"Ya Hey" Part II (or, you don't even say your name)

Onward!

So, to briefly recap from last time (this is a continuation of "Ya Hey" Part I, found here [so read it {things'll, you know, make a hecka lotta more sense if you do}]), we're talking about the poorly-named Vampire Weekend's poorly named album Modern Vampires of the City which, in addition to being the worst-named record of 2013 (I mean, seriously), was hailed by media kings Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, PopMatters, Slant Magazine and some guy named Robert Christgau as the year's best. More specifically, we're getting round to track ten of twelve: a glorious little ballad called “Ya Hey.”

The fact that it appears near the end is no accident, as there's been a buildup to it through the entire first 80% of the album. As mentioned before, songs like “Unbelievers,” “Everlasting Arms” and “Worship You” have songwriter-vocalist Ezra Koening with his back up against the wall, hackles raised in a white-collared, impeccably-arranged bout of rage/confusion/longing/ultimate defiance against the Triune God. He is, needless to say, a tad anxious of trusting Him.

But why? What doesn't he trust God to do? To take care, maybe – to be more than 'good.' Merciful, perhaps. To hold everything together. “We worshipped you” he deadpans on the thusly titled song, “only in the way you want it / only on the day you want it...energetic praise you wanted / any kind of praise you wanted” – followed closely by a plaintive afterthought: “won't we see you once again?” The flippant is always paired with longing for the God he perceives to be absent or indifferent. “Who will guide us in the end?” he asks, closing out the song with the twin senses of disappointment and desire.

Koening's lyrics always stand with a double edge – but, compellingly enough, where most indie protests appear pastoral (with a barely concealed hostility lurking in the background), Koening's bitter words can't ultimately throw off the sense of tenderness he carries towards his Accused. And, having finished the first nine songs (some among which bristling with more than a few Adonai-directed barbs) he finally drops the mask.

And the gloves. The wisdom teeth are out. Track ten begins with an intimacy reserved for lovers:

“Oh, sweet thing
Zion doesn't love you
And Babylon don't love you
But you love everything"

There's no criticism here, no laying into the seemingly neglected responsibilities God owes to His people. All of a sudden the roles are reversed: whereas the tension before was always on what He is or isn't doing for humanity, here we have the eternal, undeserved Love of God contrasted with the petty inconsistency of human commitment.

But he goes for the throat here: anyone could have remarked on the staggeringly minute levels of love lost on the part of Babylon towards the Creator...but Zion? He's not just talking about the historic Hebrew people here, he's talking about us, with our liturgies and hymnals and mission statements and seven highly effective habits and love languages – we're the ones, in Koening's estimation, without love. Which is something that deeply, deeply resonates with me.

And besides, we're taught that no one is good but God alone - that no one truly Loves but God alone.

“Oh, you saint
America don't love you
So I could never love you
In spite of everything”

And here's where Koening's deeply complex relationship with God really starts to set off some sparks. There's no doubt about where he says he stands – whether he's an atheist, agnostic or something in between (¿athnostic?) he's certainly not a card-carrying congregant of your typical Christian church. He claims unbelief but then, like a man in the confessional, admits that his inability to love somehow stands “in spite of everything.” In spite of what? From the position of a confused postmodern, he admits of reasons to love God back: God's own love, to start. And His presence in the muck of our indifference. And the sentiments only deepen:

"In the dark of this place
There's the glow of your face
There's the dust on the screen
Of this broken machine."

Koening recognizes that even though he can't muster the case to ultimately believe (especially in light of all the things that don't make sense to him), he still can't shake the sense of the hidden God behind it all. A benevolence behind the curtain. Nothing solid enough to tell what (or where) it is, but suggestive enough to keep him up at night wondering what holds it all together. The words make me think about the engine in an aging television, the core of a tiny planet, fossilized fingerprints from way, way too long ago.

All of it builds to his most personal confession yet: “And I can't help but feel / That I've made some mistake...” he sings, and the bitterness of the earlier songs falls away and Koening is left standing with nothing but his vulnerability. He reaches across the divide towards territory he's not at all comfortable with, to a paradigm that'd change everything in his life, one that'd justify the suspicions he can't dismiss about the world. He sees it. But those looking for a hallmark ending will be disappointed as he continues: “...but I let it go.”

Out of the whole song, this is the line that haunts me most. Here we have this guy, a smart, articulate dude who not only has the desire and the empathy to feel for a God he can't trust to exist, but writes to Him with such tenderness. A guy who admits the possibility that he's wrong and that maybe in the end there's a God whose loneliness is worth mourning, whose Love is worth trying to return. He feels it. It confuses him. He lets it shake him. But he let it go, saying “Ya hey.”

Which, as Michael mentioned, is pronounced Yahweh.

Koening is bought to the brink but still can't step over the edge into the actual Everlasting Arms. And those believe watch on as he continues: “Through the fire and through the flames / You won't even say your name / Only I am that I am / But who could ever live that way?”

We can!” some might say, but we're not Ezra Koening – and we don't know his conditions for belief. It's a kinda strange passivity we're left with – we're the audience to an angst we believe we have answers to, but he's a world away. So then maybe we think of our own little worlds and the people close to us who, for their own reasons, can't come to believe - reasons that, to them, are all too legitimate. Maybe we want to plead with them to open their eyes and just see the God we see. Maybe we want to cry out with Koening against the God who stays hidden - at the God who, at times, allows things that make it so hard to find Him. And maybe, even as we open our mouths to complain about one thing or the other, we let ourselves feel small in the face of everything. Mysteries upon mysteries. And the chorus circles round as it continues, repeats. Repeats. 

Ya hey

Ya hey

Ut deo


Ya hey

Josh Nadeau

Josh Nadeau is a freelance writer & journalist based in Russia. When not writing or plotting some project or another, he may be found winter cycling, hitchhiking or engaged in general shenanigans. He hopes, when he’s older, to maintain a sense of awe.

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A Little Bit of Portugal in New Jersey

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"Ya Hey" Part I (or, beat to the punch)