Monthly Archives: March 2013

My iPod #36: Sex Pistols – Anarchy in the UK


Sorry for being late.

Mate.”Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols” is one of the best punk albums of all time.

Made up of Johnny Rotten, Steve Jones, Paul Cook and Glen Matlock (who then left and was replaced by Sid Vicious) were the voice of a generation who didn’t give a shit. About anything. They only released one official album of original material, but the legacy they left on the punk genre and Britain overall still goes on to this day.

The first time I heard the song was around 9 or 8 years ago. I was watching this football show, something along the lines of the top ten controversial moments in the Premier League, and the incident where Eric Cantona kung-fu kicked a fan in the stands was shown. Of course it was one of those countdown things where the producers recruited these random celebrities to talk about these ‘controversial moments’ even if they didn’t give a shit about football.

Cantona got in a lot of trouble for that in ’95. The whole ‘I AM AN ANTICHRIST, I AM AN ANARCHIST’ seemed to fit the clip exactly, and seeing Cantona go crazy and hearing the song for the first time freaked me out a bit. I was eight years old at that time so… you know. It was scary.

Again, I would thank Yahoo’s Launch for helping me find the song. I was listening to my specific radio station when ‘L’Anarchie Pour Le UK‘ from ‘The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle’ played. I thought that the song sounded familiar, even if it was sung in French, and one thing led to another and I found ‘Anarchy in the UK’.

I thought it was the best song I’d ever heard. It was just so punchy and raw, that trademark whiney vocal by Rotten and just the whole ‘don’t give a fuck’ attitude that the song gave off.

‘GET PISSED, DESTROOOOOOOYYAAAAAAAAAH.’

A great message for all the children.

Until next time.

Jamie.

Check out my new video on YouTube.

And Happy Easter too!

My iPod #35: They Might Be Giants – Ana Ng

:’) Another great song.

One of the best They Might Be Giants songs ever. It’s got everything you want. A great chorus, an edgy guitar riff in the verses, and their typical trait of being able to write a melody that gets stuck in your head and never leaves.

The video of this song was one of the first of theirs I saw. I’ve told you guys about the Launchcast site Yahoo had, and how it basically introduced to what is my favourite band. When I saw it, I didn’t know who was singing. Neither John was lip-syncing to the song. The video just gave me everything I needed to know about them. They were synchronising in everything, their pounding on the table, their ‘dancing’, their general (I don’t want to say it) quirkiness just attracted me to them.

I had a good friend in primary school, and I was ten when I watched the video. So seeing that just made me want to force him to watch it so we could mimic the things they did during lunchtime or whatever. Everything is fun when you’re in year five.

Then primary school finished, and it was the summer holidays before I would start year seven. From being the oldest in the school, back to the youngest. I couldn’t handle it. I went out with my sister to Woolworths to buy stationery (pens, pencils, all the stuff) to prepare, and I saw one of my good friends from primary school there. I saw her, but I don’t think she saw me. I realised that’s how it would be from then on. I would never have the same relationship I had with my friends once I moved to my new school. The fact that I was the only person from my school to get into the one I did only emphasised that. I barely saw any of them, when I did it was a small exchange of:

“Hi! How are you?”
“I’m good.”
“Haven’t seen you for aaaaaaages!”
“Yeah, I know.”
“Well, see ya then! :)”
“See ya. :)”

😦 It was never the same.

I remember getting on the bus with my sister after finishing at the shop, ‘Ana Ng’ came into my head and I just kept on humming it and singing it quietly to myself whilst looking out the window feeling the time go by.

‘Ana Ng’ is a really important song for me. It reminds of me of the good times.

Until next time.

Jamie.

My iPod #34: The Offspring – Americana

I got this album for Christmas 2005.

‘Americana’ is a good place to start if you’re just getting into The Offspring. A few of their most popular songs are on it, and the hard punk rock sound that they had had for many years was still present but it was also with this album that they started to explore punk with a bit of pop on the side.

The song is sandwiched in between the light, hey-hey-hey, na-na-na-nanah, upbeat song of ‘Why Don’t You Get a Job?‘ and the trippy and eventually epic climax ‘Pay the Man‘, and is the real last short and sharp burst of music that you hear by the band before the final song starts. The introduction takes up one minute of the song. Little by little, the instruments build up. First you hear a simple 4/4 bass kick, then some toms, a killer riff is then overdubbed, the rhythm section joins in with the background vocals, (Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhh.), on and on it continues like a tribal chant. Until Dexter barges in with the first line, ‘NOW I’D LIKE TO TELL YOU ALL ABOUT MY DREAM, IT’S A PLACE.’

