finishing up “Take Me Home Tonight.” Then, without any introduction: boom. The bass drum, tuned low enough to scare off or attract wild beasts, chunks in with the floor tom and cymbals. Crashing and thudding all at once. And then the snare, a gunshot somewhere in the distance. And that was just the first measure. The guitars washed over me, and the vocals bellowed out of my ‘95 Eagle Talon’s speakers like a triumphant siren, as if calling the listener to some new kind of ritual. 
I found a parking spot quickly, which is good because by the time the first verse started, I was no longer giving much attention to driving. I sat and listened to the rest of the song, hoping to find out who had done it so I could get back to my dorm room and effectively poison my computer downloading it from Limewire. 
Then, some heartache. Phil Rudd’s sticks clicked against the rim and side of his snare. Then on the soft hi-hat. One-two. Then the chords. “Back in Black” started without any mention of the bang bang song I’d just heard. So, like many of us, I remembered as many of the lyrics as I could to search on my parents’ gigantic and arthritic Gateway when we got home from dinner. 
That is the long way of telling you that very likely, the phantom tune I had just heard was probably playing on the radio when my parents and sister first started going to that restaurant. That in that same parking lot 20 years earlier, in 1984, nearly four months prior to my gracing the scene, I might have heard those chords and that chorus, somehow. But only if you believe in that sort of thing. I kind of do.
Like many songs now forever etched into my brain, Scandal’s 1984 pop masterpiece, “The Warrior,” found me embarrassingly late, which is not something easily admitted by a person who decided in high school that he would define himself by being an erudite music ingester: not just a listener but someone who went even deeper than simply liking or not liking a song or band. This posture led to an identity of sorts, a dramatic tacit plea for others to think I was smart and cool. I’d have given nearly anything to dip my toe into being mysterious, but I settled. Or at least that was my perception.
But I didn’t own up to the fact that I was—and still am—someone who simply likes what I like and doesn’t like what I don’t. I am no different than anyone else who listens to music, or reads books, or watches TV, or has a hobby, or has been to a mall. Over the last decade or so, I have tried to tell myself the truth: I’m not a music snob, and, truly, I never was because any worthy music snob probably wouldn’t have been 20 years old before hearing the song I’ve been fortunate enough to write about for this tournament. I was never a music snob because I’ve never done the work to truly be one. 
Now that I am looking back on that experience of encountering a song that had already existed for two decades, researching and internalizing everything I can about it, there’s something haunting about how after that unwitting introduction, it started popping up more and more, as if I had somehow activated it. This frequency illusion (known colloquially as the Baader-Meinhof phenomenon) happens way too often with me—then and now—and that is in no way a brag. I guarantee you, the reader, have had many instances in which you learn something and then it becomes a part of your daily life, pointing out to you that everyone else around you had known about it, except you. For another quick example: ask me about my time with the concept of the “meet cute” mechanism in romantic comedies, one of my actual favorite genres. It’s a wild ride that will seemingly never end.)
The frequency at which I experienced “The Warrior,” which (suddenly) began playing at basketball games that winter, and now plays at every sporting event and eighties night I attend, as well as in the Home Depot on Halsted Street, on TV shows, etc., makes me wonder where this song was my literal whole life? I’m fine not knowing. But I’m glad I found it, because I’d love to tell you all about what I’ve learned about it in the nearly 20 years since that day. This isn’t the only song that’s caused me to perseverate. Not by a mile. But for a pop song from the eighties, this one deserves some extra thought.

WHO’S THE GAME?

Scandal, featuring Patty Smyth. 

That’s the band who recorded and performed “The Warrior,” and throughout many lineup changes, Patty Smyth seems to be the song’s heiress, a development that has always perplexed me, and not because I spent a few days confused about Patti Smith’s involvement with the band (none). Scandal only put out an EP in 1982 and a full-length in 1984 before, basically, disbanding. Patty Smyth is still putting out solo music and there is some footage of her performing “The Warrior” as recently as a few years ago. Some of the band members died or went off into other acts, but past that, I can’t get a good idea about what happened from the naming convention to the disbandment. But I did learn a great piece of trivia: Jon Bon Jovi toured with Scandal (ft. Patty Smyth) as part of the promotional tour for the Scandal EP. Wanting to know more, I fell face-first down a fun and unproductive rabbit hole after typing into the Google search bar, “Jon Bon Jovi Scandal.” The first Google headline reads, “Jon Bon Jovi Admits He’s Been ‘No Saint’” and when I saw that, I knew that was the rest of my night. It’s nothing that bad, at least nothing that I can see. But, to my original point, he was in Scandal for not quite a year before starting his own band. His Wikipedia page makes no mention of his time in Scandal, making me think (wish) there was some inter-band drama, which I’m a sucker for. I’m coming to terms with never knowing. There aren’t many videos showcasing his membership in the band, but they’re out there.
Speaking of the band’s first EP, Paul Shaffer (David Letterman’s sidekick) played the sixties throwback keyboard solo on, “Goodbye to You.” While Shaffer’s not in the actual video, this video is stellar and does much more work for the song and band than the video I’m about to launch into now for “The Warrior.” 

