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This
second and most famous part of the "Brick in the Wall" trilogy continues
with the narrative line and themes begun in "Happiest Days of Our Lives."
In Part 2, the school children create an anthem of youthful unrest in
response to the harsh treatment of the cynical teachers. Since
its release, countless children and adults have adopted "ABITW 2" as
an anarchistic hymn using it to strike back against years of educational
oppression. While some apply the song's biting lyrics to specific kinds
of schooling, others use it as a rallying cry against any government
mandated form of education. Largely as a result of this latter utilization,
many countries around the world have banned the song from being played
on their radio stations, a few even going so far as to place a national
ban on both the album and Pink Floyd. However, counter to these extremist
views of total educational anarchy, the song was written as an attack
against a specific type of learning, that which Waters and countless
others endured as children. The lyrics are quite specific in this effect,
rebuking those teachers first described in "Happiest Days" who use "thought
control" and "dark sarcasm" to mold the school children into mindless
drones of society. While there seems to be no specific allusion to Aldous
Huxley's Brave New World, there are certainly parallels between Huxley's
vision of future "education" and the rote learning of Pink's teachers.
As previously mentioned, Huxley's novel presents children learning largely
through hypnopedia, a process of repeating fundamental lessons to each
child as he or she sleeps. Although the specific lessons depend upon
the child's social status, there are certain governing "truths" that
are taught which all must
abide by. The outcome is a loss of individuality and the molding of
each child into identical cells in the body of society. Though the educational
system Waters is speaking out against is not as subliminal as Huxley's
vision, the effects are the same, producing social clones who know the
definition of an acre yet who cannot produce an original, imaginative
thought throughout the majority of their lives. The opening lyrics illustrate
this in the fact that "we don't need no education," is both a double
negative (We Need Education, in the sense that certain types of education
are good…they keep people from using double negatives! :-) ) and it's
a specific cry stating "we don't need THIS TYPE OF education." In this
sense, "ABITW 2" is not so much a song about complete revolution as
it as an anthem about reclaiming stifled individuality; it's a criticism
regarding the types of teachers and systems that ridicule an imaginative
child for writing poetry, as in Pink's case.
Ironically, despite being a song about individuality, the lyrics are
full of apparent conformity. Gone is any first person singular pronoun.
If you scan the lyrics, you won't see any mention of "I." Instead, the
lyrics boast "WE don't need," a collective boast alluding to the conformity
of ideas. Brad Kaye sent me an e-mail concerning the dichotomy of the
song that I felt needed to be repeated here. "When the school children
are all chanting 'We don't need no education' together in unison, this
act, in a way, is MORE conforming than the education they have grown
to hate. If you think about it, Roger Waters was saying that even in
a revolt against conformity there will still be the presence of conformists,
or uniformed followers. The use of the helpless school children is magnificent
and proves my point even more. These kids do what they are told! I mean,
I read somewhere that Roger got the idea to use a group of kids one
day and then BANG, the next day he asked a school if he could come in
and BANG, they all agreed and within a short period of time, the entire
chorus of children was recorded. No questions asked. Nobody raised a
fuss or anything, even the teachers in the school were excited and caught
up in the moment without fully understanding what was going on. My point
is this: Roger Waters wanted to show how conformity is ever-present,
even when we're little, and even when we are rebelling. His point is
definitely powerful." I couldn't agree more. (Side note: it was actually
Floyd producer Bob Ezrin who originally came up with the idea to record
schoolchildren singing the anthem. Seeing the potential for a radio
hit, Ezrin recorded the children and mixed the song before approaching
the band with the final product. Needless to say, Waters liked the reworked
version and kept it on the album.)
