Monday 3 June 2013

Wandering Star - Portishead

Good evening! I actively encourage those of you kind enough to read these posts to comment and please do make suggestions for music that you think I should be listening to - either in comments or on Twitter @mystmodmus. It is the dialogue and the connection that allows us all to grow. The inspiration for today's post comes from my anonymous friend who has been commenting extensively on the Radioactive - Imagine Dragons post. She / He recommended that I listen to Seven Stars by Air as it had helped her / him through a particularly tough time. Not only do I recommend that song to you dear readers but it prompted me to look at a song that might allow us to discuss one of the great mystical numbers: 7.

I have considered a number of songs for this task including: Seven Lives by Enigma, which is a great song to chill out to but lyrically unsophisticated; and, 7% by Sunna which is a stunning and mystically erudite song but isn't strictly anything to do with the number 7. In any case,  they are both artists that I want to return to in future posts. The song I want to springboard-off into a discussion on the number 7 is Wandering Star by Portishead:

Please could you stay awhile to share my grief
For its such a lovely day
To have to always feel this way
And the time that I will suffer less
Is when I never have to wake
Wandering stars, for whom it is reserved
The blackness of darkness forever
Wandering stars, for whom it is reserved
The blackness of darkness forever
Those who have seen the needles eye, now tread
Like a husk, from which all that was, now has fled
And the masks, that the monsters wear
To feed, upon their prey
Wandering stars, for whom it is reserved
The blackness of darkness forever
Wandering stars, for whom it is reserved
The blackness of darkness forever

(Always) doubled up inside
Take awhile to shed my grief
(Always) doubled up inside
Taunted, cruel...
Wandering stars, for whom it is reserved
The blackness of darkness forever
Wandering stars, for whom it is reserved
The blackness of darkness forever

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Its a pretty dark and moody song and is full of galactic foreboding but as with many such songs I can't help but focus on the silver lining around the cloud. You'd be quite entitled to ask, what on earth has this song got  to do with the number 7? Well its a fair question and hopefully the answer will also shed some light on why 7 developed such mystical importance.
The title of the song is Wandering Star which is the literal meaning of the word now more commonly used: planet. In antiquity the planets were literally stars that wandered across the apparently fixed celestial background, and there were seven of them: The Sun, The Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. The outer planets were not discovered until after the "invention" of the telescope at the start of the 17th Century.
And from this knowledge, the power of the number 7 has been reflected across almost all cultures and has worked its way into all walks of life. There are dozens of good websites that show he deeply this number has infiltrated our world, but it is commonly accepted that the number 7 represents divine perfection, completeness. It was the sages, wisemen, astrologers and adepts that had this knowledge and let it infiltrate the entirety of our modern world.
The many religious references to the number 7 are testimony to this, but the connection goes even deeper. Sure the days of the week are an obvious clue:  
The Goths had 7 Deities from whom come the English names of week days; Sun, Moon, Tuisco, Wotan, Thor, Friga, Seatur, corresponding, of course, to the planets.
But what about the 7 colours, or the 7 notes in music, or the 7 directions? These would have been more difficult to artificially manufacture . . . unlike days of the week, names of Gods or references in scripture.

So for me - this song is all about the number 7, and the number 7 is a great (literally daily!) reminder of the divine immanent in all - the core of the mystical revelation.

"If God is indeed in the body—and consciousness and physiology are, from an evolutionary perspective, inextricably linked—we must acknowledge that divine consciousness is available in and through physicality." Sol Luckman

or more poetically still:
"To see a world in a grain of sand,
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
And eternity in an hour."
William Blake's Auguries of Innocence 

12 comments:

  1. This song has been stuck in my head for a week. I've only listened to it a handful of times, years ago. Thank you.

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  2. ... wow. how shallow... do you care to mention that the Bible has been quoted twice in the song... might need to dig a little more on this one...

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    1. Thank you Mr / Ms Unknown! I appreciate your interest if not your unnecessarily aggressive tone! I sense much fear and some hate in you - just because I didn't mention certain obvious biblical references, does not render this post shallow! Having said that, you are absolutely right:

      "wandering stars to whom is deserved the blackness of darkness for ever" is a direct quote from Jude 1:13. I don't happen to believe in eternal damnation - it is a curiously pessimistic Abrahamistic notion. Very extreme in the context of world mysticism and world religion in general. The concept is an evolution of the ideas of karmic reincarnation - but scarier. Rather than having multiple lives to sort our selves out we get one shot, and if we get it wrong then it's eternal damnation. This is not a concept which appears in the mystical traditions of any religion. It is crude, to say the least, and not the way in which a loving God would treat his children. You are free to believe otherwise of course - but most admit that the concepts of eternal damnation, coupled with a loving God are incongruent!

      The needle's eye may well refer to passages that appear in all three synoptic gospels (Matthew 19:24, Mark 10:25, Luke 18:25). Incidentally the same passage appears in the apocryphal Acts of Peter and Andrew vv14-21. The metaphor of the camel and the eye of the needle has been long interpreted as the notion that it is difficult to reach heaven, or achieve enlightenment. I find this idea unhelpful too. In most mystical traditions it is more common to find the view that we are all enlightened beings already - we simply need to wake-up to that fact. Waking-up to that fact may be difficult, or easy, but the point is that we are all Buddhas already and redemption comes from realisation of that reality, rather than becoming something else . . .

      In this sense I prefer the use of this metaphor in the Midrash Rabbah (Song of Songs): "The Holy One said, open for me a door as big as a needle's eye and I will open for you a door through which may enter tents and [camels?]"

      We need only recognise the smallest flicker of our Inner Light (to use Quaker terminology) and the Grace of God will flood our existence.

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    2. The woman is resigned to live in permanent sense of grief and loss. She does not expect to recover or for the feeling to lessen over time. The only thing that would cause a woman to be eternally trapped in that state is loss of her child. That’s what I think when I hear this song now. Different than when I first heard this song in college

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  3. I personally believe this song deals with the realization that the wandering star/planet isn't what you are told. Those who have seen the needles eye, now tread Like a husk from which all that was, now has fled -- I relate this to being told your whole life that what you believe to be true is wrong, for instance, thinking that the planet is round and coming to a personal understanding that it isn't-- Looking up to the stars and watching how they circle Polaris(the north star) will prove this to anyone rationally thinking it out.. -- And the masks, that the monsters wear To feed, upon their prey. -- pretty self explaining, Nasa and the US government use the space exploration and the study of stars for billions of dollars profit and they can't even take an actual picture of a round earth.. -- To me, this song is the personal reflection in knowing that God created all of this Earth Plane and not science and theories.

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  4. I've listened to portishead my whole life, and only until I discovered the book of Enoch did I make a correlation that maybe she's referring to Lucifer, the morning star, a wandering star, very dark song, love it regardless of the symbolism.

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    1. Same here since the 90s baby and i barely this hour connected with this biblical reference to JUDE!!!! I love it more now! xoxo

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    1. Duality in living a life where the soul struggles with walking in the light vs the darkness two roads yet balance is the only way to achieve harmony in all existence. Good path leads to needle not good path leads to darkness 4evr. I love God and I know God loves the world and all existence within it. We should have balance bc it is very natural to have moments where pain and struggles surround us as well as others that uplift us. We fall as humans but we also are given grace and unconditional love if we that love exists in our hearts as well. The heart needs to conquer spiritual misalignment with strength through love in order to be prepared to conquer anything outside of ourselves which will ultimately lead the priceless treasure of living with love and experiencing the beautiful oneness of of existence.

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