Then the song really kicks in. It’s energetic, it’s strong, the word ‘fuck’ is mentioned about five times on here. I have no idea what the song is about but seeing as it is the one the album is named after I would say that it is probably the centerpiece of the running theme of American society that is common throughout. I think the narrator is frustrated by what he lives in, what he is surrounded by and how he is defined.

‘My future’s determined by thieves, thugs, and vermin
It’s quite an excursion but it’s okay
Everything’s backwards in Americana my way’
 

How the narrator is brought up is only because ‘Americana’ made him that way, and this is the straw that breaks the camel’s back. HE HAS BECOME ONE OF THEM. ‘Woh oh oh, woh oh oh, woh oh oh
My nightmare has come true.’
That’s just my interpretation anyway.

Then there’s a key change which would not be expected, but it’s pretty cool to hear. It adds a bit of something extra to the song. Otherwise it could have been a bit to repetitive.

This song’s a really good one. It’s one of my favourites of the album. It hits you hard after listening to the previous song.

Until next time.

Jamie.

My iPod #33: Simon & Garfunkel – America


Ah Paul Simon and Arthur ‘Art’ Garfunkel. What can I say about them?

Not much really. I’m not a massive fan.

It was in late 2011, that I listened to a full song by them. I knew ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’, but I had always thought that was a hymn or something. I never knew it was an actual song.

A documentary on the BBC was shown once in October, a brief snippet of it is can be viewed here. This song played on it when the duo started talking about the conception of their ‘Songs of America’ documentary and the controversy that surrounded it and everything.

Hearing it then, I thought I had heard that song somewhere else before. In an advert, or a film, or another various medium.

It doesn’t matter though. I listened to the song, liked it and put it on my iPod.

Bookends‘ is the album that the song is on. ‘Save the Life of My Child’ is my favourite song on it, but you could say that ‘America’ is the centerpiece of the first ‘side’ of the album.

Of course there are no sides on a CD but the first half of the album has a concept of life starting from birth to death which is pretty cool. It’s always nice to have a concept album once in a while. Even though it’s only the first six songs.

Like I said, Simon & Garfunkel isn’t really my kind of thing. ‘Bookends’ and ‘Bridge over Troubled Water’ are both great albums though.

Until next time.

Jamie.

My iPod #32: Razorlight – America


In the late spring of 2006, I was eleven years old and in the final weeks of my last year at primary school.

A highlight of that period of time was the trip to the Isle of Wight where I, most of my ‘bestest’ friends (and a few kids from year 5) stayed for a week in ‘Friends’ Hotel and basically spent the last trip I would have in primary school not giving a shit about anything. It was all about having good times with my friends, and making the most of the time we had left.

However, a week away from the house meant a week away from the Internet or MTV2. The World Cup was being held at the same time, and we watched England vs Trinidad and Tobago on ITV, that was pretty cool. But that did not get rid of the fact that I was missing out on my music.

Friday 16th June – I come back home, switch the TV to my favourite music channel, and see Razorlight’s new video for their ‘new single’ In the Morning. That got repeated almost every day during that time. It’s not a bad song though, so I never got annoyed. I liked Razorlight anyway – Up All Night is good stuff.

‘In the Morning’ was their second highest charting single in the UK, getting to #3. ‘Somewhere Else’ had peaked higher at #2 a year before. And then they released this song.

‘America’ got straight to number one – in it’s first week of release too! I didn’t think it was that captivating of a song that it could ever get to that position. It was there for only one week though, then The Black Parade marched into town.

The funny thing is that the song was actually written by the band’s drummer Andy Burrows. Johnny Borrell still got recognition in the song’s credits though, you’ve gotta keep stacking up those pound sterlings.

I like America. The song isn’t too bad either.

Seriously though some fans don’t like Razorlight’s self-titled album, they found that the band were raising their butts towards the radio and waiting for a pounding. (Sorry for the imagery.)

For me, this is Razorlight’s last album where they actually made good songs. Those that I could listen to. ‘Razorlight’ and ‘Up All Night’ are the ones you want to listen to.

And then, in 2008. They released the video for their new song ‘Wire to Wire’, and I could never take them seriously as a band again.

They haven’t released an album since.

Razorlight aren’t even Razorlight anymore. Johnny Borrell is the only original member left.

Until next time.

Jamie.