Though Stevens had announced plans to make an album for each of the 50 U.S. states, beginning the series with the albums 'Michigan' (2003) and 'Illinois' (2005), he has since then somewhat retracted the statement. "Sufjan Stevens is not going to write a record for each of the 50 states after all" was the original text included on the online liner notes for 'Mews Too: An Asthmatic Kitty Compilation' , a disc released on February 7, 2006. This statement was possibly included as a joke, as the text has since been removed and the current liner notes related to Sufjan Stevens reads: "Sufjan Stevens can fold a fitted-sheet (he once worked as a professional folder in a commercial Laundromat)."
Background
Stevens was born in Detroit, Michigan, and grew up in the city of Petoskey in that same state. He attended Hope College on the west coast of Michigan.
The name Sufjan is an Arabic/Persian name that predates Islam and most famously belonged to Abu Sufyan, a figure from early Islamic history. It has been mentioned in the press that the name was given to Stevens by the leader of Subud, a spiritual sect to which his parents belonged when he was born. Stevens has stated that the name is of Armenian origin and means "comes with a sword," and that it is "a charming militaristic Muslim name." In fact the name is not Armenian, and Armenia is a predominantly Christian country.
Sufjan is also the plural form of Sufi in Persian . Sufi is a practitioner of Sufism .This word is frequently used in the old Persian literature ,specially Sufi poetry .
His brother, marathonist Marzuki Stevens, has trained to compete in the 2008 Olympic trials, and has played on two of Sufjan's albums.
A multi-instrumentalist, Stevens plays the banjo, guitar, drums, and several other instruments, often playing all of these on his albums through the use of multi-tracking. While in school, he studied the oboe and English horn, which he also plays on his albums; he is one of the few musicians in popular music to use these instruments.
Career
Sufjan Stevens began his musical career as a member of Marzuki, a folk-rock band from Holland, Michigan. He also played (and continues to play) various instruments for Danielson Famile. While in school at Hope College, Stevens wrote and recorded his debut solo album, A Sun Came, which he released on Asthmatic Kitty Records, a record label he founded with his step-father in 1999. He later moved to New York City, where he was enrolled in a writing program at the New School for Social Research.
While in New York, Stevens composed and recorded the music for his second album, Enjoy Your Rabbit, a song cycle based around the animals of the Chinese Zodiac that ventured into electronica.
Stevens followed this with the first of his 50 states albums, a collection of folk songs and instrumentals inspired by his home state of Michigan. The result, the expansive Michigan, included odes to cities including Detroit and Flint, the Upper Peninsula, and vacation areas such as Tahquamenon Falls. Melded into the scenic descriptions and characters are his own declarations of faith in God, sorrow, love and the regeneration of Michigan.
Following the release of Michigan, Stevens compiled a collection of songs recorded previously into a side project, the Christian folk album Seven Swans, which was released in March 2004.
Next he released the second in the 50 states projects, entitled Come On Feel The Illinoise!. Among the subjects explored on Come On Feel The Illinoise! are the cities of Chicago, Decatur and Jacksonville, the serial killer John Wayne Gacy, the poet Carl Sandburg, and Mississippi Palisades State Park.
He has contributed to the music of Denison Witmer, Soul Junk, Half-handed Cloud, Brother Danielson, Danielson Famile, Serena Maneesh, Castanets, and Liz Janes. He played piano on for fellow Brooklyn musician's The National's album 2007 Boxer. A cover of "She Is" is included on the album Dream Brother, released in the United States on January 31, 2006.
Sufjan contributed a lot to the sound of the 2001 Liz Janes album Done Gone Fire as he engineered, recorded, produced and arranged it as well as playing many addition instruments.
Sufjan recently recorded with Rosie Thomas and Denison Witmer playing banjo and providing vocals. It is unknown how this record will be released. In April 2006, Pitchfork erroneously announced that Stevens and Thomas were having a baby together, but were forced to print a retraction. Witmer and Thomas later admitted it was an April Fools' prank.
The Fifty States Project
Beginning with Michigan, Stevens announced an intent to write an album for each of the 50 U.S. states, although in interviews he wavers between utter sincerity and self-deprecating irony when describing the idea.
Stevens spent the second half of 2004 researching and writing material for the second of these projects, this time focusing his efforts on Illinois. As with Michigan, Stevens used the state of Illinois as a leaping-off point for his more personal explorations of faith, family, love, and location.
