It IS about a desperate romancer, not a sniper. Christine from Salem, CtI agree with Caitlyn.As stated in the facts before, their band name is after the assassinated Archduke, so technically it is still about a sniper. Billy from Calgary, CanadaBoth parties aren't completely wrong about the sniper part.Allie from Pine Knob, MiThe only Franz song i know but its very well written!!.Kate from Burnaby, CanadaMy friend showed me this song yesterday, and I just love it!.There are many songs that are more similar to Trampled Underfoot than this one.Īlthough i do admit that riff does sound quite like the one in Trampled Underfoot. Ahmed from Chorley, United KingdomTo Sinead, Canada. Trey from Dallas, Txit may be just me but i dont't here trampled underfoot at all.Basically, the song can be interpreted in any way you want. The duke is dead, so he won't be able to leave the building as the assassin would be able to. "I know I won't be leaving here, with you" World war 1, namely, that kill so many people. Signifies that the Archduke is talking to the sniper about the events that occur after he is assassinated. "I say, don't you know, you say, you don't know" It seems fitting for their first song that they'd release this one. Billy from Calgary, CanadaThe song is not only about a hopeless romantic at a club, but also about the assassination of Franz Ferdinand.An assassin ran up to his car and shot him in the neck with a pistol. Wilford from Los Angeles, CaFranz Ferdinand wasn't killed by a sniper or in a building.Victoria from Memphis, TnThis Song doesn't sound anything like Trampled under foot.idk i coul d be wrong but i'd like to think it's better then some of these. Metaphorically: A woman is leaving him but he's saying he cant live without her. You leave me broken shattered alone(it was dropped) Then we can die. the person holding it thinking of suicide. The obvious: If you're lonely and sad im the crosshair, basically the gun singing to the person holding it. I do not get how it is about anything else. And then they say, "If i move this could die," because if he moves he is off target and could miss. Then they say, "I'm just a shot then we can die," meaning after he shoots him the guy he shoots will die and the guy shooting him has nothing else to live for. And they say, "I know i won't be leaving here with you," because he is going to kill him. I do no it is about a sniper though because he almost has his crosshairs lined up ready to shot the guy. I think it is about Franz Ferdinand's death, but he was not shot by a sniper. Patrick from Philadelphia, PaI don't get this song.Cody from Lititz, PaSinead from Canada this is not a zeppelin does sound a little like trampled underfoot but not enough that i noticed it until i read this.and im the biggest led zeppelin fan there is.but that might be a reason i like this song considering i only listen to classic rock and this isnt.Matt from Houston, TxDude, you are not the biggest zeppelin fan ever.Anthony from Morton, Pawell if he says he is, then he is.If you call this 'ripping off' then we can say Oasis ripped off Street Fighting Man and Imagine as well as Stone Roses ripped off Brown's 'Funky Drummer ' Valo from Moscow, Russia FederationThey hardly ripped off the song by LZ.Am I talking about snipers or am I talking about some kind of romantic situation?" And so I could write so you can't really tell what I'm talking about. "You know, where you both know you're into the other but no one wants to kind of, like, expose their vulnerability and make a move, and let the other know how they feel. "This image of the two snipers left quite an impact on me it felt like a very good metaphor for the kind of romantic situations that we sometimes find ourselves in," he said. The next day, "while mucking about," Kapranos came up with what would eventually become "Take Me Out." 'Cause as soon as the other makes a move, the other will know where they are and will take them out." They're both kind of tucked away, hidden from each other, waiting for the other to make a move and expose themselves. "Jude Law is the Soviet sniper and Ed Harris is the evil Nazi. One of the themes of the film is this stand-off between two snipers," he explained in a Song Exploder podcast. "It's set during the Second World War around the siege of Stalingrad. Kapranos watched the 2001 war film Enemy At The Gates the night before the idea emerged for "Take Me Out." The Jean-Jacques Annaud-directed movie served as inspiration for the song.
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