Sabaton - 7734 - Live (Original Lyrics) video free download


458,185
Duration: 03:51
Uploaded: 2012/09/02

Heavy Metal will never die!

7734 first appeared on the album "Metalizer" (2007), the live-version was taken from the CD "World War Live - Battle of the Baltic Sea" (2011).

CAUTION!

I won't tolerate any racist, discriminatory or in any other form inappropriate comments! This song neither glorifies war, nor National Socialism, but should be considered as a historical work.

"No, we don't glorify anything, we just tell stories about things that have happened." (Rikard Sundén, founding member of Sabaton)

Please support Sabaton and purchase their current album Carolus Rex.

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Heavy Metal will never die!

7734 wurde zum ersten Mal mit dem Album "Metalizer" (2007) veröffentlicht, die Liveversion stammt von der CD "World War Live - Battle of the Baltic Sea" (2011).

ACHTUNG!

Ich dulde keine rassistischen, diskriminierenden oder in sonstiger Form unangemessene Kommentare! Dieses Lied verherrlicht weder Krieg, noch den Nationalsozialismus, sondern ist rein historisch zu betrachten!

"Nein, wir verherrlichen nichts, wir erzählen nur Geschichten über Dinge, die passiert sind." (Rikard Sundén, Gründungsmitglied von Sabaton)

Bitte unterstützt Sabaton und kauft euch das aktuelle Album Carolus Rex!

Comments

8 years ago

dimvoly

I listen to this when running at sunrise.

8 years ago

Rizzla CS

Sabaton sound so gooood on live versions, Id love to see them live.

9 years ago

Marvin Uhlmann

I love sabaton i have all Album and all Songs

9 years ago

Stuntsau

I thought it was on Heroes not on metalizer

9 years ago

Eliga Lerton

Am I the only one who thinks Joakim sounds better live?

9 years ago

Alex Czarnecki

I figured this excerpt from an interview with Par can help clear things up on the meaning. “When we recorded Metalizer, we had some songs that were written in the studio. ‘7734’ was one of them. The song is basically a hymn about the battle of metalheads which are – in the beginning – few in number and they finally become 7,734. We saw the number written on a calculator upside down which spelled ‘HELL,’ so we named it that way."

9 years ago

Sam Bakich

What it seems like to me, and I am not saying this is correct, is the story of creation and Satan's fall from an angel's point of view. Might be wrong, and I do not mean to offend, it's just what I get out of it.

9 years ago

Michael Zak

Heavy metal will never die!!!! 

9 years ago

Sanguinius

I believe this song is quite a bit deeper in meaning than taken at face value. The best position is that this song is about the fall from the Viking age, the rise of modern Odinism and the Swedish black metal scene. How can we reconcile the following verses?Falling downNow your soul returns to paradise7734I believe the best answer is that 7734 is a distorted reflection of hell, as in, "one man's hell is another's heaven" and Falling down is not about a descent to hell - but about dying in battle so your soul can be transported to Asgard, which is paradise for a viking warrior. From the point of view of someone who believes the meek shall inherit the earth, Norse paganism must certainly look like a religion from hell and the practitioners as needing conversion. The math which turns 7734 to 777 (heaven) into 666 (hell) can be viewed along similar lines of point of view inversions.So the song uses some word inverts and reverse spellings to remind us that point of view is very important. "Do glatem live" has earlier been shown to be "evil metal god" spelled backwards (another stark point of view element). The full verse is:Do glatem live, creator of allWhat is ironic is that the creator in the Norse pantheon is Odin (along with his brothers). So Odin is the evil metal god, which is problematic as this is not really supported in Norse paganism. To reconcile this inconsistency we must also view the song as a description of the Swedish black metal scene's evolution from essentially embracing Satanic views (which they realized actually validates the religion they typically decry) to embracing Germanic Neopaganism or paganism in general. The position of this song within this album is also instructive, it comes after "Shadows" a song derived from Tolkien's fantasy (which Tolkien intended as the mythology of England and is about a mythical age in Europe, and after "Burn Your Crosses" an anti-religion song. 7734 basically combines the elements of the previous two songs into one. Also in Sabaton's catalog is the song "Swedish Pagans" a non-subtle glorification of the viking age.So there you have it - a self-consistent song meaning for an enigmatic set of verses.

9 years ago

Антон Максимов

Can anyone tell me what this song is about?

9 years ago

fefixfrost

Wer die bedeutung wissen will.Hier die Antwort: Wenn man 7734 in einen Taschenrechner eingibt und auf den Kopf stellt ergibt das Wort Hell und Hell heißt auf deutsch Hölle.Ich nenne sowas Taschenrechnersprache

9 years ago

zxlegacyxz

To hell with what the numbers mean, park it and enjoy the song.

10 years ago

Marinela Ghotic

OVAJ TIP IMA ČUDAN AKCENAT

10 years ago

Michael Westman

Its f***ing amazing,. just love it :)

10 years ago

GUERILLA RADIO

It's a song, why does all this come from songs, can't we all enjoy artwork rather than argue over it, I't may have a hidden meaning but don't bitch moan and groan over it, just enjoy it.

10 years ago

barry murray

falling angles

10 years ago

Jim Kap

7734 means hell

10 years ago

ta666ak666

The lyrics of this song are more complicated to understand than Nostradamus' foretellings.

10 years ago

NitroxDiver

Jesus Christ , wtf

10 years ago

Vini Kämpferherz

I don't get the part "2 became one" How's that became 111? it shouln't be "77 / 3+4 = 7: 777. ?/)

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