Category Archives: Music

#846: Blur – Miss America

Like a lot of other songs in this very long series thing, it took a while for me to get into this track. When I first listened through Modern Life Is Rubbish, years ago now, I think I was 18, ‘Miss America’ stood out as the really slow and much longer track in an album where the pace was quite rapid and frantic. I thought it was boring. But a few years later, you can guess where this is going, I listened to the album yet again, and it all made sense. Coming after the heavy, two minute, shoegaze-ish ending of ‘Oily Water’, ‘Miss America’ brings a needed calmness to the proceedings.

A horrible touring experience in the US where the band were broke and the members basically starting hating each other spurred the whole music-for-the-British-people thing that Damon Albarn was all for during the 90s, and I think that ‘Miss America’ is pretty much about missing the UK while he was having the worst time across the pond. He sings about how he doesn’t understand ‘Miss America’ and loves only ‘you’, ‘you’ in this case being the United Kingdom. There are some other lyrics about jellybeans and ‘Jemima ho hos’ that don’t make much sense, but I think those are just in there to fit the music. Could also be a part of the huuuge Syd Barrett influence on this track too.

What I think really drew me in though, is the whole dreamlike atmosphere of the song. These reverb-drenched acoustic guitars take up the frame with these twinkling wind chimes (I think) throughout. There’s a proper haze about it. I’ve been in bed while listening to this and never wanted to get up, I feel so comfortable when this comes on. The track’s very loose, and I think it’s a live take too. There’s a short moment at the beginning where a drunk Graham Coxon yells out ‘Michael’, and Alex James and Albarn share a laugh about it before beginning the track. The only thing that I would point out about it is that Albarn’s vocal is very upfront in the mix… Kinda wish the instruments were louder so the vocals were more subtle. But, hey, the producers know what they’re doing.

#845: Green Day – Minority

‘Minority’ by Green Day. This is a track I’ve known and really liked for a long time now. Was one of the videos I watched on repeat on the band’s website when I was really into them in ’05. So much so that I remember my aunt making fun of the way Billie Joe Armstrong sang the track’s first line. But I liked it then, and still do today. It’s the penultimate track on Warning, but was released as the first single from it, and is one of those “fuck the Man, I’m doing me” type of songs.

I’m in that group who say Warning is an underrated album. It might not have the grandiosity of an American Idiot or a 21st Century Breakdown, but the simplicity of all its songs really highlight the band’s chemistry and Billie Joe’s melodic talents. And ‘Minority’ has one of the most memorable singalong moments on there. The whole track is like one long chorus, and I appreciate this. The one part of the track that I really like is the “Stepped out of the line” section, and that only appears once before changing back to the pre-chorus again. Kinda leaves me wanting more. But as it stands, the track’s still one of the best from the album.

I think it’s fair to say the band like it too. It’s a staple in their live performances. Sometimes the band stretch the track out for about eight to ten minutes to allow a lot of instrumental breaks, crowd banter and “hey-heys” and “hey-ohs” and “ay ay ays”. While those are all probably very nice when in the moment, I’ll take the studio recording any day.

#844: Talking Heads – Mind

The album sleeve will tell you that ‘I Zimbra’ is the first song on Talking Heads’ Fear of Music. But for me, the record doesn’t truly start until the following number. With ‘Mind’, the whole ‘concept’ of being frightened/obsessed with the thing listed in the song titles properly begins. Here, David Byrne wants to know what’s going on in the listener’s head. Or at least to whoever/whatever he was thinking about at the time of writing the lyric.

After the party-conga-like tone of ‘I Zimbra’, ‘Mind’ brings things back down to earth with a hefty crash of a cymbal and a great reduction in tempo. There are these pleasant keyboards that fade in and out of the mix, but the guitars and bass play these odd notes that keep things sounding unusual. Then Byrne comes in. If you weren’t intrigued by the band elements, then it’s Byrne’s voice that will gain your attention. He sounds resigned at the beginning. Like he’s been examining us for a while and has started singing the song to pass the time. With every iteration of the “I need something…” chorus, Byrne seems to become progressively unhinged in his delivery, culminated in a huge scream on the very last word of the song.