The widely acclaimed Illinois was the highest rated album of 2005 on the Metacritic review aggregator site, based on glowing reviews from Pitchfork, The Onion A/V Club, Spin, Billboard, Entertainment Weekly, Rolling Stone, The New York Times, and The Guardian. The 2006 PLUG Independent Music Awards awarded Stevens with the Album Of The Year, Best Album Art/Packaging, and Male Artist Of The Year. Pitchfork Media and Paste Magazine named Come On Feel The Illinoise! as the editors' choice for best album of 2005 and Stevens received the 2005 Pantheon prize, awarded to albums selling 500,000 copies or fewer, for Come On Feel The Illinoise!. In April of 2006, Stevens announced that 21 pieces of music he had culled from the Come On Feel The Illinoise! recording sessions would be incorporated into a new album, called The Avalanche. The album was released on July 11, 2006.
While there were other projects rumored to be released following 2005's Illinois, by 2009 and his live album The BQE, he was seemingly finished with the project, calling it "Such a joke", and accepting that the project was too massive and too cliché to ever reach an end.
Religious themes
Many of Stevens' songs have religious and spiritual allusions, but his album Seven Swans has the most direct religious references. Stevens has expressed that he is Christian, but does not overtly advertise this aspect of himself in his music. Stevens has also stated that he does not try to make music "with a message", or music for the sake of preaching. "I don't think music media is the real forum for theological discussions," says Stevens. "I think I've said things and sung about things that probably weren't appropriate for this kind of forum. And I just feel like it's not my work or my place to be making claims and statements, because I often think it's misunderstood."
The songs 'Abraham', 'Seven Swans', 'To Be Alone With You', 'We Won't Need Legs To Stand' and 'The Transfiguration' directly address Christianity on the album Seven Swans. In 'Abraham', Sufjan recounts the Old Testament story in the Book of Genesis when Abraham, ordered by God as a test of faith, leads his son, Isaac, up a mountain and prepares to kill him, as commanded (but before God sends an angel to intervene). The lyrics of 'The Transfiguration' follow the Biblical accounts of Jesus' Transfiguration in Matthew 17:1-8, Mark 9: 1-8, and Luke 9:28-36.
Michigan and Come On Feel The Illinoise! are packed with Christian references and metaphors. Michigan contains "Sleeping Bear, Sault Saint Marie", which implores "Oh Lamb of God! Tell us Your perfect design and give us the rod" ("Lamb of God" being a Biblical name for Jesus Christ). The song "Oh God, Where Are You Now?" asks God to "hold me now", to "save somehow", searching for God in the midst of personal turmoil. "There's no other man who could save the dead," the song states. The album closer, 'Vito's Ordination Song', was apparently originally written for Sufjan's friend Vito Aiuto, and its lyrics allude directly to Psalm 139 ("I always knew you. In your mother's arms, I have called your name", "I've made a crown for you"). The song speaks of "When the bridegroom comes" - the New Testament speaks of Jesus Christ as being the Bridegroom and the Church His Bride, finally being united together at the End of Time.
Come On Feel The Illinoise! features the song 'Chicago' with its refrain of "You came to take us, to recreate us", and 'Decatur' has the chorus of "It's the great I Am" ("I Am" being the name the Lord reveals Himself by to Moses in Exodus 3:14). "Casimir Pulaski Day" speaks of "All the glory that the Lord has made" in the midst of personal pain and loss. "The Predatory Wasp of the Palisades Is Out To Get Us!" has the lyrics: "Lamb of God, we sound the horn. Hallelujah!" One instrumental passage has the title of "In This Temple as in the Hearts of Man for Whom He Saved the Earth". "The Seer's Tower" speaks of Emanuel, "With His sword, with His robe He comes dividing man from brothers" (an interesting side note is that "Sufjan" actually means "comes with a sword"). Indeed, the vast majority of songs of Come On Feel The Illinoise! contain lyric lines which can be readily identified as having a basis in Stevens' faith in Christ.
Sufjan's second, electronic album, Enjoy Your Rabbit, contains a song cycle based on of the animals of the Chinese Zodiac, culminating with the song "Year of our Lord". Stevens released the original, Christian-themed song "God'll Ne'er Let You Down" on the "To Spirit Back the Mews" compilation on Asthmatic Kitty. The officially unreleased Christmas albums Sufjan Stevens made and then compiled into Songs for Christmas feature suitably Christmas and Christian themed music, both originals and covers of hymns and traditional songs.
