【Lee Soo Actor | Adult Movies Online】
Love Songs: “Slow Show”
On Music

Matt Berninger. Wikimedia Commons, Licensed under CCO 2.0.
This week, the Review is publishing a series of short reflections on love songs, broadly defined.
In her 1993 memoir Exteriors, drawn from seven years of journal entries, Annie Ernaux describes overhearing a familiar pop song at the supermarket. She is struck by the pleasure she experiences—and by a “feeling of panic that the song will end.” This prompts her to consider the relative emotional effects of books and music. While certain novels have left a “violent impression” on her being, the impact hardly compares to the “intense, almost painful” feeling produced by the song. “A book offers more deliverance, more escape, more fulfillment of desire,” she writes. “In songs one remains locked in desire.” The structure of pop music is inherently erotic; the repetitions of rhythm and melody continually summon and satisfy aching anticipation. Love songs bring this otherwise sublimated longing to the surface: some through grand, theatrical gestures, others by drawing out the dialectic of desire embedded in everyday life—say, the feeling of being alone at a party, sad and self-conscious, desperately missing someone.
This is the premise of “Slow Show,” a somber but rousing midtempo track from The National’s 2007 album Boxer. The narrator spends the verses separated from his lover, surrounded by people but unable to reach them, confined to the claustrophobic quarters of his own mind. Guitars flutter frenetically over foreboding squalls of feedback, while Matt Berninger’s mumbling baritone evokes the narrator’s recursive, dead-end thoughts: “Standing at the punch table, swallowing punch”; “I leaned on the wall, the wall leaned away”; “I better get my shit together, better gather my shit in.” In the choruses, an atmospheric sweetness swells as he briefly spans the distance, if only in his imagination: “I want to hurry home to you,” Berninger croons, “put on a slow, dumb show for you and crack you up / so you can put a blue ribbon on my brain.” His halting syntax smooths out into the simple, fluid choreography of a fantasized intimacy, which disrupts his anxious solitude.
But even the utopic space of the chorus is marred by doubt in its final lines: “God, I’m very, very frightened / I’ll overdo it.” The same fear that strands the narrator alone in the midst of a party gnaws at the edges of his reverie, manifesting now as a terror of spoiling the moment. (In the roiling “Conversation 16,” released a few years after, Berninger intensifies this same dread: “I was afraid I’d eat your brains / ‘cause I’m evil.”) Within each gesture of mutual understanding between lovers there lurks the possibility that the bond might break; the separation that shapes desire shadows every tender encounter.
The song’s extended coda collapses this play of distance and return into a single, paradoxical image of missing what one doesn’t yet know. Over a melancholy piano line, Berninger sings a quatrain adapted from the chorus of a song on the band’s nearly forgotten debut album. “You know I dreamed about you / for twenty-nine years before I saw you / you know I dreamed about you / I missed you for, for twenty-nine years.” It’s a nearly mythic origin story for the mundane set of relations sketched in the rest of the song: in the beginning, there was a longing.
Nathan Goldman is the managing editor of Jewish Currents.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Amazon Prime Grubhub deal: Save $10 off orders of $20 or more
2025-06-26 10:13John Ashbery reads ”A Boy”
2025-06-26 08:59The History of the Pancake Bell
2025-06-26 08:43The Morning News Roundup for March 14, 2014
2025-06-26 08:33Popular Posts
'The Last of Us' Season 2, episode 5: The spores are here!
2025-06-26 10:02The Child Is Father of the Man by Sadie Stein
2025-06-26 09:24The Morning News Roundup for March 18, 2014
2025-06-26 09:19NYT mini crossword answers for May 9, 2025
2025-06-26 08:41Featured Posts
'Mario Kart World' Nintendo Direct: 3 takeaways
2025-06-26 10:35For His Birthday, the Illustrated Buffalo Bill
2025-06-26 09:58The Savage by David Mamet
2025-06-26 09:19Popular Articles
Contingent No More
2025-06-26 10:50Dennis Wilson Was a Good Editor by Dan Piepenbring
2025-06-26 09:47Fall Asleep Easily with This Chunk of Boring Prose
2025-06-26 09:18Best iPad deal: Save $100 on 13
2025-06-26 09:16Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (45288)
Heat Information Network
Best iPad deal: Save $132 on Apple iPad (10th Gen)
2025-06-26 10:05Visual Information Network
The History of the Pancake Bell
2025-06-26 09:54Motivation Information Network
Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with James Joyce’s Cats
2025-06-26 09:29Resonance Information Network
Happy Birthday, Jonathan Lethem
2025-06-26 09:26Wisdom Convergence Information Network
Draper vs. Arnaldi 2025 livestream: Watch Madrid Open for free
2025-06-26 08:26