V Poslednyuyu Osen'
DDT
The Last Autumn: A Poetic Farewell
DDT's song "V Poslednyuyu Osen'" ("In the Last Autumn") is a poignant reflection on the passage of time, the end of an era, and the inevitable changes that come with it. The lyrics evoke a sense of finality and melancholy, as they describe the last autumn as a period where no new lines or sighs are left, and the last songs have fallen away with the summer. This imagery suggests a closing chapter, where an epoch burns out like a farewell bonfire, leaving only shadows and light for the observers.
The song continues to explore the theme of autumn as a force that scatters everything that once suffocated and oppressed. The autumn storm whimsically disperses all that played, shimmered, and weighed heavily on the soul, tearing it apart with an aspen wind. This metaphorical storm represents a cleansing or a release from past burdens, yet it also signifies destruction and the end of what once was.
A poignant moment in the song is the reference to Aleksandr Sergeevich, likely the great Russian poet Aleksandr Pushkin. The lyrics lament that he did not tell us about the struggles, the search, the love, and the knowledge of the last autumn. This reference adds a layer of cultural depth, connecting the personal and collective experiences of change and loss to the broader Russian literary tradition.
The final verses depict a hungry sea swallowing the autumn sun, obscuring memories and preventing any touch of the dusty grass. Poets leave in the last autumn, never to return, with shutters nailed shut. What remains are the rains, a frozen summer, love, and revived stones. This imagery encapsulates the essence of the song: a farewell to the past, an acknowledgment of enduring love, and the resilience of memory and art even as time moves forward.