Trivia
On Snow Patrol's 2006 album Eyes Open there is a reference to Sufjan and the song "Chicago" in the song "Hands Open" - "Put Sufjan Stevens on and we'll play your favorite song/"Chicago" bursts to life and your sweet smile remembers you."
Sufjan has twice been featured on the FOX television show "The OC". "To Be Alone With You" and "For The Widows In Paradise, For The Fatherless In Ypsilanti" can be heard on episodes 202 and 315, respectively.
Sufjan Stevens' music has appeared twice on the Showtime dark comedy "Weeds". "All The Trees Of The Field Will Clap Their Hands" appears on S1E02 over the end credits, and "Holland" appears near the end of S2E10.
Two of Sufjan's songs appear on the soundtrack to "Little Miss Sunshine": "Chicago" and "No Man's Land"
The song "John Wayne Gacy, Jr." appears on the 3rd season of the tv show "Nip/Tuck".
Several songs can be heard on the movie "Driving Lessons"
You can also hear snippets in between CSI shows on 5US
In the TV show "Austin City Limits", he mentioned that when he was a kid, he and his best friend saw something in the sky which they couldn't figure out. They thought it was a spaceship or UFO first, then an eagle or a dragon. Finally they realized it was a giant wasp. He wrote the song "The Predatory Wasp of the Palisades is Out to Get Us!" about the incident and mentioned that the reason they (the band) all have wings on stage is to overcome his fear of flying things.
The song "Redford (For Yia-Yia & Pappou)" is heard in the 2012 "World of Red Bull" television commercial. he is quoted as saying "selling out never looked so good." and "somebody had to pay for all of that Christmas confetti." referring to his recent Christmas album and supporting tour.
In 2017 Stevens wrote two Original Songs to be featured in the gay drama film “Call me by your Name”, entitled “Mystery of Love” and “Visions of Gideon”. He also made a reworked version of his Song “Futile Devices” which is also featured on the soundtrack.
Website:http://sufjan.com
Visions of Gideon
Sufjan Stevens Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Is it a video? Is it a video?
I have touched you for the last time
Is it a video? Is it a video?
For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms
Is it a video? Is it a video?
For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms
Is it a video?
I have loved you for the last time
Visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon
And I have kissed you for the last time
Visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon
For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms
Is it a video? (Is it a video?) Is it a video? (Is it a video?)
For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms
Is it a video? (Is it a video?) Is it a video? (Is it a video?)
For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms
Visions of Gideon (visions of Gideon), visions of Gideon (visions of Gideon)
For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms
Visions of Gideon (visions of Gideon), visions of Gideon (visions of Gideon), visions of Gideon
Visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon
Visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon
Visions of Gideon (is it a video?), visions of Gideon (is it a video?), visions of Gideon
Visions of Gideon (is it a video?), visions of Gideon (is it a video?), visions of Gideon
(Is it a video?) (is it a video?) (is it a video?)
The lyrics to Sufjan Stevens's "Visions of Gideon" are hauntingly beautiful and filled with emotion. The repetitive question of "Is it a video?" brings up the imagery of a lost love that can only be revisited through technology or memories. The lines "I have loved you for the last time / Visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon" express a sense of finality and closure. The singer is acknowledging that this love is over and can only be kept alive through their internal visions. The use of the name "Gideon" is significant as it is a biblical name meaning "destroyer" or "mighty warrior", perhaps alluding to the strength of the love that is now lost.
The lyrics also express an intense longing for the physicality of the lost love. The lines "For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms" show that the singer wants to be with their love again, to feel their embrace and hear their laughter. But this is impossible as it is only through their visions or memories that they can revisit this love. The repetition of "visions of Gideon" reinforces the idea that this love will always be just that, a vision, a memory, an unattainable ideal.
Line by Line Meaning
I have loved you for the last time
This is the final time I will love you
Is it a video? Is it a video?
Is this memory only a video that I can replay?
