Monthly Archives: June 2023

#1059: Mac DeMarco – Preoccupied

Well, here’s the last representative from Mac DeMarco’s Here Comes the Cowboy album that will be featured in this long, long list. It’s been fun. Though I’ve written about ‘Nobody’ and ‘On the Square’ previously, I’d also like to send my regards to ‘All of Our Yesterdays’ and ‘Hey Cowgirl’. The latter of those was somewhat agreed to be one of the more lacking songs on the record initially upon its release almost four years ago, but hey, I like it. Had Cowboy been released in 2013, those two songs would have their own dedications. But this is where we now stand at this moment in time.

‘Preoccupied’ is the fifth track on Here Comes the Cowboy, carrying on the minimalist approach DeMarco had chosen to take when making this specific album. The instrumental’s calming, relaxed, ideal for one of those slow days – that feeling aided by the sound of birds chirping that arrives right from the song’s start and right to the end when the guitar notes have rang out to silence. Like a large majority of tracks by DeMarco, it consists of only two verses and a chorus that’s repeated twice, usually alternating with one another in the structure. That occurs many, many times on the album alone. The simplicity was something that turned a lot of listeners off this album when it was released in 2019. There are tracks on there that I don’t care for a lot myself. But ‘Preoccupied’ is one where its subtle delivery only highlights the content. Gotta appreciate those tasty licks that come in during the choruses.

The song concerns what it states in the title. Everyone’s preoccupied and whether or not they mean to be, they can’t help but show it. You could probably either take this as some sort of commentary of people being on their phones all the time, locked in on whatever’s going on on social media and forgetting the art of actual human interaction, or maybe there’s some mental health issues talk in there too. The lyrics are quite open ended, which is always nice, so there’s a lot of room for interpretation. You know, if this album had come out in 2020, during that whole pandemic/lockdown thing that was going on, I feel like it would have been appreciated a lot more. There’s a lot of stuff on this album that seems really appropriate for what was going on during that time. Clearly DeMarco was in the know about something and we were all too naive to understand.

#1058: Bloc Party – The Prayer

I guess A Weekend in the City will always be seen as the not-as-good paler-in-comparison follow up to Silent Alarm, but when it was coming round to the release of Bloc Party’s second album in the first month of 2007, the anticipation and expectation couldn’t have been greater. Like the band had said in 2005, it was only two more years to hold on. Lo and behold, two years later – a new album was to come. ‘The Prayer’ was the first single, with its music video released in advance of the album’s arrival, and boy, do I remember that being repeated endlessly on MTV2 almost immediately. The band don’t do anything but sit around in some club. Only Kele Okereke gets up and walks about a little while the club-goers start distorting and all types of weird things start happening.

But none of the visuals mattered. What counted was that Bloc Party was back with this ‘new’ sound. It certainly made an impression with the 11-year-old kid I was. The huge boom-clap introduction was an ear-catcher from the moment it began, inspired by Busta Rhymes’ massive ‘Touch It’ single that would have been around while they were making the song. And then it’s followed by this ominous monk(?)-like humming which may also have a guitar buried underneath. Those are the main elements that lead into the verses in which Okereke takes on the persona of a man praying to the Lord above to give him the courage and strength to go out to the club and impress everyone he meets with his charm and his dance moves. The song’s page on Wikipedia says the track’s about drugs like ecstasy and Ketamine in nightclubs. It really isn’t. It’s about some guy who considers himself a bit of a lame-o during the working week that wants to be the main attraction when he’s on the dancefloor on the weekend. But I guess if you really wanted to think about it, the drug route is a possible way to go. Personally though, I’d say it’s the wrong way to go.

