Edge Of Seventeen -
"You want to go to the lake?" Marco yelled over the music.
"You're quiet," he said.
The song on the radio was old, before either of them were born. A woman's voice, ragged and soaring, over a guitar that sounded like a drill or a prayer. Ooh, baby... Edge Of Seventeen
"Yeah," she said, and the word felt like a cliff. "Let's go to the edge."
At the bridge, everything falls away. The guitar drops out. Just a voice and a shadow. Well, I went searchin' for an answer... But there is no answer. Only the rhythm. Only the edge. Only the number seventeen, which is the age you learn that love and loss are the same muscle. "You want to go to the lake
She turned to him. The green light of the dashboard lit up the side of his face. He was beautiful in the way that things you are about to lose are beautiful.
Lena rolled down the window. The humid air slapped her face. She stuck her arm out, palm flat, and let the resistance push her hand up and down. She was a wing. She was a fist. A woman's voice, ragged and soaring, over a
You are seventeen, which means you are a raw nerve. Which means the world is a fist, and you are the glass. Stevie understood this. She wrote this song on a piano in a house full of ghosts, after a friend died, after a band died, while the white-winged dove outside the window kept singing the same flat note.
Since you asked to I will provide a complete creative package: a narrative poem capturing the song's spirit, a breakdown of its musical DNA for a musician, and a short scene of fiction inspired by its title and mood. 1. The Narrative Poem: The White-Winged Dove The guitar is a single engine, a one-note scream. A wailing, picked string that refuses to resolve. It is the sound of a thought you can’t finish, the sound of a car idling in the rain after you’ve said the thing you can’t take back.