"Starship Trooper" was written by Jon Anderson, Steve Howe and Chris Squire that first appeared on Yes' 1971 album The Yes Album. The song is in three parts, "Life Seeker," "Disillusion" and "Würm."
Anderson was aware of the title of Starship Troopers, the 1959 novel by Robert A. Heinlein, and from that got the idea of a "Starship Trooper being another guardian angel and Mother Earth". "Starship Trooper" was constructed from pieces of music written separately by Anderson, Howe and Squire. Anderson was the primary author of "Life Seeker." Squire wrote most of the "Disillusion" section; this section had earlier been used with slightly different lyrics as the bridge for the song "For Everyone", with Squire providing the lead vocals. Howe had written the instrumental "Würm" section while he was in an earlier band (Bodast).
The song was heavily constructed in the recording studio, and as a result the band were never able to play it live quite the way it was recorded. The song changes mood, rhythm, tempo and style continually. Authors Pete Brown and Lisa Sharken describe the "Würm" section as "a Bolero-paced chord sequence that builds into an explosive solo". They note that Howe's solo incorporates rockabilly and country music elements rather than on blues-based music with distortion as is typical for these types of solos.
A theme of "Life Seeker" is the search for God. Anderson has stated that the lyrics:
Mother life hold firmly onto me Spread my knowledge higher than the day Release as much as only you can show
refer to "the point within yourself that knows you," which we call "God." The lyrics accept the fact that "no matter how much you want to get clearer visions of what you're up to, you're only going to get a certain amount."
The song uses UFO imagery. Other themes that have been inferred for the song include new age ideas and environmentalism.
Part of what I hope to see a lot of in this sub is the lyrics from a lot of these groups.
Going from this song to the tragic "owner of a lonely heart" is a perfect example. They used to write epic tales and, well, wondrous stories. Then, years later, hearing them singing to the pop-40 crowd was just sad.
Damnit, I thought this was going to be a song for the Mobile Infantry!
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