Tag Archives: high

#1283: They Might Be Giants – The Statue Got Me High

I could probably say that ‘The Statue Got Me High’ goes down as one of my favourite songs by They Might Be Giants. There was a short, very brief time when I didn’t get it that much. And that was when I was about 10 and watching the music video for the first time, on the Internet, on Yahoo’s old music service website. I don’t know what it was, there’s a lot of stuff happening in the music video and the song itself is quite busy in its structure and momentum too. I think it was all too much my little, tiny head to take in. But fast forward about five years to late 2010 when I was downloading the band’s albums and got to Apollo 18, ‘Statue’ started playing and I was into it almost immediately. I think it was the first time I’d heard the track since the attempt those years prior, but it felt like it should have been a certified favourite for all of that time.

Another TMBG track mainly written by John Linnell, ‘Statue’ is about a man who stares at a monument until his head explodes. And that’s pretty much the gist of it. There’s something about the wording of the song title that seems kinda clumsy about it. A sentence like “it got me” isn’t one you hear in everyday situations. But how Linnell sings it is where it becomes very convincing as a phrase. It’s like he’s shouting it from the highest rooftop and wants everyone to know about the situation he’s in. Or the narrator, whatever. It’s a song where I very much enjoy Linnell’s vocal performance. It’s one where he’s belting out the notes from his chest one moment and then singing in a standard baritone, sort of mirror the intensity/moments of relaxation in the music, all while maintaining these glorious melodies and recording these harmonies and backing vocals that add these layers of substance. As much as I like all the instruments behind them all, I think this song’s massive strength is in that vocal work. All so jubilant and earwormy, in general.

I want to say that I read somewhere that Linnell had a daydream depicting this scene and was inspired enough to write a song about it. Though, I may be making that up. I guess that’s how most songwriters fulfill their craft. They make up scenarios and write songs about them. But sometimes I think about how John Linnell can write songs like ‘Four of Two’ or ‘My Man’. And it’s like, yeah, maybe he just has daydreams about a person strangling themselves to death while looking at a clock, or another person suffering from spinal paralysis, and has an urge to write about them. Even the song ‘Unrelated Thing’ is about a woman daydreaming in the middle of a tremendously boring date. They’re not your typical song topics, but that’s what sets the Giants apart from nearly everyone else. And a large majority songs usually turn out good too. I just don’t know how they do it.

My iPod #526: Freddie Gibbs & Madlib ft. Danny Brown – High

Piñata, the collaborative album by rapper Freddie Gibbs and music producer Madlib, was released in March last year. All you want from a hip hop album are clever, detailed and meaningful lyrics delivered via a charasmatic voice and beats, good sounds and clear production to give those lyrics a rhythm to flow with. Piñata did not fail in providing those. It was one of my favourite hip hop albums of 2014. Gibbs’ lyricism essentially about his and the gangsta life matched with Madlibs’ soulful samples make up an hour’s worth of captivating music. Very good, check it out.

“High” is the fifth track on there and, if you didn’t assume already, is about getting high off cannabis. Gibbs tells us that the activity is one of his favourites; while his brother and sister were finishing college, he would be smoking the stuff in his house and now that he’s famous everyone wants to smoke with him when they didn’t give a damn about him before. Sex with groupies at shows can’t even be done without a bit of it either. Whatever the occasion, Gibbs gets high. Gibbs had featured on Danny Brown’s album Old released a few months earlier and here Brown returns the favour, though you can tell that he was in a completely different studio while recording his verse.

The instrumental bangs too. Madlib did well.