I have touched you for the last time
This is the final time I will touch you
For the love, for laughter, I flew up to your arms
I found joy and happiness when I was with you
Visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon
I see visions of you, Gideon, in my mind
And I have kissed you for the last time
This is the final time I will kiss you
Visions of Gideon, visions of Gideon
I see visions of you, Gideon, in my mind
Visions of Gideon (is it a video?), visions of Gideon (is it a video?), visions of Gideon
I am questioning the reality of these visions, wondering if they are just a video in my head
(Is it a video?) (is it a video?) (is it a video?)
I am still questioning if these memories are real or just a figment of my imagination.
Lyrics © BMG Rights Management
Written by: Sufjan Stevens
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
@mattyoung4336
Minimalist Twinkle ...
My thoughts are that it could largely be down to that being how they prefer it. I'm certain that when they perform in front of audiences like this, they would actually feel quite satisfied and successful. Artists like this, that is to say people who are truely deserving of the title of Artist, I'm almost certain would not equate their success to how many world wide number 1 songs they have, or the value of their recording contract or endorsement contracts, just as they are not motivated to release albums so frequently so as to keep the money rolling in. This is not to say though that they would not be thrilled to have hit songs, or earn more money or gain more fans ..... but they appear to be the kind of artists who would not be out to achieve all those things by doing things like pumping out albums, selling their faces to large companies, etc.
Regardless of how you feel about it, there is a place for the highly manufactured, pop based, music and artists. There's nothing wrong with a good singer, or catchy song, they pass time and are good for a dance or whatever. You can recognise these sorts of songs or artists by the fact they are some manufactured group (as opposed to bands that form naturally) and their songs get lots of airplay and maybe they release two or three albums a year .... and there is a place for those bands or artists that maybe have a real loyal following, some of who are constantly confused why they aren't more successful. They tend to write their own material and release new stuff less often.
In a nutshell .... some of those we call artists are people who maybe love money and fame first and are happy to let others control a large portion of their persona, and they have a good voice, so they become instruments of a recording company and sing songs they are given, that are written by groups of people who aren't there pouring their hearts out over their experiences and making songs. They are people with a keen sense of current sentiments and create lyrics to fit this. Usually the topics of songs are about love, or relationships, or break ups or anger. They appeal to so many people so will likely make the most money. Unfortunately though, you do get those kinds of artists having fans who are just crazy and have unshakable beliefs thAt the artist wrote the song all by themselves and the lyrics are so meaningful and fit my life perfectly .... these are usually the same people who line up to buy their tickets to a One Direction concert 5 days before they go on sale, and can be found often crying because they are so overwhelmed they are so close to buying tickets to see these people they revere as gods and this is emotional because you've loved them for so long and they just make really good music and are so cute. Those 13 year old girls that lose mental function because they scored tickets and will be in the presence of their idol ... they are the worst kind of person alive!
Then there are bands that don't relinquish so much control and write either all, or most, of their own material. Because it's personal, you could get one album that's upbeat cause, who knows, maybe the lead singer writing the songs got married and had a kid. Happy times! Then next time it's an album with a focus on depressed slower songs cause they broke up or the kid died. It's unpredictable what you get, but usually you get a few gems. The groups we may love and feel are not getting the recognition they deserve, often are getting what they deserve. If they wanted more money, fame or exposure, they know they could go to a record company and say "ok, we will be puppets" and overnight get rich. But honestly, for a group of real artists who seem under appreciated, do you really want them to be so much more appreciated by inviting in the crazy teenage girl fans? No thanks ... keep those crying, screaming, giggling bishes away from my singers please!
But
@saymoncsr
I am so grateful for living in the same time that Sufjan lives.
@PrasetyoHerfianto
Saymon de César Reis yeah we should be.
@murrduckulous
Woah, that was the exact thought that this performance invoked in me.
@hanshirsch7587
This is the best comment of all times. And yes, me too !!!!
@bc9103
Facts,
@neldormiveglia1312
for real, what a time to be alive. he makes me cry like a baby of sadness/happiness/emptiness/all of it.
@luisatondo6146
“He came. He left. Nothing else had changed. I had not changed. The world hadn't changed. Yet nothing would be the same. All that remains is dreammaking and strange remembrance.” 😭😭😭💔💔💔
@2230abcdE
Luis Atondo heavy mixtures of emotion in that.
@cd6584
Yet nothing would be the same, in my heart, since CMBYN...
@pressurexz
😭