Un montón de huesos
Divididos
Unveiling the Skeletons Beneath: A Dive into 'Un montón de huesos' by Divididos
Divididos, an influential Argentine rock band, delves into the raw and often unsettling truths of human existence in their song 'Un montón de huesos.' The lyrics pose a stark question: '¿Qué hay debajo del amor?' (What is beneath love?), to which the answer is 'un montón de huesos' (a bunch of bones). This metaphor suggests that beneath the surface of love and human relationships lies something much more primal and perhaps grim—our mortality and the bare bones of our existence.
The repetition of 'un montón de huesos' throughout the song emphasizes the inevitability and omnipresence of death. The line 'dejame decirte que la buena fe es que no soy de nadie' (let me tell you that good faith is that I belong to no one) speaks to a sense of individualism and existential freedom, yet it is juxtaposed with the imagery of bones, hinting at the ultimate fate that unites all humans regardless of their beliefs or affiliations.
The song also touches on societal decay and corruption with the line '¿Quién escarba la tierra? un montón de ratas' (Who digs the earth? a bunch of rats). This imagery of rats digging through the earth, possibly through graves, adds a layer of critique on how society handles the dead and the living. The vision of people dancing in this 'infierno' (hell) over the bones suggests a macabre celebration or ignorance of the underlying truths of life and death.
'Un montón de huesos' is a powerful reflection on mortality, individualism, and societal decay, wrapped in the raw and gritty sound that Divididos is known for. The song challenges listeners to confront the uncomfortable realities that lie beneath the surface of everyday life and love.