Doherty famously asserts, "These are the good old days," urging listeners to find value in the present moment rather than pining for a bygone era.
The opening verse—"If you’ve lost your faith in love and music / Oh, the end won’t be long"—is often cited as the band's defining ethos, suggesting that these two forces are the only things that make life worthwhile.
The song is steeped in the band’s "Arcadian manifesto," a romanticized vision of a poetic, bohemian England.
The intro, sung by Barât, invokes the spirit of the ancient British warrior queen, grounding the band's modern indie-rock in a lineage of national folk history.
The "Arcadian dream" represents a mythical destination of artistic freedom and purity, which the lyrics acknowledge has "all fallen through" even as they continue the journey. Lyrics and Meaning
Referred to in the lyrics as a ship that "sails on course," Albion is an archaic name for Britain that the band used to represent their ideal of a "spiritual graceland".
The Libertines - The Good Old Days -
Doherty famously asserts, "These are the good old days," urging listeners to find value in the present moment rather than pining for a bygone era.
The opening verse—"If you’ve lost your faith in love and music / Oh, the end won’t be long"—is often cited as the band's defining ethos, suggesting that these two forces are the only things that make life worthwhile. The Libertines - The good old days
The song is steeped in the band’s "Arcadian manifesto," a romanticized vision of a poetic, bohemian England. Doherty famously asserts, "These are the good old
The intro, sung by Barât, invokes the spirit of the ancient British warrior queen, grounding the band's modern indie-rock in a lineage of national folk history. The intro, sung by Barât, invokes the spirit
The "Arcadian dream" represents a mythical destination of artistic freedom and purity, which the lyrics acknowledge has "all fallen through" even as they continue the journey. Lyrics and Meaning
Referred to in the lyrics as a ship that "sails on course," Albion is an archaic name for Britain that the band used to represent their ideal of a "spiritual graceland".