Monthly Archives: August 2023

#1082: Cloud Nothings – Quieter Today

Well, I guess from this day onward, things will be a bit quieter around here. It’s the last song of the P (and Q) section. It’s the last Cloud Nothings song that will feature on this whole thing too. They had a good run. The first one I wrote for the band came in 2014 with ‘Fall In’. Had I known the band earlier, ‘Cut You’ would have got its own post too. Bit of a shame though because since they released Here and Nowhere Else all those years ago, there haven’t made another record that hit me the same way as it and Attack on Memory did and still do to this day. I did think they would go on to take the rest of the 2010s by storm. Wasn’t meant to be it seems.

‘Quieter Today’ is the second song on Here and Nowhere Else and keeps things rolling on very swiftly after the album’s mood is somewhat established by its opener, ‘Now Hear In’. Guitarist and vocalist Dylan Baldi described it as ‘almost like a pop song’, and I see where he’s coming from. In terms of the structure, you’ve got the standard procedure of verse, pre-chorus, chorus (x2), bridge and outro. So, in that way, it’s easy to follow like a pop song. Though where it differs greatly is that obviously it’s in a noise-rock context where the drums are thrashing, moving almost ahead of where each beat is supposed to go, and where the guitars are playing chords and hooks at a frenetic pace. My favourite moments aren’t even brought on by the performance here. They arrive in those short pauses that occur in between the pre-choruses and the choruses themselves. All the tension built in the former is released in the latter with this great release; it’s so cathartic every time.

Gotta say I have no idea what the lyrics truly are. Genius appears to have what would be the closest-sounding to what can be heard, but I’m still skeptical about them anyway. Though Baldi also stated that the song is about being comfortable in just observing and keeping quiet when around people who talk just for the sake of talking. This is a sentiment that I am on board with all the way. If I didn’t already like the song, that just added a few bonus points in my eyes. Not that I don’t want people to talk all the time. It’s just fine to have those moments of silence where no one feels like they have to fill it with something to avoid things being “awkward” or whatever. Hats off to Cloud Nothings for this song and addressing this topic.

Annnd that is it for now. My goodness, that was a lot of songs. For a bonus, I’ll throw in ‘QYURRYUS’ by The Voidz. It won’t get a post, but I just want people to know that it’s a bop. It’ll feature on the Spotify playlist too. The series will come back, and I’ll be tackling the R’s. See you then.

#1081: System of a Down – Question!

Remember when System of a Down released those new songs a few years back? That was definitely an occasion. It was cool to hear some new stuff after so many years of not releasing anything. It definitely sounded like they were starting right from where they left off. Unfortunately though, both Mezmerize and Hypnotize are my least favourite albums by the group. I do prefer the former than the latter by a small margin. I’m a big fan of the usual back and forth and harminozing dynamic between Serj Tankian and Daron Malakian, a usual feature on SOAD albums. But there was a larger presence of Malakian that I’ve never been to fond of. When it was revealed that Tankian actually wanted to leave the band prior to the album sessions and sort of went through the motions for the recordings, that presence made much more sense. So I do have to hand it to Malakian for holding the reins to get the albums done. Still, just not for me so much.

Over the two albums, there’s only one that’s solely credited to Tankian in terms of the music and lyrics, and that is today’s subject, ‘Question!’. While everyone else trips over ‘B.Y.O.B.’ as the overriding highlight of Mezmerize, I’m listening to ‘Question!’ with as much attention and focus as I did when I first saw the music video back in 2005. The song’s a very dramatic affair, concerning (I think) a narrator who’s about to commit a double-suicide by eating poison berries with their significant other and questions (want to say this is the basis for the song’s title) what will happen after they consume them. Will they actually die? Cease to exist? Or will their spirits live on in another form? As I said, quite dramatic. And that feeling is only intensified by the impassioned wailing harmonies of Tankian and Malakian during the choruses. Like it alludes to in the music video, there’s almost an operatic/theatrical tone to how they’re belting out these notes.

Not only are the vocals something to marvel at. The track is propelled by changing time signatures and shifting moods. You never know what’s coming around the corner. Starting as the album’s previous song is still fading out, the track comes in with a soft acoustic guitar playing in 9/16. The 5/8 main hard rock riff smacks you in the face once that’s over. Then the choruses come in with a waltz-time. There’s a lot of switching between those sections that happens throughout. How Tankian managed to get a beautiful melody into all of this is beyond me. Some would maybe be so focused on the musicality that any sort of melody you’d want to at least hum to would surpass them. But that’s not how it happens in System of a Down. I think I said in the last System of a Down post that sometimes their unusual delivery can be quite overbearing and a little tiring. Something along those lines. You’d think ‘Question!’ would be a prime example. But I never get tired of it. It’s real good stuff.

#1080: David Bowie – Queen Bitch

Aha! Surprise “Q” attack. That’s right, I’m going right into the Q section of the list. Why? Just because there’s only three songs that I have to write about, so it made sense to just get them over and done with before really thinking about how to approach the R’s. Will take a break for that though, I’m sure you understand. So let’s get this short selection underway. David Bowie’s ‘Queen Bitch’ kicks things off, the penultimate track from his 1971 album Hunky Dory and a proper rocker too. Mostly made of three chords apart from the change-ups for the campy choruses. It’s usually a good time guaranteed when this comes on.

Similarly to my experience with fellow album track ‘Oh! You Pretty Things’, I don’t think I really paid attention to ‘Queen Bitch’ until after Bowie died and I watched a performance of he and his Spiders from Mars (or did they go by a different name before the whole Ziggy Stardust thing) playing the track on the Old Grey Whistle Test show from the ’70s on YouTube. I may as well go ahead and embed that at the bottom. Bowie oozes coolness with the blue 12-string acoustic guitar, not much singing as he is talking in rhythm during the verses, Mick Ronson’s killing it on the golden Les Paul on the right and then they come together to share the microphone and harmonise for the choruses. It’s a boss “live” take. Live in quotations because I’m sure the only thing that’s live about it are the vocals and nothing else.

The song is a full-on tribute to the Velvet Underground, and in particular the band’s frontman Lou Reed. Everything from the smooth talking vocals to predominant use of three main chords to the lyrical subject matter, all taken out of Reed’s guide to songwriting. Take a song like Underground’s ‘Rock and Roll’ and you have the template for ‘Queen Bitch’ right there. Very sure Reed appreciated the gesture as he and Bowie would become kinda tight, and the latter would end up producing Reed’s Transformer album in 1972. They also sang the track together for Reed’s big 50th birthday party concert in New York City in 1997. I mean, I may as well embed that too. These are two legends with the crowd in the palms of their hands.