First of all, I'm not a fan of the Twilight and New Moon stuff at all, but I learned of this song. It does have a pretty good soundtrack I may say.


Also you can't really be wrong with what a song means because it has different meanings with each listener.


To me personally this song is about a boy who fell in love with one of his friends. She was interested in him too, but after a short while, she realized she likes him only as a close friend.


The White demon is her, who left him for someone else. "White Demon, who let your friends go."


The whole song is him trying to show her that he is the perfect man for her, and to "let us be in love." and "Widen your heart's scope." beyond what you only see in the men before him.


I have always found it interesting of what others say a song means to them.


well first i would say that the song is about a person who wants someone who dosent want them so i would say that this song is pretty much coming from Jacob's heart, hes telling bella thats he love her he will never hurt and he will always be there and that hes the better man, and how he dosent understand how she can be in love with some one who is no good for her.


A White Demon Love Song By The Killers Free Mp3 Download


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White demon, where's your selfish kiss?- i personally love this line i think its saying how edwards kisses are shelfish because he could never really kiss bella with passion, because everytime the poor guy gets near her he wants to drink her blood so he holds back

And thats it guys im a big twilight fan and i think this is what the song means this is jacobs song to bella and i would say this song hit the nail on the head its a great song i love the killers its amazing iight you guys lata hope you guys listen to the song and agree with me on this one ...

I really, really like this song, and that is my interpretation. I am very much a Twitard, and I have always loved the Killers, so I was extremely pleased that they made it onto the soundtrack with such an awesome song. =]

I agree that this song might not have been made specifically for New Moon. While the idea of calling vampires "white demons" fits, this is also a slang Cantonese term for Caucasian people. So, my offbeat theory is that this could be about a Caucasian guy who moved to Asia leaving a friend behind who really cared for him.

White demon love song on the hall

White demon shadow on the road

Back up your mind there is a call

He isn't coming after all of this time

She likes the way he sings

White demon love songs in her dreams

It's about a man who may be unhealthy or dangerous for the woman in the song. The third man, or the narrator of the song, is in love with the woman and loathes the man whom he addresses as "white demon." The narrator is frustrated and desperate for the woman to get over the other man and love him instead. Basically, think of New Moon: Jacob doesn't understand why Bella loves Edward and can't love him. He's cynical and heartbroken by it, yet he keeps trying and hoping.

When I first head this song, I didn't know that it was from the Twilight Saga. So, I didn't quite interpret it the way everyone else did. But that's the great thing about well written music; there are many ways of looking at it. 


In the phrase: "White demon love song down the hall, white demon shaddow on the road. Back up your mind there is a call. He isn't coming after all.", I thought it meant that the female in this song was completely captivated by the "white demon", so much that he was all she thought about. It's as if he was with her constantly. But there is a very gloomy feel to the song, so her love for him was depressing to her. She wanted him badly, but he didn't think she existed. 


But there are some positive parts to her being in love with him. Despite the emptiness he brings to her, she still has fantasies about there being better times where he treats her well. "All this time, she likes the way he sings white demon love songs in her dreams."


"Black invitation to a place that cannot change" The state that she was in and the feelings she had were constant, almost as if there were no end. 


In the part "Let us be in love, let's do old and grey", I didn't first think of a love triangle, I thought of it as the artist of the song speaking in her thoughts. "I will never stray, I will do my part. Let us be in love tonight."


But,being a piece of art, there will be multiple interpretations. This is just what the song meant in my perspective.

I think it's more about the love triangle myself. The person singing is talking about a girl who is clearly still in love with someone who's gone - her personal white demon. Then the singer starts referring to her as his own personal white demon asking her to open her heart to include him. Still fits the New Moon scenario doesn't it?

this song is about a girl loving a guy that she probably shouldn't be, but it's all about how you interpret the song. this song is in new moon, so the interpretation could be that the 'white demon' is edward, so they used this song, in my opinion, to show that bella shouldn't be loving him, and being so close with the vampires, yet she is.

