Gun Week continues at Gloomy Tunes with a song where a gun leads to tragedy. A highlight of 1979’s Rust Never Sleeps, “Powderfinger” is a tale of young man (only 22, he says) left by the “powers-that-be” to be in charge on the day a boat come up the river, and it isn’t ferrying tourists. It’s got a red beacon, numbers painted on the side, and armed men on board. Even though he’s been instructed to run, he decides to fight back. Even though “daddy’s rifle in my hand is reassuring” it’s no enough, and he sees the shot that kills him coming, As he’s dying, he asks for absolution, his last words “remember me to my love/I know I’ll miss her.” Chugging along at a steamboat’s tempo, the melody rising and falling like the wake of a boat, and Neil sings the song at the higher end of his register, giving the story a tremulous innocence, the backing vocals on last verse sending the young man to his final rest in heavenly harmonies, the guitar finishing the song on a ringing, slowly fading harmonic tone.
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