Tag Archives: all killer no filler

#948: Sum 41 – Nothing on My Back

Here’s another fill of early-2000s pop-punk for ya. ‘Nothing on My Back’ is the first real track on Sum 41’s 2001 debut, All Killer No Filler. The combination of this track and the jokey faux-heavy metal speech ‘Introduction to Destruction’ delivered by drummer Steve Jocz properly introduced listeners to the band’s world. That is of course if they had gone blindly into it and somehow not heard ‘Fat Lip’ being played everywhere before the album’s release date.

And it kicks off with a riff in 7/4 time. I’ve always thought that was an interesting move. I didn’t get to listening to the album in full until about 2010, when I thought about downloading other LPs that weren’t in my own personal collection of CDs. Standard pop-punk it might be, but that opening riff at least differentiated a bit from other bands I knew like Blink-182 or Green Day. Can’t think off the top of my head of any of their songs which mess around with timing a bit.
The riff ends, going into this tom-tom heavy breakdown, before transitioning into the first verse in which the song’s theme is sort of established: Feeling low and sad when there’s nothing to really be sad about. It becomes a lot clearer in the choruses. With nothing on the narrator’s back, there’s still something out there that brings them down. I’ve always appreciated how the second verse took on a completely different melody from the first. Usually you’d just repeat the first verse melody, very sure that’s how it goes most of the time. Just another small thing that’s got my attention over time.

I think the big highlight of the whole track is the instrumental breakdown that occurs after the second chorus is over. Steve Jocz pounds on the tom-toms accompanied by Cone McCaslin’s bass, the guitars join in, forcing out these strident chords and ringing harmonics alongside every heavy thrash of the cymbals. And it’s not until Deryck Whibley starts singing again that you realise that the song’s key has changed entirely and gone up a few notches. It changes right when the breakdown begins, but it’s so subtle that it doesn’t come off as those typical cheesy key changes. With Whibley now singing the chorus with a more intense delivery, the whole musical aspect brings a thrilling conclusion to what’s been a fantastic opening to the album so far. Just when you think the guitars will fade out, they fade in again and abruptly end to give way to following track ‘Never Wake Up’ – a hyper sub-minute song that I’ve written about before. Judging by the album’s first three songs, its title wasn’t something to laugh off.

#907: Sum 41 – Never Wake Up

‘Never Wake Up’ is the third song on Sum 41’s All Killer No Filler album. Hard to come up with a thorough, deep post about it. Reasons being that it’s only 50 seconds long, and I don’t think that its lyrics that you see online are even correct. Well, except for the “I plan on never waking up” lines, that’s clearly what he’s singing there. Despite those things, the track always scratches an itch when it comes on on shuffle or something. There’ll be all these mid-tempo, complex songs playing and this one rolls in with pummeling force from the first second.

From the lyrics that are available online, I’m making a guess that the track is about trying to find the motivation to get out of bed in the morning and failing to do so. It’s a subject that’s touched upon later in the album, arguably in a more fleshed out form. But what this song has going for it is sheer energy and speed. It’s a track to just freak out and lose control to for a short moment before you have to adjust yourself back to reality. I like those guitar chord jumps that happen after each ‘never waking up’ repetition. They didn’t have to be included, but they add that extra kick to the proceedings. And although I don’t have a clue what Deryck Whibley is saying for the majority, it’s always a good effort to try and sing along anyways. The track may make up a small small part of the album’s runtime, but it’s definitely lives up to the killer aspect of its name.

My iPod #501: Sum 41 – Heart Attack

“Heart Attack” is the penultimate track on the album All Killer No Filler, Sum 41’s debut album from the Spring of 2001. The opening string plucks fade in as the ending of “All She’s Got” is in the process of fading out, but it isn’t long before the bass and some light strikes of the ride cymbal are brought to the forefront of the mix and essentially mark the start of the track.

The song is an ode to laziness and sleeping in; if there is nothing new to experience upon getting out of bed in the morning then what is the point of getting up at all? That is the point Deryck Whibley makes throughout, softly singing in the quiet verses before the gearing up and letting loose in the loud and defiant choruses, disregarding the importance of his alarm or any communication with the outside world.

Musically, it’s typical pop-punk stuff. Power chords everywhere. But it does play with the time signature at one point, and the track contains a notable performance on the bass by Jason ‘Cone’ McCaslin. Always hum along to it.

It really has nothing to do with a heart attack for first time listeners, that’s the joke. Somehow though the title still manages to fit.

My iPod #362: Sum 41 – Fat Lip

I wasn’t listening to Sum 41 in 2001. At six years of age, I wasn’t really into music as much as I was into children’s television. But this track always reminds me of the early 00s for some reason. Everything from the sound of it, and its music video. So many pop punk people started showing up in the charts too, it was weird.

“Fat Lip” is just one of those songs isn’t it? No one who listens to Sum 41 has probably heard the track at some point in their lives without even knowing it. If you were to randomly shout out “The doctor said my mum should have had an abortion”, someone will complete the ‘-ortion’ echo because they will know what you’re going on about.

The song’s anti-conformity/fuck rules message is something that’s used all the time, and is a topic that on first listen you might react with approval to but you’ll eventually get over in time. But the rap/rock thing it has going on is pretty catchy, I can’t deny that. Some of the lyrics are downright hilarious.

My iPod #218: Sum 41 – Crazy Amanda Bunkface

Quoted from songfacts: “Lead singer and guitarist Deryck Whibley wrote this about one of his old girlfriends.” From the title, you can already tell that this is not a track about the good times the couple had in that relationship.

No, it seems that “Bunkface” was asking too much of Deryck. Always going on about being together forever even when they’re only in their late teens, and generally talking about things that, although he appears to care, freak him out when they come into conversation. He tries to put on a smile, but wants out.So this song are basically all the thoughts going through his head while that’s going on.

Can’t say much about it, but I have it on the iPod so I must like it.