Tag Archives: fade

#1297: Radiohead – Street Spirit (Fade Out)

On Radiohead’s The Bends, there’s a theme about the fear of getting old that shows it’s face throughout the record. On ‘Bones’, Thom Yorke sings about not wanting to be “crippled and cracked”. On ‘Fake Plastic Trees’, he talks about gravity always winning in reference to aging women who went through plastic surgery in the 1980s. Thom Yorke would have been 25/26 when working on the lyrics for the songs that would make up The Bends. But even then, I think it’s fair to say he might have been going through some existential crisis of some kind at the time. I think as we all do when we get to that mid-20s period. And closing the album off is a song about a thing we all know is certain in life. Death. The track is ‘Street Spirit (Fade Out)’, one of the group’s most sombre numbers which also happens to be one of their most popular too.

When it comes to me, well, I think I first came to know about the song when its music video played on MTV2, or one of those alternative music video channels, back in the 2000s. In between 2003 – 2007, when the band were on a bit of a hiatus, a Radiohead music video showing up on those places was a regular occurrence. Probably because the band were known to have some of the coolest of those types of media. The video for ‘Street Spirit’, with the whole manipulation of time thing going on in its scenes, was cool to witness to the small kid I was at that time. Thought it was so cool, in fact, that I tried to find the video online, which in a pre-YouTube world was very hard to do. Can only imagine what it must have felt like seeing something like it in 1996, when the song was released as a single. The track may be one of the band’s darkest. But man, if it isn’t catchy in its own uniquely bleak way. When that opening, circular guitar riff gets going, it’s very hard to stop listening to everything else that follows.

In the first verse, Thom Yorke depicts an image of a helpless figure feeling closed in by the houses that surround them. The second sees him referring to a machine that can’t communicate “the thoughts and the strain [he’s under]”. This got me thinking, maybe he’s talking about his guitar. Maybe he was really going through some things at the time. Or maybe he’s taking a point of view of a general machine used by an employee somewhere. After which he suggests we unite and be people of the world before we all end up underground. And in the third verse, he brings up imagery of cracked eggs and dying birds screeching through their lasts breaths. I did mention this song was bleak, didn’t I? Despite all this, the music is extremely infectious. You’ve got the riff I talked about in the last paragraph, but then there are the “Ah-na-na” vocals during the instrumental breaks. And then there’s Yorke’s actual vocal take, which just soars over everything. He changed up the way he sang from OK Computer onwards, so to have that Pablo Honey/Bends era style finish on this track is a massive way to go out. All very morose, but a lot of people love it, including myself, to the point that, if given an opportunity, there will sing it even louder than Yorke at a live performance. Like in the one below.

#628: Queens of the Stone Age – In the Fade

I believe it’s agreed amongst many a Queens of the Stone Age fan that ‘In the Fade’ is arguably the best track on Rated R. It’s one that the band have never been able to replicate in terms of style, mood or execution since its release almost 20 years ago, and I think that stands as a testimony to its uniqueness. Mark Lanegan sings it, not the first time as he appears on the album as he backs in both ‘Leg of Lamb’ and ‘Auto Pilot’. Coming after Nick Oliveri’s screeching on the previous track, Lanegan’s deep and gravelly vocals are like butter to the ears.

It takes a while for the song to kick in. There’s a lone buzzing tone that fades into some keyboard chords and an echoing sound that I can’t describe. Lanegan sings the first few lines and after an open hi-hat and cymbal crash the track gives way to a fantastic groove led by Oliveri’s tremendous bassline. There’s a perfect mellow feel the music captures without it being too lazy, it’s a definite head-nodder/toe-tapper so it’s a definie bonus when the harder guitars join in for the more forceful choruses.

Think I read somewhere that it’s about suffering from a hangover? It may also just be about having to leave someone and knowing that it’s what’s best for the both of them. I’m not sure I’ve never cared for its meaning that much, I’m just one of those people. When it comes down to it really, it’s just a brilliant song. Great guitar tones, bass grooves and vocal harmonies/melodies are on full display. And there’s a little reprise of ‘Feel Good Hit of the Summer’ at the end.

My iPod #349: Franz Ferdinand – Fade Together

Nearing the end of Franz Ferdinand’s second album comes “Fade Together”, a forlorn piano-led track about the end of a relationship. You regularly get the ’emotional’ track near the end of any album, and this song is definitely one of those.

A single-tracked Alex Kapranos in the verses sighs into the microphone about plans to ‘get away’ with somebody which all seemed so real, until something of a flash-forward in time in the next verse reveals that those dreams are long gone. Now Kapranos only wishes to get over this person, no matter how hard it actually is to do so. In hope of ending this feeling he, along with himself as the haunting double-tracked vocal comes in for the chorus, calls out to all to ‘fade together/forever’.

A very good album track. One where the time signature is quite weird during the verses (goes from 3/4 to 5/4 and then switches back to 3/4), and includes great use of a piano, which has its own little solo for the last 30 seconds when the singing finishes and the bass and acoustic guitars disappear and you may also hear the sounds of bird tweeting throughout, adding to the track’s lonely atmosphere.

It’s all a bit of a downer. But at least the next track ends the album on more of a confident note.