Monthly Archives: January 2014

My iPod #211: Wings – Country Dreamer

 

I am late, I know, forgive me. I did have a good day today. I went to Romford with mates, had some Nandos and watched American Hustle (which is a good film that I recommend, unlike 47 Ronin). It is probably the last time I’ll go out before I go back to university on Tuesday, which I am very much looking forward to.

“Country Dreamer” is a track that Wings recorded in 1972 for their album “Red Rose Speedway”. It didn’t make it on there, and was released as a B-Side to “Helen Wheels”, a single they released the year after.

After starting to like The Beatles in 2009, 2010 was the year that I began to listen to each member’s solo material. I knew Paul McCartney was in Wings, and what is generally considered to be the band’s best album? “Band on the Run”, duh. So I downloaded that, and this song was the last one. Apparently the version I downloaded was a re-release of the album from 1993.

This song’s very frilly and a bit sappy. It is too happy. Paul sings about wanting to different things with ‘you’ and asks if you would like to do it too. The things he wants to do take place in the country (he was into that type of scenery a bit) because he dreams of doing that stuff there, and with ‘you’ he knows that it can all come true. That’s basically it. If you like it, that’s cool.

My iPod #210: Nine Black Alps – Cosmopolitan

“Cosmopolitan” is the second track from Nine Black Alps’ first album “Everything Is”. It was one of the first tracks to be recorded for it too. It was the first single by the band, and was released a year earlier in 2004.

Now I had known of Nine Black Alps when their videos for “Unsatisfied” and “Just Friends” started appearing on MTV2. I never really gave “Unsatisfied” a chance because every time the video started and Sam Forrest had such a glum look on his face, I was never sitting on the edge of my seat waiting for what would come next. “Just Friends”, I liked but it was a little too short. YouTube didn’t exist and I wanted to hear more of their material. How could I? When would the next opportunity arrive when I would another one of their tunes?

Christmas 2005 when I got FIFA 06, that’s when. “Cosmopolitan” was one of the tracks that EA had selected to be in their yearly football release. Something that’s quite strange looking at the tracks they have for FIFA 14. They would never choose something as hard-hitting as this again.

I love FIFA. Been getting it since 2002. So if an artist’s song is in there, if it is good, I will be able to decipher the lyrics and sing along to it all the time. “Cosmopolitan” was no exception.

With a lone guitar playing the riff for the first few seconds, the track then explodes into life. Brilliant guitar playing in the left and right channels while Sam Forrest really sings from the stomach – it’s almost like melodic shouting. It’s cool.

It’s very dark. But that’s no surprise. I say ‘dark’ all the time when I talk about this band but I can’t help it. They write dark stuff. “Everything Is”, lyrically, is especially dark. That album’s great.

P.S. Um… hello Hatch Records. If you see this, thank you for following me on Twitter. If you like this post could you comment below…. or favourite my tweet. It’s really awesome to know that one of my most liked band’s label has noticed me.

My iPod #209: They Might Be Giants – Contrecoup

 

Today’s track is brought to you by They Might Be Giants, a band I have written about many times in the past. This time, it is “Contrecoup” from their 2007 album “The Else” that I will be typing about for today’s entry.

They Might Be Giants seem to be able to come up with songs about just about anything. Shoehorns with teeth, spiraling shapes, stomp boxes, you name it. Even though those things all sound silly to the ear, those are tunes that you better believe have a lot of thought put into them. You wouldn’t be able to create with a song that is from the perspective of a nightlight in a child’s bedroom. That idea would never occur.

This song however was made really easily, and was created way before its proper release in 2007. Two years prior, John Linnell was on a radio show. The show said, make a song using the words ‘contrecoup’, ‘craniosophic’ and ‘limerent’. The track was made then and there. It was changed up a bit for “The Else”, but that is the story of how “Contrecoup” was born.

Musically, the song is quite calm. It chugs along at a sturdy pace driven by an acoustic riff with light guitar and keyboard vamps. The song does troll you nearing the end when it suddenly starts to build pace…. it fades out to silence, but I’m still left satisfied.

My iPod #208: The Beatles – The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill


Finally! After almost three years from its release, I have seen the last Harry Potter film. The feels! I kid you not, just two minutes ago I finished watching it. Thank you MegaShare. I never thought I could get an actual working link as the top result on Google, but there you go.

Today’s track is one that would not be acclaimed by a lot of Beatle fans. It was one of my most played tracks in iTunes, which would either impress some people or gain some curious looks by others.

Well I don’t care! I like it. The song’s quite funny. And one based on real events. An American man went to visit his mother in India, where John Lennon and the rest of the band were staying at the time, and set out on elephants to hunt a tiger. A tiger was killed, John didn’t like it, the rest is history.

The song is also noted for the one and only appearance of a female lead vocal on a Beatles track. This pisses off some people, as it was provided by Yoko Ono. For me…. meh. I am indifferent. It is over before you know it.

My iPod #207: The Raconteurs – Consoler of the Lonely


Sorry for the late post, I had started writing at around seven and then some events occurred which prevented me from finishing it… But here it is.

First day of the new year but the posting doesn’t stop. You think I would take a day off for this momentous occasion? You is stupid. I would never do that. Even though I am at my friend’s place and easily could have missed today. But I feel as if it would have been a waste to let this day go without making a mark on it, so here we go.

I bought “Consolers of the Lonely” in 2008 just because I really liked “Salute Your Solution” and wanted to listen to it on repeat without waiting for it to appear on MTV2. That resulted in me a skipping the almost title track when I first got the album. That was a silly mistake.

I did have a reason as to why I did. The slow guitar introduction did not impress me so I skipped the whole song altogether, not knowing that the song actually changed into a full-on hard rock tune.

Something that I really liked about the first single from the album was the change of the band’s sound. I know that’s said for a lot of artists, but compared to “Broken Boy Soldiers” which sounded like a band writing their tracks and then recording them in a small studio, “Consolers of the Lonely” was the sound of a band ready to take on the biggest festivals and fill the largest stadiums.

With the track beginning on a quiet note, a bunch of studio chatter and aforementioned guitar I wasn’t expecting much. That was until the count-in from the drumsticks appeared and the real song began. The first chord accompanied with the pounding rhythm section hit me like a ton of bricks. It sounded so good. Brendan Benson’s vocals sound as rich as ever, and work ever so well as the ‘lonely’ character as detailed in the album name.

Then the middle begins. The song slows down, and the guitar from the introduction is the backbone of it. Very clever! So it wasn’t some sort of random lick that they just threw in, it actually has purpose. Jack White strides in as the ‘consoler’ as he offers the loner ‘something good to eat’ and slap-bang we’re back to the pumping verses again.

It’s all done really smoothly. This song is one containing a lot of changes. The best one is saved for the last minute when the song suddenly gains pace and the band execute one of the best breakdowns I have out of all the songs I have on my Apple product.