“Alert Status Red, but the sun comes up instead”
Musical Works, White Light Rock & Roll Review, Alert Status Red
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Matthew Good 15
Canadian singer-songwriter 1971Related quotes

Source: This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life

On Literature, Revolution, Entropy and Other Matters (1923)
Context: When the flaming, seething sphere (in science, religion, social life, art) cools, the fiery magma becomes coated with dogma—a rigid, ossified, motionless crust. Dogmatization in science, religion, social life, or art is the entropy of thought. What has become dogma no longer burns; it only gives off warmth — it is tepid, it is cool. Instead of the Sermon on the Mount, under the scorching sun, to up-raised arms and sobbing people, there is drowsy prayer in a magnificent abbey. Instead of Galileo's "But still, it turns!" there are dispassionate computations in a well-heated room in an observatory. On the Galileos, the epigones build their own structures, slowly, bit by bit, like corals. This is the path of evolution — until a new heresy explodes the crush of dogma and all the edifices of the most enduring stone which have been raised upon it.
Explosions are not very comfortable. And therefore the exploders, the heretics, are justly exterminated by fire, by axes, by words. To every today, to every evolution, to the laborious, slow, useful, most useful, creative, coral-building work, heretics are a threat. Stupidly, recklessly, they burst into today from tomorrow; they are romantics.

Departures (1964), translated by Michael Cuanach http://web.archive.org/20041217155724/members.tripod.com/~Cuanach/anna.html

Ain't Goin' Down, written by Kent Blazy, Kim Williams, and G. Brooks.
Song lyrics, In Pieces (1993)

“The best time to talk to ghosts is just before the sun comes up.”

“Every day
The sun comes up again
A little hope begins”
"Every Day" (leaked 6 October 2011)
Lyrics, unreleased

“The yellow moon turned orange and was soon red as the setting sun.”
Source: Catch-22 (1961), pp. 462