Difference between revisions of "United States of Eurasia (song)"

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In addition, it draws influence from ''Nineteen Eighty-Four'' by George Orwell,<ref name="mj200907"/> in which Eurasia arbitrarily changes between ally and enemy of Big Brother country Oceania. This is where the idiom "We have always been at war with Eurasia/Eastasia" came from, typically employed in response to the most obvious political uses of the exposure effect to convince a populace that a ruling figure or party said or did the opposite of that which was in fact actually said or done.
In addition, it draws influence from ''Nineteen Eighty-Four'' by George Orwell,<ref name="mj200907"/> in which Eurasia arbitrarily changes between ally and enemy of Big Brother country Oceania. This is where the idiom "We have always been at war with Eurasia/Eastasia" came from, typically employed in response to the most obvious political uses of the exposure effect to convince a populace that a ruling figure or party said or did the opposite of that which was in fact actually said or done.
Promotional copies will apparently be sent at such a time as to arrive at radio stations on the 20th of July.<ref name="ml20090708">
{{cite |
title = United States of Eurasia - First Single | desc = Muselive news | date = 2009-07-08 | fetch = 2009-07-08 | auth = Tom Wilson | pub = Muselive | url = http://www.muselive.com/forums.php?m=posts&q=38848 | dom = www.muselive.com | type = ext
}}</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 20:47, 8 July 2009

Muse song
Name United States of Eurasia
Album/single The Resistance (4), United States of Eurasia (1)
Length Unknown
Alternative titles -
First live performance -
Latest live performance Unknown
Recorded Milan, Italy, 2009
Writer/composer Matthew Bellamy, Dominic Howard, Christopher Wolstenholme
Producer Muse

Description

A song featuring stringed instrumentation and vocals reminiscient of "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen.[1]

Additional information

The song title was found by Muse fans from a picture on Twitter of Matt holding a score.[2] The name comes from the book The Grand Chessboard by Zbigniew Brzeziński, who puts forward the view that Eurasia must be controlled by the USA to secure oil supplies.[3]

In addition, it draws influence from Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell,[3] in which Eurasia arbitrarily changes between ally and enemy of Big Brother country Oceania. This is where the idiom "We have always been at war with Eurasia/Eastasia" came from, typically employed in response to the most obvious political uses of the exposure effect to convince a populace that a ruling figure or party said or did the opposite of that which was in fact actually said or done.

References

  1. Dean Chalkley. (2009-07-07). Muse New Album - First Listen. NME magazine. Retrieved 2009-07-08. [verify]
  2. Muse. (2009-05-22). New Album Title. Official Muse website. Retrieved 2009-05-22 from muse.mu.
  3. a b Ray Wilkinson. (2009-07). Progressive stadium rock three dream up album five. Mojo magazine, 1802. Retrieved 2009-07-05 from www.muselive.com. [verify]


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