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Marbles - The Invisible ManIntroduction: From an interview with the Web France, in September 2004, h said, "Invisible Man takes a bit of explaining, and I don't really want to explain it... Well, just very generally, it's about witnessing without being there, about being conscious of other people's lives, sometimes intimately conscious, without being there and without being able to do anything about it, and about how difficult that is. So the invisible man is a ghost, really, he is somebody who is watching and knowing, and must bear the weight and the pain of that, and the pain of being unable to help. 'When you stumble/ You will stumble through me' is the most important line of the song, and this one line really sums the song up. The attempt to catch someone as they fall and them falling through you because you're actually not there. And to some extent we've all become invisible men. "There was a time when we all just lived in caves, where the only things we were conscious of where the things that happened to us in the cave or just outside the cave. And if something dreadful happened to us, we were conscious of it, we felt that pain. Or if something dreadful happened while we were out, running around, hunting, we were conscious of that and had to deal with it... We now live in a world where we are conscious of all kinds of horrors that are happening on the other side of the world, because of mass telecommunication, television and television news. So every day we wake up with this knowledge of some terrible injustice that has happened. And that's totally unnatural. We're not really equipped as human beings to have to be aware or feel responsible for something that is happening in Rwanda or Sydney, Australia or Mexico City, and now we do. And I think that introduces a massive burden on every person, because try as we might, we cannot help but feel a little bit responsible for it. "And
in many ways we are, because internationalism and global corporate trading
are now such that each of our economies and our own national, and to some
extent therefore our personal wealth, is a product of the fact that perhaps
some corporation has gone to another country and exploited the people,
either culturally or financially. And we're all a little bit conscious of
the fact that perhaps our own wealth is coming at the expense of somebody
else somewhere in the world. So there is this feeling of shared
responsibility and collective guilt for things that really, in an ordinary
world, in a primal world, we never would have known about in the first
place. So in that sense we're all invisible men and we all carry that burden
of the knowledge of what we have to witness and can do nothing about." ’The Invisible Man’ Ana 'Arqanacarb' from Brazil pointed out that in the DVD
Colours and Sound, h says that
'Budapest, Krakow and Amsterdam' are three places in the world he most
considers 'obscure', sad , 'ghostly' places.
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