Cove

Shit, shit, that is such a great cover of โ€œFree Fallin'โ€ that I posted earlier. Iโ€™ve seen a million covers of that song before and after Tom Petty died and none of them are all that good.

Most of them are terrible because the singers donโ€™t know what the hell the song means. It just sounds pretty to them, so they sing it that way. But Grace G. knows what the lyrics mean. Maybe one of those bad boys has broken her heart, too.

The song is, of course, about the narrator treating a girl like trash, at first even lightly mocking her for her essential conformity and naรฏvetรฉ, then gradually realizing heโ€™d made a mistake by treating her so terribly.

The first chorus of โ€œfree fallin'โ€ connotes that the narrator feels freedom in the sense of heโ€™s free of obligation, of responsibility โ€” heโ€™s used a woman for his own purposes and now heโ€™s free of her, doesnโ€™t even miss her, and though he refers himself as a โ€œbad boy,โ€ itโ€™s not serious. Itโ€™s like calling someone a โ€œbaaad man.โ€

But that changes in the next part of the song.

In some of the best lyrics of any song ever written, the great line โ€œAll the vampires walking through the valley \ Move west down Ventura Boulevardโ€ is where the narrator starts referring to himself as one of the vampires.

Then the bridge, which changes the tone of the song completely.

The narrator then tells us, โ€œIโ€™m going to write her name in the skyโ€ in an attempt to rectify his mistake of hurting the girl by discarding her, breaking her heart. This is where the โ€œfree fallin'โ€ changes meaning in an obvious way. โ€œFree fallin'โ€ that is into nothing, as the narrator states. He wants to write her name in the sky to tell her heโ€™s made an irredeemable mistake and now heโ€™s falling into the oblivion of his own errors of judgement.

But itโ€™s too late, and the narrator knows it. Grace does, too.

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