This song was a big one for Bloc Party. In the second week of its release, it got to number four in the UK singles chart and still remains to be their highest-charting single over here. For good reason too. Surely, the lyrics can be felt by any of those shy people who crave that sought-for recognition they believe they’re due, maybe even going so far as praying to help them obtain their success. You never know. It could be a desperate situation for people out there. Also, remember when I mentioned the producer Jacknife Lee in the post about Weezer’s ‘Pork and Beans’ a few days back? Well, he’s here again, managing to take the established presence of the band’s rhythm-section heavy dynamic and somehow making it even fatter. When those choruses arrive, they sound absolutely huge. Helps that the melodies throughout are just too good to not sing along to. God, it’s getting up to 20 years since this song’s been around. I mean, surely it was 2007 just a few years ago? Unlike a lot of music from around that time, ‘The Prayer’ does not sound as old as “20 years ago” may seem to be.

#1057: The Kinks – Powerman

The Kinks’ 1970 album Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One is one that I grew very fond of right from the initial listen. Don’t know what it was about the band from 1968 – 70. Some may argue that the run started some years prior/ended some years after. But the three albums (Village Green, Arthur, and Lola) released one after the other in three consecutive years is where, in my view, Ray Davies and company properly peaked. The first of those is my personal favourite. May have mentioned in other posts concerning songs from it. But while Arthur is usually regarded to be the other top, top classic of the band’s, it’s Lola that has always trumped it for me. The songs are fantastic, and Ray Davies is singing in his normal voice in comparison to that American-soulful inflection thing he has going on throughout Arthur. I’ve never been able to accustom myself to that choice.

Lola Versus Powerman is a bit of a concept album, almost, sort of. It was meant to be the first part of a story that ran for two records, hence the ‘Part One’ of the title, but was ultimately scrapped. A theme running throughout is the disillusionment and a shaking of fists to the music industry and those who sit at the top counting the money while the artists/bands do all the work. This is no better made clearer than in the album’s penultimate track, and I guess the third title track on there, in which Ray and Dave Davies on co-lead vocals sing about ‘Powerman’. Though this Powerman is set up as one character, I think it’s fair to say that it’s also an amalgamation of all the similar types of fat cat/cigar smoking boss-manager type people who were common to find in the record label office back in those days. Davies takes on the point of view of a person who works under ‘Powerman’, telling the listener how, after starting from nothing, the titular character obtained hunger for that sweet, sweet power, climbed that ladder and now laughs at everyone below him as he makes his way to the bank. People can make fun of him, but they’re irrelevant as far as he’s concerned. The narrator has his music and his girlfriend to keep him fulfilled and sane through the whole ordeal, but will always have the looming presence of Powerman behind their shoulder.

This is a great guitar song. The acoustic one that opens it up has this great presence about it, the electric guitar that joins it with that clonking introduction adds another spark. But it’s when then track builds up its pace not soon after and the rhythm section joins in that consistent head-bopping occurs for the rest of the entire track. Sometimes I’m not even singing along to the Davies brothers’ vocals and will just hum/”ner-ner-ner” my way along to the riffs that the guitars are doing through the verses and the choruses. Also, I think the bass guitar and those electric guitars are playing the same notes throughout almost the whole song. Hearing those elements in unison, I don’t know, they just make everything occurring seem so locked together and in-sync. Gives the track a bit of an overbearing presence, almost like a wall of some kind. And if you’re not trying to hear those guitars, then it’s always a plus to hear the Davies brothers harmonising as well as they do here. They might not have got along all that well, but when it came to the music they were always able to make up some magic.

#1056: Kanye West – POWER

Man, to be a fan of Kanye West in these times. I’m not a huge fan of the guy myself, not like those stan-like, crazy ones you can find out there. I don’t think I’ve enjoyed a full solo Kanye project since 2016’s The Life of Pablo. Everything since then has been met by me with a firm shrug of the shoulders. But the man’s made some good music, you have to admit. He said some things all those months ago that you can’t excuse. Heck, he might have even said another by the time this is out. I’m not looking to excuse them. I honestly couldn’t care that much about the guy. I mean he doesn’t know I exist, right? Not much point in investing too much time into what he’s doing. But ‘POWER’ is the song that I’m writing about today because it’s the track that’s next up in the list, so if you’re aggrieved by the mere mention of Ye’s name, might just wanna skip this post and wait for the next.

