Daily Archives: July 1, 2015

My iPod #522: OutKast – Hey Ya!

You’ve heard it. Still sounds good twelve years later.

I was tempted to end the post there, but that would have been just plain lazy.

“Hey Ya!” was the co-lead single from OutKast’s double album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below from 2003. Alongside Big Boi’s “The Way You Move“, “Hey Ya!” was the first single released in the lead-up toward a new album by the duo since 2000.

Despite its memorable hook and upbeat rhythm, the track is rather melancholy in tone with André 3000 singing about commitment in relationships, how love and emotions can fade over time, how two people can feign loving one another when really both of them aren’t happy at all. But as even Mr. 3000 points out: You don’t want to hear him, you just wanna dance.

Its actual meaning is probably lost on a lot of people. Maybe it’s for the better. No one would be able to shake it like a Polaroid picture in the same way again.

My iPod #521: Dananananaykroyd – Hey James

“Hey James” is the penultimate track on Hey Everyone!, the debut album by former Scottish ‘fight pop’ band Dananananaykroyd. Despite its welcoming title the song is probably the heaviest one out of the twelve tracks, depicting an image of a barren wasteland, war and what could possibly be the end of the world itself.

In a track-by-track guide-through a week before the album’s release, guitarist David Roy confirmed that the ‘James’ in the title is a reference to their former drummer who had left to pursue other music interests in another band. The track is a tribute to him, written as “a furious sort of epic rock thing with a hint of sadness”. That hint of sadness may be an allusion to the the track’s minor key, otherwise the song is a performance of sheer energy and balls-to-the-wall noise. The use of two separate drum kits throughout the album is something to behold but both of them on here have a noticeable role on here, providing a punchy rhythm during the verses before adding to the disorderly nature of the choruses.

The track climaxes with a 6/8 time signature before closing out with nightmare-inducing whispers creepily repeating the phrase ‘hey everyone….’ into your ears. Those go on for about a minute. Although it gives you time to take in what you’ve heard it is a nervy way to end it all, but it’s all okay once they segue right into the more cheerful sounding opener of the following song.