 

THE WARRIOR VS. THE WARRIORS VS. CATS VS. WEREWOLF

Something I’ve done my whole life: Find a song, then listen to it until it’s tattooed onto my brain. Once I found out about this 20-year-old song, “The Warrior,” it found its way onto my many mixed CDs that played at parties and on car trips and in my shower and at night when I was staring at the oven waiting for a pizza to bake. 
But I need to spend some time on the song’s official music video. At the time of my discovery, I hadn’t considered it even having a music video. Now, I know I didn’t think about that possibility because I’d never seen it on MTV or VH1 (which, of course), but also because in 2004, YouTube didn’t quite exist. It would be another few years before I saw it. Music videos have become my favorite medium and watching “The Warrior” again recently didn’t hold the ironic laughter it used to when considering its absolutely bonkers-ness. Instead I have been trying to dial into the something I will harp on a lot in this essay, for better or worse: songwriting and performance intent. This video cashed in all its 1980s-vibe chips and never looked back. 
At once, the video pulls from many sources, many inspirations, and, potentially some others I can’t detect (would love to hear your thoughts!). This video from a YouTube show Professor of Rock, hosted by Adam Reader, definitely helped keep me oriented. The music video’s director, David Hahn (not this David Hahn, or this David Hahn, but maybe this David Hahn), had a vision that might have been associatively conceived based on Walter Hill’s spectacular film, The Warriors (1979), a brilliant movie I got to, no surprises, way too late in life. There is a familiar darkness, and, to a degree I love, a sensational and riveting silliness. For instance, within the first few frames of the music video, our perceived hero, Patty Smyth, has her goddamned kimono thrashed by an unknown antagonist, thus literally showing us that our hero is in a situation where being a warrior is not only warranted, but deeply encouraged. But it does little to support that idea or the song as it goes on.
Without relying on a play-by-play of a video you probably saw decades before I did, it’s hard to not marvel at the other obvious pillars the director comfortably leaned against. Less than a year earlier, Michael Jackson teamed up with John Landis to redefine the opportunities and limitations of music videos with Thriller (which has just a hell of an epigraph to kick it off; check it out if you aren’t familiar). And yes, you might have already thought it, but given his one confirmed IMDb credit for this music video, maybe Hahn felt that offering a generic, knock-off version of the iconic Broadway musical, Cats, would seal the viewers’ commitment to seeing just where in the hell this story might take them. But more and more, to me, the video’s aesthetic is as follows: “The Warriors” as live-action Cats. Purely to entertain and capitalize.
Watching it again and again, and hearing Patty Smyth talk about it in the aforementioned interview, this video nearly shows us exactly what the song is not about. We see protagonist Smyth singing to the camera as the same dingbat who clawed and probably destroyed her kimono engages in choreographed dance combat with a host of impossibly modern dance opponents, including a gang whose uniform are cargo nets. There’s also another combatant with a traffic-cone orange mask. That is about as thorough of a description as you need because the whole time, the camera keeps returning to Smyth, whose hair transforms and grows and looks more and more unwieldy even though, at this point, we know she is the Warrior, yet one who is watching this silver-toned threat prance around with other equally unattractive combatants only to find a sweet-looking distressed robo-damsel who seemingly needs help. In health or heart? Honestly, your guess is as good as mine, but I am fairly certain he goes ahead and kills her all the same.
Then, without warning or explanation, Smyth’s hair shoots up even higher as we see her face now painted in a red-white-black-and-blue Kabuki-style pattern. Every time I watch this video, nearing now maybe fifty times, I find myself foolishly feeling like we’re finally at Warrior time, that with her new look, not unlike Bruce Wayne sliding down the Bat pole, we are going to see the triumph that will match the song’s triumphant lyrics and music. The makeup doesn’t last long, though. As quickly as this transformation comes, it goes, with the Warrior back to normal-looking hair and no makeup. Sure, for 20-screen-seconds, there is a somewhat erotic dance to represent a fight between our Warrior and this witless, third-rate Rum Tum Tugger, but it ends with a clunky, pre-Dirty Dancing lift. That’s sort of it. 
From here on out, the silver stalker stands steady with a one-thousand-lightyear stare as the Warrior continues belting out the awesome chorus. He does step in to help when she inexplicably falls over, neither faint-looking or physically hurt, and while I can’t really decipher that particular piece of choreography, I do wonder if Smyth resisted the makeup treatment in favor of showing her actual face. After all, music videos were created to sell the song, the album, and, if lucky, the band. There’s more to say about this video, of course, but I’ll end this rant by saying that looking back, with the power of knowing what we know now, it is a missed swing that this video didn’t do more work to support the song’s meaning. I think this song is rooted in strength. And, yes, I know it was a four-minute music video from 1984 and I should probably relax. Pop music by its very nature isn’t supposed to be taken so seriously, I know, and I agree there is no reason to shame a music video. Unless we choose to go a little further. Which I will always choose.

