R
Jean Michel Jarre Lyrics


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One blue telephone, a pressure cooker
A ventilator, four more bars of chocolate
Six pairs of socks, a yellow clock
A pink scooter, a box of condoms

One baby leopard, a pot of jam
A safety pin, an iron
A wet shoe, a camera
One ton of peanuts, a black bra

A silver fork, a typewriter
An electric train




Three tons of strawberries
Strawberries

Overall Meaning

The lyrics of Jean Michel Jarre's song "How Old Are You" seem to be a list of random objects, but on closer inspection, they could be interpreted as a commentary on consumerism and materialism. Each item mentioned represents a certain aspect of modern life, from technology and appliances (telephone, ventilator, camera) to indulgences and desires (chocolate, condoms, pot of jam), and even to the absurd (one baby leopard).


The seemingly arbitrary order of the items could suggest the overwhelmingly vast and sometimes nonsensical world of material possessions, where we are constantly bombarded with advertising and the pressure to accumulate things. The repetition of "one" and the continual listing of items also emphasize the never-ending cycle of consumption that we are a part of.


The inclusion of the phrase "how old are you" in the title and repeated throughout the song could also be a nod to our obsession with age and the pressure to remain youthful and desirable, often through the acquisition of material goods.


Overall, the lyrics of "How Old Are You" offer a thought-provoking commentary on consumer culture and the endless pursuit of material possessions.


Line by Line Meaning

One blue telephone, a pressure cooker
A list of seemingly random, disparate objects that have no real connection to each other or any discernible meaning.


A ventilator, four more bars of chocolate
More random objects are listed, still with no apparent connection to each other or any larger idea.


Six pairs of socks, a yellow clock
Still more objects are listed, seemingly chosen at random and without any significance in and of themselves.


A pink scooter, a box of condoms
The objects listed begin to take on a more playful and sexual tone, hinting at perhaps a sense of youthful rebellion or experimentation.


One baby leopard, a pot of jam
More random objects are listed, but the inclusion of a live animal and a food item hints at perhaps an underlying theme of indulgence or excess.


A safety pin, an iron
The objects listed return to the mundane and utilitarian, but the inclusion of the safety pin suggests a sense of danger or risk-taking.


A wet shoe, a camera
The objects listed continue to be seemingly disconnected, but the presence of a camera suggests perhaps an act of documentation or memory-making.


One ton of peanuts, a black bra
The inclusion of a massive quantity of peanuts and a bra hints at perhaps a sense of decadence or sexual freedom, but the connection to the other objects is unclear.


A silver fork, a typewriter
The objects listed return to the mundane, but the silver fork suggests perhaps a sense of luxury or refinement.


An electric train
The final object listed is an electric train, which again seems unrelated to the other objects and leaves the meaning of the overall lyrics unclear.




Lyrics © O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Written by: JEAN MICHEL JARRE

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@28076130513B

I bowed in awe when the LP came out. (I was 15 years old then)...
...and I still bow to this day, 46 years later, since the publication in 1976 (you have to imagine that...!!!).
In 2022, this track, its sounds, just all of it feels like it's a recent piece of electronic music.
And now imagine ("Youngster") how that hit 1976 - because at that time there was nothing comparable in the music world...
Back then, hardly anyone had heard of sequencers, samplers, envelopes, envelope curves and all the other components that the pioneer of this genre experimented with like no one else at the time, let alone knew what all of this was all about.
I call myself a fan of electronic music from the very beginning and was already into it when the first bands "garnished" individual pieces with a noise called "white noise".
The best way to explain these first steps is as follows:
Take the most primitive of all computer games, namely the legendary "Pong" by Atari (just google it) - the forefather of all subsequent computer games - and compare its "variety" and graphics with today's war games and the like. on high-performance gaming PCs, then you have a rough idea of ​​how "primitive" that was.
In the hit "Silvermachine" by the band Hawkwind, for example, this noise runs through the entire piece (at different "heights") - and that's it (apart from the intro) but that's about it.
And then along came Jean Michelle Jarre...
With "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" by Pink Floyd, this "original synthesizer noise" even achieved world fame and suddenly came across as an intro in an unexpectedly bombastic way (you know how - and where...).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UXircX3VdM&t=871s (from 13:18)



All comments from YouTube:

@nab1uk

Whos listening to this in 2024? What a tune !

@vasilinapoklad

Я из 2024❤❤❤

@charlesbelo6794

Eu. Brasil.

@vasilinapoklad

@@charlesbelo6794 Россия

@pic16lf628

Ме

@darkthrust666

Eu!Mi-se face pielea de găină!

68 More Replies...

@janrobnettwordweaver2227

My sociology teacher in high school played this album for us during a class on meditation. I was 16 years old and asked her what the music was. She told me and the name of the album. I immediately went to the record store after school that day and bought it. I never regretted looking into this music. It resonated deeply. Decades later, it still does.

@mimasrea

Woow i just can imagine how The world was in those days...i was born in 1985 but i think 70's, 80's were The Best years...

@user-ib1lb5df2x

@@mimasrea yes, correct you must have listened to the artists in your early years courtesy of your parents 👍

@JontyMaster

Happy 47th Anniversary to the Oxygene album! Still a mindblowing piece of creativity to this day!

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