Musically speaking, "ABITW 2" is much more varied and vibrant than
the trilogy's first installment. As I mentioned before, the musical
styles of the "Brick in the Wall" trilogy reflect the development of
Pink. Whereas the music in Part 1 is much more subdued and
repetitive reflecting Pink's budding self-awareness, Part 2 is much
more energetic, musically echoing Pink's lively adolescence, his developing
artistic imagination, as well as his conformity to the conventions of
building a wall as seen in the repetitive verse and chorus. Every personal
injury repeatedly becomes "just another brick in the wall," linking
the ideas of conformity with those of cycles. The animated guitar solo
breaks the monotony for a few moments but ultimately the song fades
back to the sounds of the school yard and, above all else, the shouting
teacher who continues to lord over the children's lives yelling "wrong,
guess again!" while reinforcing the lesson previously mentioned that
"if you don't eat your meat, you can't have any pudding." Interestingly,
the repetitive sounds (guitar chord / verse / chorus) and narrative
cycle (teacher / mental revolution / conformity / teacher) rolls perfectly
into the dull drone of the phone ringing, briefly foreshadowing the
events that take place in the transition between "Young Lust" and "One
of My Turns." This later transition in turn reinforces the ideas of
cyclical conformity and repetition while hinting at the failures of
many fundamental social institutions such as school and marriage.
Like the popularity of the song "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2,"
the movie representation of the song is one of the most distinctive
and well-known pieces in the
Pink Floyd video collection. The darkness and cynicism of the set design
is due in large part to Gerald Scarfe who based the factory-like school
in the video on some of his previous artwork inspired by his own education.
The children march in unison to the same beat, rolling through a machine
only to emerge as putty-faced clones void of individual distinction
who ultimately falling blindly into an oversized meat grinder, metaphorically
pulverized and minced into the same ground beef-like form as the preceding
victim. It's interesting to note that many of the machines pictured
are made up with parts that resemble hammers. Hammers
are a major dichotomous symbol in "the Wall" possessing both creative
and destructive powers, simultaneously beneficial and oppressive. The
same hammer that constructs a house has the power to tear it down. Similarly,
the hammers in the machines metaphorically create ideal members of society
while destroying each child's individuality. Both natures of the symbolic
hammer are explored in greater detail later in the movie and album as
Pink slips further into his dementia.
The
ideas of conformity in revolution inherent in the song are further solidified
in the accompanying film footage. Although the children in the second
verse sing lyrics of personal rebellion, their unified singing coupled
with their symmetrical seating in the film are as eerie and standardized
as when they marched down the hall in oppressive unison. Despite their
rebellious intentions, they have become just as homogeneous as when
they were school clones. Furthermore, like the dual nature of the hammers,
what begins as a productive revolution (the regaining of individuality)
turns into destructive violence as the children destroy their school
and create a bonfire with the instruments of their past educational
repression that serves as a funeral pyre for their teacher whom they
drag out of the school kicking and screaming. This scene of absolute
anarchy spawned by the overthrow / absence of an authoritarian figure
is evocative of William Golding's novel Lord of the Flies in
which a group of school children revert to being savages when their
plane crash lands on a deserted island. Similar to almost every theme
in "the Wall," Waters alludes to both the creative and destructive forces
of any one idea. While overly-domineering figures are destructive to
personal development,
the absence of any authority figure is just as caustic. The dictatorial
teacher represses each individual child but the lack of any education
whatsoever is just as harmful. In this sense, living life is like walking
a thin wire between two polar but equally destructive forces; to live,
one must either skate over the thin ice carrying the personal burdens
of the past or break through the ice and drown in self-destruction.
One last interesting matter concerns the aforementioned blurring of
reality with imagination. While the scenes of the children marching
through the factory-like school are undoubtedly fantastical, the rebellion
that takes place during the guitar is much more realistic, thus causing
a bit of confusion as to whether these events are truly taking place.
For a while, the viewer is completely submerged within Pink's mind wondering
about the authenticity of what they are seeing. There are no fantastical
elements to the set and the violence portrayed is certainly feasible
albeit horrific. In the end, the viewer is instantaneously thrust out
of these dark imaginings as the camera cuts to Pink rubbing his ruler-struck
hand. It is at this point that we are fairly certain that what
has just taken place was completely in Pink's mind, once again reminding
us as the viewer to keep on our toes lest we fall for Pink's illusions.
As the album and movie progress and Pink becomes further shut off behind
his wall, his imaginative visions become much grander and much more
dangerous, increasingly distorting the line between reality and fantasy.
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