I have a small, small memory of seeing the ‘listen to the new single ‘Power’ by Kanye West’ webpage – I think on NME – when the track was released in the summer of 2010, a few months before My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy was released. Obviously, this was the first thing West had released since the whole Taylor Swift/VMAs controversy, which had also happened a few months before. And to the 15-year-old I was at the time, the main thing I took away from it was that I was glad that he was just rapping again. No matter how influential 808s & Heartbreak is considered to be, singing Kanye has never the era of his that I’ve ever looked on too fondly. On ‘POWER’, he was back doing what he does best, sounding like he had nothing left to lose with the amount of confidence in his delivery. I didn’t realize the magnitude of this track off that initial listen on the NME website, and it wasn’t until I heard it within the context of the full album that I did. When that moment came, it all sort of started to make sense.

Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, here was Kanye West returning with a huge middle finger to anyone who criticized him in the aftermath of the VMAs incident – using the hate as fuel to write a cinematic hip-hop song telling you why he’s actually one of the greatest to have ever lived. Like he says in the lyrics, it’s essentially a supervillain’s theme song. Barack Obama called him an jackass. He was mocked by the cast of Saturday Night Live. He was one of the most disliked people in the US. That title still hasn’t faded that much since that time. And yet with ‘POWER’, he bathes in the glory that he was able to make so many people react so negatively as they did, literally laughing it off before telling them how small-minded in comparison to the treasures within his vault of a mind. This track also introduced me to King Crimson’s ’21st Century Schizoid Man’, which I have to thank it for. Not saying that I would never have listened to that particular song. But I would have heard it much, much later had it not been used as the main sample in ‘POWER’. Only made sense to have one extraordinary track be utilized so effectively in another.

#1055: Duels – Potential Futures

This track is another instance of the music team at EA completely bossing their roles when choosing the songs to be used in their FIFA games in the 2000s. ‘Potential Futures’ by Duels was featured on the soundtrack for FIFA 06. It’s the one and only song I’ve ever listened to by this band. That’s something that probably isn’t likely to change. Don’t think my life’ll be heavily affected if I were to never hear any of the two albums the band have made in full. Then again, maybe I’m the fool to sell the band short like this. If anyone out there can tell me that Duels have made these fine records that I haven’t heard, I’ll welcome your thoughts and opinions with open arms.

Although I was regularly playing the FIFA game around the time of its release, I never fully appreciated the song until years later. In 2009, I asked for another copy of the game after my original from 2005 had some sort of glitch/error where the loading bar before the matches would just stop, which essentially defeated the whole purpose of having the item in the first place. My mum was confused as to why I wanted this old game. I could see where she was coming from. But I always felt I never got as much time with that FIFA edition before it glitched out, so it seemed right to me. I had my established favourites from that game having played it before. Some of them I’ve written about on here. And a few others that just never got a post. Due to this, I want to say I must have muted all of the other songs, including ‘Potential Futures’, to stop them from playing in the menu sections. Its stomping intro would usually crop up in those pre-match loading screens though. But when I did let the whole track play out from 2009 onwards, it was like I’d known the whole song my entire life. Only took maybe a few listens to start singing along to it.

The track narrates the tribulations of a Mr. Jimmy DeLancia, a fictional character who hates where he’s working and wants to hightail it out of the dead end town he’s currently living in. Why such a specific name was used is because the album that this track went on to appear (albeit in a newer re-recorded form which I think is inferior to the original single version) was supposed to be a concept album based around this man, a bit like Pretty Things’ S.F. Sorrow. The idea fell through though, and Jimmy only gets the brief mention here. I’ve come to think of the ‘Potential Futures’ phrase as some sort of company name, with its slogan/mission statement being sung by… I guess, the public who are buying into whatever this company’s selling. It’s the contrast between the disillusioned DeLancia verses and the happy, big singalong choruses that does it for me. Got those nice organs in the back during the latter that makes everything sound on this higher plane of existence. Some nice chord changes and movements that make each transition between song sections very fluid. A strong song in general.