
The
last – it speaks of fatality and finality, the end of one historic moment and the beginning of another, but without the reassuring comfort of any continuity between them. The last (of anything) names an apocalyptic rupture, an unrecoverable end marking death and extinction—the last Passenger Pigeon, for instance, named Martha, which died alone at the Cincinnati Zoo at about 1:00 p.m. on September 1, 1914. The last thus reaffirms our perception of time as linear, and the moment that is the last, as in “our last breath,” is a point in time that is inevitable and unavoidable, although we ourselves, ironically, will not actually observe it. The last is a point in time that erases the past but therefore also leaves the future radically open to new, and therefore terrifying, possibility. Last, of course, can mean an earlier or previous time, as in “The Last Time I Saw Paris.” And the expression, “at last,” names a long anticipated moment that has finally come to pass. But songs such as “Last Kiss” are about a moment in time that is both fatal and final, the conjoining of Eros and Thanatos, the embracing of the beautiful corpse.
Ten Lasting Moments:The Band –
The Last WaltzThe Drifters –
Save the Last Dance For MeThe Eagles –
The Last ResortEdward Bear –
Last SongDon Henley –
The Last Worthless EveningThe Monkees –
Last Train to ClarksvilleThe Motels –
Suddenly, Last SummerThe Rolling Stones –
The Last TimeBruce Springsteen –
Last To DieJ. Frank Wilson & the Cavaliers –
Last Kiss
No comments:
Post a Comment