Watch The National Perform “I Should Live In Salt” for Gibson Austin
We’ve got a raging atomic (for peace) hangover, but were revived upon seeing The National performing one our personal (literally) favorites off of Trouble Will Find Me, I Should Live In Salt unplugged for Gibson, Austin. Check it out below. Once again the Dessners showed up on appropriately-branded guitars.
Singer Matt Berninger had this to say about the song’s meaning when interviewed by NPR in June:
“Tell us a little bit about the lyrics to “I Should Live in Salt.”
“I write all the lyrics, and this one was sort of inspired — very much inspired — by my younger brother, Tom, who’s nine years younger than I am. And he was on my mind a lot while we were making this record because he was living with my wife and I at the time. Still — actually still does. So he was on my mind and in my house….We’re very different brothers. Whereas I might be kind of buttoned-up and ambitious, he’s more lax in his approach to the universe, I guess. We love each other a great deal, but there’s often a lot of conflict between the two of us.”
And there’s some fun imagery in one of the verses: “Can you turn the TV down? You should know me better than that.”
“The lyrics to that are like a bunch of little fragments of thoughts about him. And, truthfully, it’s about us actually getting to know each other as adults, because I went off to college when he was a little kid. He was 9 when I was 18 and went off to college, and then I moved to New York after that. And he kind of went his own — a different path.
“I felt a lot of guilt, because I think [he] needed an older brother the most when you start hitting your teens, and that’s when I sort of took off and disappeared on him a little bit. I mean, we’ve been close our whole lives. But then, when he came and joined us on the tour as a roadie, it was the first time we were spending a lot of time together as adults. And it was a big shift in our relationship and trying to figure out how to love each other and respect each other as adults — not just this much older-younger brother sibling dynamic. So the song kind of is a reflection on all of that.”
And you said you felt a little guilt, but the chorus is, “I should live in salt for leaving you behind.”
“Honestly, that was just kind of an abstract image or something in my head and I don’t know. I think Lot’s wife turned to salt when she looked back at the city. I think they used to pack bodies in salt. So there’s not specifically any meaning into it directly, but it seemed like a bad thing to have to live in salt. A lot of my lyrics are approximate meaning without me knowing why they sound right.”
Reminds us of some siblings we know. Take good care of one another.