This song has more than one meaning. "White demon" would be a guy that a girl is in love with, though she shouldn't be. "White demon" is also a term used by the Native Americans toward white people. It is a bad term. That is why this song was used in the Twilight movie "New Moon".

The reverbed sound, along with the wistful lyrics about a lover also fit the moment well, as Bella was deep underwater, and could have died if Jacob hadn't pulled her out in time. Edward leaving Bella was one of the saddest things that happened to her, but her thrill-seeking activities after that were even worse, made better only by the beautiful songs.

Edward and Bella were soulmates, but it was clear that an ending of some kind was near, so the despair in the air was conveyed through "Satellite Heart", a song about a girl who ended up alone and without her love.

Pulsing synthetic beats create a sense of urgency in this jagged but engaging song by Thom Yorke. The words tell a story of unrequited love, but the makers used this tune in the background as the wolves and Reservation residents chased Victoria through the forests of Forks.

The Virgin Suicides is the elegy of the Lisbon girls, from the perspectives of the neighbors that are still haunted by them. The Lisbon family lives on a quaint suburban street in the Sun Belt, drenched in sunlight and white-washed shingles. Then one year, every Lisbon girl, starting with Cecilia and ending with Mary, commits suicide. This book is the observations and meditations of the boys across the street, the ones who loved them, who obsessed over them, who objectified them, and who watched them die one by one. The girls are doomed from the opening lines. The only question that remains is why they did it, and why our narrators can't let them go.

I read this book because I was told it was a staple of dark academia. It is not, no one here likes school. In reality, it is a treatise on girlhood, in all its insubstantial suffering. The first thing that struck me was the way the author sets the mood immediately. The entire book is dripping with malaise, the suffocating nature of sisterhood and parenthood on full display whenever the Lisbon house is described. The brief gasps of outside life are bright and crisp, while the references to the current day, middle-age life of the narrators is sad and listless. I wouldn't say this book is pleasant to read, but it is gripping in its complete commitment to its mood and setting. On that note, the choice of the author to tell the story entirely from outside perspectives was fascinating. The narrator is only described as "we", as the group of neighborhood boys who obsess over the girls in both childhood and adulthood. One conflict in the book is wondering if we are meant to sympathize with the boys who are scarred from the suicides, or see them as a commentary on the ways that the world seeks to capture and define teenage girls. I ended up seeing it as the latter, which likely made me view this book in better light than many of my peers. The boys actions always have an air of perversion about them, and at the end they seem to realize that all their breaches of privacy and decency have brought them no closer to understanding the girls. Another thing I liked about this book is the way that the girls are given a kind of privacy of thought from the narrators and the readers. Every attempt at scrutinizing their reasoning or emotions or motivations is always followed by a caveat. Nothing is certain with the Lisbon sisters, just the way nothing is every certain when we view the actions of others. The unknowability of their tight knit group gives them a dignity that their neighbors and community seem to want to violate constantly. This book is also a clear censure of suburbia. The neighbors try to do their best to help when they can, but still grumble amongst themselves about the Lisbon family leaving the leaves in their yard the fall after their youngest commits suicide. The great debutante balls and dances of the south are in full swing, but there is an undercurrent of corruption and distortion to the dancing and dating. The sexualization of the girls is also rampant, which, again, makes the book a lot harder to enjoy if you don't see it as a choice by the author in order to comment on it. In short, the suicide of the girls seems like a catharsis, a response to the disgusting and decaying world around them. Everyone around them represses their emotions, from their parents to the boys enraptured by them to their teachers to their peers. They are the only ones who get to set something free. The juxtaposition of the wailing EMTs to the quaint, straining neighborhood further demonstrates their freedom, even in their death.

This book did have problems. A lot of stuff is uncomfortable to read, even if viewed as a deliberate choice. The story often takes winding tangents that serve little purpose besides demonstrating the boredom and trivialities of suburban life. Still, the book is still a fantastic meditation on what its like to be a teenage girl, in all the wonderful and ghastly ways. I would recommend this book to anyone who is looking for good setting, shocking stories, and a good mystery to carry with them!

Reviewer Grade: 12 0852c4b9a8

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