I think ‘Mind’ gives a great taste of things to come throughout the album. Moreso than ‘I Zimbra’ which amps you up more than anything. Crazy vocals, far out synthesizer work and production, awkward sounding notes here and there. Classic Talking Heads stuff.

#843: Kelis ft. André 3000 – Millionaire

You might hear this and think, “Wow, for a song that’s labelled Kelis ft. André 3000, there’s for sure a lot more of the latter on here than the former.” Well, ‘Millionaire’ was supposedly intended to be included on the ‘Love Below’ half of OutKast’s double album in 2003. So that would provide your answer. For some reason, that didn’t happen. As a result, it was included on Kelis’s Tasty album instead. Now, I thought this song was a worldwide hit. But it turns out that it wasn’t even released as a single in the US, so there’s a possibility that a lot of people don’t even know this track exists. This needs to change.

This song was out when I was a dumb nine-year-old. And like a dumb nine-year-old, I wasn’t listening to these song’s lyrics and what was really going on in them. I just knew that the beat was bangin’, André 3000 sounded as smooth as he did on ‘Hey Ya!’ and ‘Roses’ – which had been out as singles for only a year at the time of the release of ‘Millionaire’ – and Kelis sounded just as great too. She was doing her thing too with the success of ‘Milkshake’ and ‘Trick Me’ around this time. And yeah, the song sounded good. But it’s actually very sad. Basically does the same trick as ‘Hey Ya!’, detailing these sad events in the lyrics which you would hardly think about ’cause you want to dance so much. You can’t really dance to ‘Millionaire’ though, which is probably why the lyrics stick out a bit more.

It’s a big ol’ case of being lonely at the top. It’s all in there in the first line of Dré’s verse, to be honest, and the depression is piled on from there. He feels like a lowlife despite having all this money. He wakes up early in the morning, but still can’t find happiness in the sun’s rays. Kelis is losing her friends and feeling like she’s losing her direction in life. Being rich isn’t all it’s hyped to be. And all of this misery is backed by this stomping beat, soothing synthesizers, and that ringing alarm clock-like melody that plays throughout. It’s conflicting. I could listen to this one anytime though. It’s a big nostalgia wave, but one that still gets to me in the present time too.

#842: OK Go – A Million Ways

You didn’t know OK Go had another dancing video, did you? No, it’s always been the one with the treadmills that got all the attention. Well, here in the UK at least, ‘A Million Ways’ came before ‘Here It Goes Again’ by at least a year or something. Though the latter was the video that skyrocketed OK Go’s name in the business, and got them doing the treadmill act at the MTV VMAs in 2006, ‘A Million Ways’ was probably the track that really started it all.

This was the first track I ever heard/saw by OK Go. Didn’t know that they had something of a hit with ‘Get Over It’ in 2002. The video showed up on the Amp music channel. All I know was that there were these four men dancing this somewhat elaborate routine. To a ten-year-old me, I thought it was truly captivating stuff. I probably didn’t catch the music as much, but I certainly couldn’t forget the video. The band held a contest on YouTube allowing people to do the ‘Million Ways’ routine. If I had been older and had friends who were into the same music as me, I could have done it. I do remember doing the dance at primary school, just at playtime or whatever. People thought it was funny. It’s not that great doing it solo though.

For a while there in 2006, OK Go was one of my favourite bands. YouTube was now a thing and you could watch music videos on there, it was pretty revolutionary at the time. During that time, I found the video for ‘Invincible’, ‘Do What You Want’ was a single and appeared on the soundtrack for Burnout Revenge. All these songs I liked. ‘Here It Goes Again’ and its success capped off that good year for the band.