Gratitude Walks: Difference between revisions

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'''"Gratitude Walks"''' is the first song on [[start|American Music Club]]'s sixth album, 1993’s ''[[Mercury]]''.
'''"Gratitude Walks"''' is the first song on [[start|American Music Club]]'s sixth album, 1993’s ''[[Mercury]]''. The 6th Street referred to in the lyrics is in San Francisco, a block and a half away from where Vudi was subleasing the second floor of a warehouse in the South of Market area of town, where [[American Music Club]] rehearsed and often lived at the time.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Stolder |first=Steve |date=1993 |title=Heart Of Darkness |url= |magazine=Request Magazine |location=Santa Monica, CA |publisher=Marvin Scott Jarrett |access-date=January 16, 2017}}</ref>
 
The song, originally titled "The Torture of St. Cruelty," was written in the spring of 1992, as mentioned in an interview with ''Musician'' magazine.<ref name="Musician">{{cite magazine |last=Fong-Torres |first=Ben |date=July 1992 |title=American Music Club's Mark Eitzel: Underground Hero |url=
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027115440/http://www.geocities.com/richbraz/amcmusician92.html |magazine=Musician |location= |publisher= |access-date=January 16, 2018}}</ref>
 
In the interview, Eitzel states, "I just wrote this new song, 'The Torture Of St. Cruelty.' It's about weakness. At first, I thought, 'No drums. It's just going to be acoustic guitar and a string section.' Now, I'm thinking, 'Let's try drums and maybe we'll do it heavy metal.' To me the song's realized as long as it does the same thing to me inside. And if a song doesn't groove, we'll drop it."<ref name="Musician"/>


==Lyrics==
==Lyrics==
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That gets louder the lower you sink
That gets louder the lower you sink


Gratitude walks on Sixth Street
Gratitude walks on 6th Street


Pull it from the air<br>
Pull it from the air<br>
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Push him down if he should try and run
Push him down if he should try and run


Gratitude walks on Sixth Street
Gratitude walks on 6th Street


Take a number for your big lament<br>
Take a number for your big lament<br>
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Leaving your cupboards bare
Leaving your cupboards bare


Gratitude walks on Sixth Street
Gratitude walks on 6th Street


==Video==
==Video==
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==Also appears on==
==Also appears on==
* ''[[A Toast To You]]'' <small>Live version</small>
* ''[[A Toast To You]]'' <small>Live version</small>
* ''[[The Mercury Band Demos 1992]]'' <small>Demo</small>
* ''[[The Mercury Band Demos April 1992]]'' <small>Demo</small>
* ''[[Our First Trip to Nottingham]]'' <small>Live version</small>


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 21:04, 7 March 2021

"Gratitude Walks"
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Mercury cover
Song by American Music Club from the album Mercury
Released March 15, 1993
Format LP / CD / CS
Length 4:14
Label Reprise Records (US) / Virgin Records (UK)
Writer(s) Mark Eitzel
Producer(s) Mitchell Froom
Mercury track listing
  1. "Gratitude Walks"
  2. "If I Had A Hammer"
  3. "Challenger"
  4. "I've Been A Mess"
  5. "Hollywood 4-5-92"
  6. "What Godzilla Said To God When His Name Wasn't Found In The Book Of Life"
  7. "Keep Me Around"
  8. "Dallas, Airports, Bodybags"
  9. "Apology For An Accident"
  10. "Over And Done"
  11. "Johnny Mathis' Feet"
  12. "The Hopes And Dreams Of Heaven's 10,000 Whores"
  13. "More Hopes And Dreams"
  14. "Will You Find Me?"

"Gratitude Walks" is the first song on American Music Club's sixth album, 1993’s Mercury. The 6th Street referred to in the lyrics is in San Francisco, a block and a half away from where Vudi was subleasing the second floor of a warehouse in the South of Market area of town, where American Music Club rehearsed and often lived at the time.[1]

The song, originally titled "The Torture of St. Cruelty," was written in the spring of 1992, as mentioned in an interview with Musician magazine.[2]

In the interview, Eitzel states, "I just wrote this new song, 'The Torture Of St. Cruelty.' It's about weakness. At first, I thought, 'No drums. It's just going to be acoustic guitar and a string section.' Now, I'm thinking, 'Let's try drums and maybe we'll do it heavy metal.' To me the song's realized as long as it does the same thing to me inside. And if a song doesn't groove, we'll drop it."[2]

Lyrics

Why don't you be good for something
And draw down the shade
On a sign that sat up all night shivering
On a sign that sat up all night afraid

Well now chains on the oasis that
Leads a man to drink
Drunk on the kind of applause
That gets louder the lower you sink

Gratitude walks on 6th Street

Pull it from the air
And they throw it in the blue
And you're spinning under their wheels
Trapped in your room

You're jumpy, you don't want to see
You don't want to see them have their fun
Slap her face if she should laugh
Push him down if he should try and run

Gratitude walks on 6th Street

Take a number for your big lament
They sold the rules of dream land
in cotton, wool, and cement

Well it's never what you want
It's just the kind of thing that always happens here
Yeah you watch the good old days pass you by
Leaving your cupboards bare

Gratitude walks on 6th Street

Video

American Music Club performing "Gratitude Walks" on April 5, 1993 in Scotland.

Personnel

Also appears on

References

  1. Stolder, Steve (1993). "Heart Of Darkness". Request Magazine. Santa Monica, CA: Marvin Scott Jarrett. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Fong-Torres, Ben (July 1992). "American Music Club's Mark Eitzel: Underground Hero". Musician. Retrieved January 16, 2018.