Tag Archives: girls

My iPod #428: Maxïmo Park – Girls Who Play Guitars

“Girls Who Play Guitars” is the opening song on “Our Earthly Pleasures“, Maxïmo Park’s second album, released in 2007. Despite its title, the track does not specifically mention female guitarists at any point. It is actually about a relationship of a man and a lady who are very good friends; the former wants something more, but the latter prefers to go out, get drunk and the ‘friends with benefits’ business.

I’ve always enjoyed this song. Like many of the songs I’ve written about before (and the many that are to come) it’s one of those where its music video was played continuously on MTV2 that I could never really forget the melody. But just like all the other Maxïmo Park singles, this didn’t let me down either. Overall it is a very exciting track to listen to.

My iPod #427: Good Charlotte – Girls & Boys

I tell you now, there won’t be another Good Charlotte song in this whole “My iPod” thing. Never really liked them. They got big over in the UK in about 2002 and I knew their stuff then, but I didn’t care about them. Fast forward four years later when I’m starting secondary school and I make a friend who really likes their music, I try to listen to their stuff again. That’s when they released “Keep Your Hands off My Girl”. “No” I thought to myself. No speak/rap please. Whatever I ‘felt’ about Good Charlotte was gone. It is alright thinking about it now, but I can’t take it seriously.

“Girls & Boys” is the only song by them that I actually really enjoy. The song’s lyrics, to crudely put it, state that girls and boys are just as stupid as each other when it comes to the money and being materialistic or whatever. But the music isn’t half bad either. And although like the other singles the chorus has words in which a syllable is elongated and makes up about a third of it in the process (LIFESTYYYYYYYLES OFTHERICHANDTHE FAY-MOOUUS“) (“YOOOUU, DON’TWANNABEJUSTLIKEYOOU“), it steers away from being too grating and whiny. “Girls & Boys” has great melodies from the vocals to the guitars, particularly during the instrumental break.

Is this a guilty pleasure? Maybe. Actually, no! This song is great, I don’t care. Good Charlotte on the other hand not so much.

My iPod #426: The Who – Girl’s Eyes

“Girl’s Eyes” is a song recorded during the making of The Who’s third album The Who Sell Out, which went on to be released in 1967. The song did not make it onto the original album’s tracklist. Though it did appear in the extended tracklisting when the album was remastered and remixed years later in 1995. The track is one of the very few Who songs to be written by the ever-eccentric Keith Moon. He couldn’t sing very well, but you’re still able to hear him take lead vocals in the right channel with bassist John Entwistle singing along with him in the left.

After a false start in which someone blows over the top of an open bottle and Moon hurriedly says “Hello” to the listener (maybe to test the microphone or something), the track eventually gets going and is driven by a delightful piano and acoustic guitars, but Moon and Entwistle do their business on their respective instruments too. The track concerns a fangirl who Moon sees at every show the band perform at, but he clearly doesn’t care about her as much as she about them. He wonders if he could have the audacity of hurting this girl if they were ever to meet, though whether this actually happens is not revealed as the lyrics pretty much end there. I also think that Moon couldn’t think of a true ending to the song’s music, as the band improvise an ending where each member eventually gives up playing after a few reiterations of the song’s chord progression.

This song’s a-okay. Moon was always meant for the drums, of course, but this track shows that he could actually write a good tune as well too.

My iPod #226: The Fratellis – Cuntry Boys & City Girls

And that’s not me being vulgar. That is the title of the track.

You’ve gotta love a bit of wordplay. The boys are from the country, but are also obsessed about the the female sex organ, you see.

What it’s all about is basically all in the title name. Girls from the city goes to the country, boys see them and are attracted, girls find themselves ‘strangely’ attracted to them…. good times occur.

I honestly can’t sing along to this because the lyrics aren’t embedded in my head, even though I’ve had “Costello Music” for yeeeears so I have to come to the conclusion that I put it on my iPod because it sounded really good.

Americans probably don’t know the song because it was removed from the US version of the album, probably to censor the rude word within the song title, so here it is! After seven years of it being released I am very sure that you’ve heard it anyway.