![]() We want space, but space doesn’t really want us. Perhaps our establishment in space has become more like a virus in this modern day, though, more than anything else. We’d be less scared of at least SPACE then… since we’re obviously going to stay afraid of time forever. With our sheer persistence and self-centric desires, we as the human race can extend our reach out into the infinite and establish ourselves there. Ruler of Everything is the fourteenth track on Tally Halls first studio album, Marvins Marvelous Mechanical Museum. As far as the battle at the end between the three worlds goes, I think it just goes to show that perhaps the smallest of us all can do the most damage. I think that’s in the same vibe as theories that out of our world there’s another world larger than ours, etc., etc., etc. They discover themselves in a foreign place… which would be considered in our point of view, to be a pretty basic house. After the population has reached a certain level of intelligence, they decide to explore what’s out beyond their planet, as we have down here on Earth. Do you like how I walk Do you like how I talk Do you like how my face disintegrates into chalk. It controls how slow or fast the mechanical hands go (the manual crank), and is responsible for all the things the residents cannot control (such as natural disaster). However, above the planet, as time goes by, the Cosmos is watching– whatever THIS grand creator is supposed to be. Kinda like how the Monolith in 2001 gave the gorilla-man intelligence. ![]() When the microscopic man enters the baby, it immediately begins commencing plans on developing its planet. Our composition is what gives us our knowledge. Though we may try to fool ourselves (as the song tends to give the opinion of), we’re all childish and have a lot to learn. The humans are portrayed by the infant-like creatures. They’re, in a way, colonizing our bodies. ![]() The two-dimensional human beings are our cells and other microscopic organisms within us that give us life. It shall all fade, though, as we slowly disintegrate into chalk through the mechanical hands of time. In this, it seems as though there’s a world within a world within a world. We have zirconium pants– our life and our youth and vitality. Actually, I’ll post it on the Tubbs right after this certain video goes through with uploading on my second channel… Thank you for giving me the strength of my convictions, YTASB.Īs far as I can tell, this is my best shot at interpreting both the song and the video. I don’t know, that’s never stopped me before. This was actually meant to be a comment on the YouTube video itself, but as you’ll see, it’s a little bulky. (Slip-a-Freud much?) Considering I just went through all 137 &s drawn for the now-cancelled Hawley music video, it seems only appropriate to be posted now. As I did with The Avalanches’ Since I Left You, here’s my interpretation of Ruler of Everything by Joe Hawley’s Tally Hall.
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