From my first day on the job, I felt like God intended for me to work at this magazine. After being at the magazine for about a year, one evening on my subway ride home from the office I wondered silently: Do I really believe in angels?
Over my writing desk, which faced a wall, hung a large mirror. When I looked up at the mirror I could always see who was walking in the bedroom door behind me. But when I looked into the mirror that day I gasped.
The Pop Song Professor project is all about helping music lovers like you to better understand the deeper meanings of popular song lyrics so that you know what your artist is saying and can enjoy your music more.
I've never been Katy Perry's biggest fan. Something about the candy costume in "California Girls" threw me off. And "Roar" is too much pump-up without enough purpose. But it doesn't matter what I think, right? The point here is to explain this song objectively and line-by-line.
Perry's song "Rise" is the theme for NBC's 2016 Olympics coverage this year (says Wikipedia), and it's good at that. The music video "sports" pictures of a variety of athletes from different countries in the 2012 Summer Olympics, and capitalizes on the strong "let's win" themes of Perry's song. But there's still a little bit more to it.
Katy Perry sings, "I won't just survive / Oh, you will see me thrive." With these first two lines, she gives away the main point of her song. She wants to overcome and to do something amazing. And she's not going to let other people tell her she can't win; she says that you "[c]an't write my story."
"Rise" takes a more interesting literary twist when she sings, "I'm beyond the archetype / I won't just conform." Archetypes in literature (and elsewhere) are stories or plots we're all familiar with. We've all seen a "rags-to-riches" movie (Annie) or read a book about growing up and becoming wiser and sadder (Harry Potter). When Perry mentions archetypes here, she's not just saying that she's not going to be an archetypal loser, she's saying that she's going to win so much that no story has been written before that could be compared to hers.
And she continues, "No matter how you shake my core / Cause my roots, they run deep." She's determined, and her motivation isn't a passing whim. This is something she's wanted for a while, and she's ready to go for it no matter what.
Here, Katy Perry sings, "Oh, ye of so little faith / Don't doubt it, don't doubt it." She's drawing on her religious past here to momentarily compare herself to God. The first line is a reference to Matthew 8:26 when Jesus rebukes his disciples for being afraid of a storm. He wanted to assure them, but Perry here is saying that people will look like fools for not believing in her because "[v]ictory is in my veins / I know it, I know it."
The chorus is where things get really intense as Katy Perry sings, "When . . . the fire's at my feet again / And the vultures all start circling." Here's she's showing that the situation is getting difficult, and she must respond. In addition, "vultures" refers to people who think she is going to fail and who are ready to tear her apart if she does. This makes sense since vultures are carrion birds that eat dead animals they spot while out searching.
These "vultures" are "whispering, 'You're out of time,'" to Perry, but she sings, "But still, I rise." And she wants her success accredited to herself, not to chance: "This is no mistake, no accident."
And even if it looks like she's about to die, she wants listeners and haters to know that she's still in the game. She sings, "When you think the final nail is in; think again / Don't be surprised, I will still rise."
This verse acts mainly as a transition back into the pre-chorus and chorus. Perry sings about needing to "stay conscious" and how "[t]hrough the madness and chaos" she is going to "call on [her] angels." Who these angels are is going to differ from person to person, and only Perry knows if her angels are encouraging friends, assertive thoughts, or a spiritual influence. But it really doesn't matter. In this case, they're meant to be whatever encourages the person listening since "[t]hey say . . ." what comes next in the second iteration of the pre-chorus.
"Oh, ye of so little faith / Don't doubt it . . . / Victory is in your veins." Perry's angels modify her pre-chorus by changing all of the first person pronouns (I) to second person pronouns (you), affirming everything that she said about herself earlier.
I've got to credit Wife April for my deeper thoughts on this song. Last night while we were doing our grocery shopping (yes, we usually do it after 9PM--not sure why), we heard "Rise" and April shared her thoughts on it.
She explained that it was interesting that "Rise" was NBC's song for the 2016 Olympics since the Olympics used to be about honoring the Greek gods. Perry's song, on the other hand, is definitely about honoring one's self and acknowledging and encouraging one's own power to accomplish and overcome.
Perry's song suggests that it is about one's own ability to overcome and that the Olympics are a testament to the fierce power of humanity when it really wants something. More specifically her song suggests that it's about each individual person's attempt to beat others to get to the Olympics or to any goal.
Keep in mind the difference then; the Olympics used to be about honoring gods, and now they're an honoring of the self and of humanity in general, which gives the Olympics a different purpose and flavor entirely. (It's generally more about bringing different countries together in fun competitions.)
She may have excellent answers and I may be too existentialist to fully appreciate her song, but these are the questions a pump-up song that seems to go nowhere except the glorification of the self prompts in me.
Hi! I'm a university writing center director who teaches literature classes and loves helping others to understand the deeper meanings of their favorite songs. I'm married to my beautiful wife April and love Twenty One Pilots, Mumford & Sons, Kishi Bashi, and so many others!
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