#974: Kings of Leon – On Call

Two and a bit years on from Aha Shake Heartbreak, the time had come around for a new Kings of Leon album. The music video for ‘On Call’ premiered in the UK on Channel 4. If anyone from the UK remembers when Channel 4 used to premiere brand new music videos, shout out to you. But they always showed them at the latest times of the day. I was 11 years old at the time, and didn’t have enough energy to stay up until 11:45pm or whenever time they were showing it. It was some ungodly time, for an 11-year-old at least. My sister, however, did. When I asked her how it was the next morning, though I can’t remember the specifics, I do recall her making a comment on how the camera zoomed on Caleb Followill’s face every time he sang, “Be there.” I asked, “Kinda like Kurt Cobain in the ‘Heart-Shaped Box’ video?” She said, “Something like that, sure.” It wasn’t too long until the video started regularly playing on MTV2. Followill isn’t as unhinged as Cobain was in that music video. But the similarity was there.

Gotta say, ‘On Call’ is quite a strange choice for a single. Especially the first one for an album that fans would have been eagerly anticipating. In a lot of ways, it shouldn’t work. There’s no guitar-led introduction like the other typical KoL singles. Instead, in came these slow ghostly keyboards, with which Caleb Followill joins in not too long after. Even he delivers his lines, one after the other, quite shyly with spaces in between to really make those keyboards heard. Then that ominous tape-echoed bassline comes in with that chugging guitar line on the right by Matthew Followill. All these elements make for quite the mysterious introduction to a song. Then Caleb really starts singing. The “I’m on call to BE THERE” line is one that has a melody that, again, should not work in any way. But then the band properly fall in at 1:18 and everything comes together, it all starts to make sense. Then by the time the guitar solo comes in, you’ve got yourself another classic KoL track.

Think I’ve made it clear in other posts concerning Kings of Leon, but after Because of the Times, things were just never the same. The video for ‘On Call’ sort of marked an end of an era. It was the last video of the band’s in which Caleb Followill had his long hair, something of a remainder from the Aha Shake era. The band released the track ‘Fans’ as a single, but the next music video they would make would be for ‘Charmer’, where those locks were chopped off. Amazing how he looked almost like a completely different person through that act. But I’m not afraid to say I’m one of those fans who think it all went wrong from ‘Sex on Fire’ onwards. I don’t cry and wish they’d go back to their old style though. No point. By this point I’ve made my peace with the matter. But for a while Kings of Leon had us all going.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.