 

THE WARRIOR OF THE WORDS

Serendipity strikes again. As if my relationship with this song wasn’t already filled with some quasi-ethereal circumstances, I learned a few weeks ago that of all years for me to be lucky enough to be in this tournament, it is also the year the song’s co-writer, Holly Knight, released a memoir, “I Am the Warrior: My Crazy Life Writing the Hits and Rocking the MTV Eighties,” which I waited to be released before putting the finishing touches on this essay. There’s only one short chapter detailing the writing and legacy of the song, but one thing blisteringly obvious from the book is that Knight really did embody the female struggle in the music industry during that time, and has written figuratively countless hit songs in her career. But “The Warrior” is among the songs she wrote that remained a “theme song” for the rest of her life.
Lyrically, I think there’s a long-term intention and a short-term vision. In the larger sense, this song is aimed at giving the protagonist agency in heartbreak and loss. Its percussive verse lyrics feed into the anthemic chorus, which is what I imagine many listeners have held on to all these years (in 2004 I internet-searched “bang, bang, i am the warrior”). But how far does the feeling go? I have no idea, but I like to think that at least the germ of the song’s idea is rooted in women having not only a voice, but one that is fueled by unapologetic power. 
Holly Knight teamed up with Nick Gilder (of “Hot Child in the City” infamy) to write “The Warrior” with no one in mind to sing it. At least at first. Producer and oft-songwriting collaborator of Knight’s, Mike Chapman, wanted a song for up-and-comer Patty Smyth but sat on the composition for a bit before taking it to Smyth (who was the perceived star of the band she was singing for, Scandal) to record. A year earlier, Knight and Chapman co-wrote “Love is a Battlefield” for Pat Benatar, which is richly and thematically foreboding. Chapman and Knight also wrote/rewrote one of the band Spider’s hits, “Better Be Good to Me,” which ended up being a Tina Turner hit. (Holly Knight was Spider’s early keyboardist.) This is all to say, that there was a fateful energy pulsing through these songs and Holly Knight had her hand on the switch, enabling powerful women to sing powerful songs in a sexist eighties climate that seemed tumultuous and terrifying. It never hurts to have women openly resisting the norms outlined by the Baby Boomer generation/all of history. 
In NPR’s “The Women Behind the Music” series, Knight’s edition observes that “Knight wasn't just making statements for women. She described the shifting dynamics of relationships, suggesting that it might be better to unite and take on the world as a team. The fight metaphors in Knight's songs are a reminder that all's fair in love and war — and rock and roll.” I have no further questions. 
“The Warrior”’s lyrics, a collaboration between Knight and Gilder, are as ridiculous as they are big. Given Knight’s vast songwriting catalogue, I would have reasoned politely that she must’ve penned most of the actual lyrics. For the sake of the song’s success and my grip on this essay, the lyrics are the lyrics. Nothing more. Nothing less. But in her memoir, Knight tells of the lyric-writing process, which she claims was pretty even in terms of word and line contribution. She says, “I told Nick that we needed to write the kind of male-driven lyrics that men were known for, but that a woman with balls could sing instead.” They succeeded because Gilder, after the song was complete, wanted to record it for himself.
But going further: I don’t think great songs need to always be at the caliber of an AOL Instant Messenger away message. Not all the time, at least. But if a song, deemed great by the critics and record sales, only has tangential and inaccessible lyrics, I often think it is a wasted opportunity. Don’t get me wrong, I admire what Max Collins of Eve 6 did with “Inside Out.” Chris DeMakes, of Less Than Jake, had Collins on his podcast (Chris DeMakes a Podcast) and to paraphrase, Collins tells DeMakes that he was never hoping to tell a story in “Inside Out,” rather he was aiming to use words that simply fit well together and propelled the song sonically. For me, at some point, the free association-style of lyric can pull me away from an otherwise good track. Same with poetry; sometimes, maybe a lot, it’s about how the words sound and that is where it ends. The feeling comes from sound, not meaning. I agree that both can be true and to great effect.
Speaking in generalities, for argument’s sake: Folk music lyrics aim to tell stories. Rap and punk lyrics often dive into real-world political and social plights. What do pop lyrics do, and what are they supposed to do? I think about this a lot, and have for years, since the early aughts when boy bands, teen idols, radio rap, and pop-punk/emo (not real emo) bands dominated. Again, in generalities, boy band lyrics intended to make listeners’ dreams feel tangible, band-member archetype by band-member archetype (Justin Timberlake vs. AJ McLean, etc.). Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, members of the teen pop resurgence, sang about being in a position for those dreams to come true even in the face of hardship. Radio rap in the early aughts was big on money and going to clubs and other embodiments of conspicuous consumption. And with a swift kick to my younger self’s glass chin, pop-punk and emo helped solidify that boys are indeed sensitive, regardless of how they look or act. Actually, sadly and unfairly, pop punk and emo songs often sermonized that girls who don’t love these bad/sad boys back ought to sit heavy with guilt. Always a hyper-focused agenda for pop/radio music, it seems, and I think, lyrically, “The Warrior” splits the difference and splits it well: amped-up, firm female empowerment on one side with over-the-top yet vague, big rock song cliches beaming out on the other. Other songs have done it, too, to great success. But since we’re on this specific journey together, here are a few highlights of “The Warrior”’s words.
First, the use of “bang, bang.” Shots fired. At the “walls” of heartache, no less. According to Knight’s memoir, this was a direct contribution from Gilder a little later into the song’s writing. That onomatopoeia sealed this song’s fate for admittance and tenure in the pop music canon. The move sticks with you and, at its core, is genuinely fun. It is a success on that front, without a doubt. Pop music is catchy. I get that.
Now we have imagery of guns. My wife recently said that she’d known about the song for a long time before she met me as well as a long time before I knew of the song, naturally. Her main point with these lyrics is that warriors, as we often think of them in history books and in popular culture, don’t really use guns. The rest of the lyrics, however, adhere to this insistence on the presence of firearms. “Love is a kill, your heart’s still wild,” evokes a sad Hemingway hunting expedition in Africa, not 1200 AD Japan or Mongolia. In the song’s defense, I’d say that being too literal with pop music is a tricky game. The point is as clear as can be, regardless of these nit-picks. 
But then on November 2, 2022, I listened to the song in the shower. I have a shower playlist and yes, it is a weird amalgam of songs like “The Warrior” that have stayed with me closely for years. After the shower-listen, something felt different. It dawned on me: the Warrior is neither our protagonist, nor our antagonist. The Warrior, in song and video, is our narrator, our omniscient voice of relatability. The Warrior is telling us about something that has happened and is equally warning against it, but who is the audience? Other potential heartbreakers? Other women who might experience heartbreak? I looked more closely at the lyrics and while there are points of single-volley dialogue, this verse is the coolest sounding and most enigmatic in terms of intent:

You talk, talk, talk to me
Your eyes touch me physically
Stay with me, we'll take the night
As passion takes another bite
Oh, who's the hunter, who's the game
I feel the beat call your name
I hold you close in victory
I don't want to tame your animal style
You won't be caged
In the call of the wild

What, if anything, is this narrator saying? (Though “Your eyes touch me physically” is simply stunning and not in position for critique.)
Then I thought: the Warrior is talking to herself in what might be the most compelling pep talks I think any of us have been able to experience. You won’t be caged in the call of the wild. Clearly not talking to the person who wronged her. She is preparing herself for a fight and—maybe thinking too optimistically—she is preparing herself to never feel this way again. This is a song about empowerment, about getting knocked down and rising up again. If you survive.

VICTORY

It’s been a fun effort, delving into a song that might stick in your head for a while before sliding out into the comfortable ether populated by other popular music. Deep dives into these sorts of things—songs, books, movies, and so forth—have always kept me dialed in during times when I was untethered. It doesn’t matter that the video is stone-cold bananas, nor does it spoil anything that the lyrics and their meaning are nebulous yet loud. What matters is the feeling we can get from hearing a new-to-us song that we instantly love and then immediately wonder, Where has this song been my whole life? In the many instances I can claim these feelings, the moment always feels chosen, like that the time and circumstance were necessary. That if the moment had passed, my life might be somehow different, even on a minor-minor scale. Songs score our lives and the playlist will always change. Even if you forget about a song, the next time you hear it, it’ll sound different and the same, depending on where you are and who you’re with. Whether you consider yourself a stereo jungle child or not.


Born and raised in a Cleveland suburb, Alex Berge went on to earn his MFA in fiction. He is a current member of Poems While You Wait, a nonprofit writing collective, and is the former Associate Editor of CRAFT Literary. Alex’s work has appeared in Witness. He lives in Chicago with his wife.


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