Monthly Archives: September 2019

#652: They Might Be Giants – It’s Not My Birthday

‘It’s Not My Birthday’ is a well-loved song among the most dedicated of TMBG fans. Originally released as a B-Side on the ‘They’ll Need a Crane’ single in 1989 – it was given wider circulation in 1991, placed as the seventh track on the band’s compilation Miscellaneous T.

I heard it for the first time….. think in early 2011 when I was studying for my GCSEs. I had been a major follower of They for years up until then, but it was around that time that I actually got to listening to their albums in full. Those were good times…. But anyway – got around to listening to Miscellaneous T and although these were all B-Sides they nevertheless had the same authentic quality of any track that made it onto their ‘official’ albums. Some would say this track in particular should have been on Lincoln. That’s just the way things go sometimes, I guess.

It’s less than two minutes in duration but is packed with so much that you at least feel satisfied when it’s over. There’s a briskness to it, led by a bouncy rhythm and general upbeat vibe in the music. However, it’s another one of the group’s that has an looming hint of sadness to it. Mainly in the lyrics. I’ve always had that feeling towards it though I’ve never known why. They’re quite hard to fully interpret. But I think it’s about a person who is just going through life without any real purpose and is just waiting for an end with each day. Though that’s just me.

#651: Ween – It’s Gonna Be (Alright)

Though Ween have mostly considered to be this joke band who don’t take their music seriously because of the humour they incorporate into their material (which they’re not and they do), there has always been a song on each of their albums (except La Cucaracha probably) that can unexpectedly surprise you with its sincerity. There are a couple I can think of when it comes to The Mollusk; ‘It’s Gonna Be (Alright)’ is one of them.

This track has always been one of my favourites from the album since I heard it back in 2013. Following ‘The Blarney Stone’, an explicit number in the form of a sea shanty, ‘Alright’ slows things right down to darken the mood with its wavey guitar arpeggios and echoing percussion. It’s another devastating track in Ween’s discography concerning the end of a relationship. For anyone who doesn’t know, Gene Ween – lead singer and co-songwriter in the band – has a big heart; when it gets broken he can get really sad. He wrote songs like ‘Birthday Boy’, ‘Baby Bitch’, and ‘I Don’t Want It’ detailing some of the misery he’s been through. However, ‘Alright’ is one of those tracks where although the relationship is no more, there’s still hope that things can still be good between the two of them.

Things get weird again as they follow this with ‘The Golden Eel’ on the album, pretty much about what it says in the title, so it’s almost like the band just drops this serious track to just say ‘everything’s not as well as it seems here but forget about it here’s the silly stuff again’. But that’s all what adds to the charm… of Ween.

#650: …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead – It Was There That I Saw You

‘It Was There That I Saw You’, the (almost) opener of Trail of Dead’s 2002 album Source Tags & Codes still gets me pumped today. I listened to the full album for the first time about five years ago and ended up pleasantly surprised by the entire thing. There’s this grand mystical vibe that the music and lyrics give out throughout which some may find pretentious but I found bearable at least.

But ‘I Was There’ starts it all off with this calming introduction that suddenly explodes into a ball of energy with crashing drums and exhilarating guitar work. It is during this moment that singer Conrad Keely comes into frame singing about the time he became enamoured by someone (I’ll assume a lady) and had some great times with her before eventually losing touch. He is left wondering what he has been up to in the time that have been apart.

It’s endearing stuff. But then the fast music suddenly stops and transitions into this slow breakdown – with a melody taken from the preceding track ‘Invocation’ – that builds and builds in intensity, repeating that melody endlessly before transitioning back into the fast music you were hearing almost two minutes ago. Ahhh… it feels so good when that happens. You can experience it too!

It’s a dynamic track that pulls and pushes and takes a few turns here and there. It’s an exciting listen. It’s a great album, I say.

#649: The Flaming Lips – It Overtakes Me

At War with the Mystics is the first Flaming Lips album I was properly alive and kicking for around the time of its release. I was eleven watching MTV2 almost every morning and the video for ‘The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song’ was showing very frequently. The song is all right. A bland opinion that I hold to this day. ‘The WAND’ followed some time after. While that one has a great groove to it, I hold that in the same regard as I do the ‘YYY Song’. Neither of them are bad though, and I can still dig them even 13 years on.

However, the track that really grabbed me from the album was ‘It Overtakes Me’. Not that I went out and actually bought the album. Actually I was either in bed or the living room and this advert for Becks beer came on. It was this weird stop-motion animation where these models were dancing to a thick bassline and an almighty groove. I later found out that it was the song that you see in the title. I’ll put that advert below just so you can all witness my impressive descriptive skills.

So ‘It Overtakes Me’ is the seventh track on At War with the Mystics. On the album itself, it’s merged with an almost-four minute instrumental entitled ‘The Stars Are So Big… I Am So Small… Do I Stand a Chance?’. I’m not too big a fan of that, but luckily the main song was edited to remove that section on its own EP and is the version you can listen to above. I might just link the instrumental at the bottom too.

As I said earlier, ‘It Overtakes Me’ is dominated by this thick and heavy bassline that’s at the forefront of the mix and is pretty much the melodic centre of the whole composition. While that bass is going on, Wayne Coyne sings about how insignificant and small he seems to be in this big wide world (a theme he tends to explore in the group’s music) and how the fact that we’re all on this sphere floating in space overwhelms him. It’s not all emotional though. There are some twinkling keyboard melodies, dramatic backing vocals, loose moments when a bandmember will yell out ‘Yeah’ in the midst of everything….. There’s a point where a vocal slowly transforms from a chipmunk-like pitch to a giant-like bellow too. It’s a very fun listen for something that can cause an existential crisis for some people.

#648: Tame Impala – It Is Not Meant to Be

‘It Is Not Meant to Be’ is the first track on Tame Impala’s debut album Innerspeaker, released almost ten years ago…. If I remember right, that particular was the second of the “group”‘s that I listened to following Lonerism when I was in my last year of sixth form. Compared to that album, it was apparent that there was a lot more focus on the guitars and some good riffs. A lot less synthesizer work. But it was all still some great music for this guy in 2012/13.

Probably down as one of the best introductions to an album in my music library, ‘It Is Not Meant to Be’ grabbed me right away with its thick bassline and phasing guitars that repeat on and on for a minute and 20 seconds before the vocals eventually come in. If that section were its own track I wouldn’t be too upset. It’s very hypnotizing. But then Kevin Parker arrives and tells the listener about a girl he’s had his eye on and who is way out of his league, much to his reluctant acknowledgment. And that’s something a lot of guys have been through, right? I know I have.

But it’s not just because of its relatability that I dig this track. It just sounds so good. When I listen to it, I see…. trees of green, the sun. I sense a summery feeling but its surrounded by a mystic haze. Like I’m lying in a field. And then when the chorus hits I’m lifted to a whole other level. It’s a warm, comfortable listen that carries a heavy weight but won’t do you any harm in the long run. It’s definitely a smooth way to start off a discography.