Tag Archives: lonerism

#949: Tame Impala – Nothing That Has Happened So Far Has Been Anything We Could Control

Very well might be the song with the longest title that I’ve covered on here so far. ‘Nothing That Has Happened So Far Has Been Anything We Could Control’ is the penultimate track on Tame Impala’s 2012 album, Lonerism, a record whose mesh of psychedelia and hard rock with these spiralling synths and accessible melodies warmed a lot of people’s hearts upon its release and to this day. Kevin Parker embarked on going into a more pop-orientated direction, starting with 2015’s Currents and making itself more apparent on The Slow Rush, and sometimes there’ll be a comment or two that I see wishing that his music was more like the Lonerism days. It probably won’t happen. But I silently wish it too just a little. Though maybe he’ll surprise us all.

‘Nothing That Has Happened’ carries a theme that, thinking about it, would be further echoed in the first track of Tame Impala’s next record. Things that arise in life are at the most by chance, and really we have to just let these things happen (nudge-nudge, wink-wink). Tells you everything you need to know about the theme in the title to be honest. But when it comes to the music, it’s a swirling, twisting and turning six-minute experience. What I’ve always envisioned when hearing this song, is it being played live at a concert where people are high and having a good time. But for the narrator here it all gets a bit too much. He freaks out, leaves the room, gets calmed down by his girlfriend (spoken interlude here provided by Melody Prochet of Melody’s Echo Chamber) and goes back in chiller than before, but still having a bit of an existential crisis. And it’s just brilliant how this is all reflected in the production, like how the music goes quieter during the interlude, almost like its playing behind some doors before increasing in volume again. Or how the synthesizers upon the narrator’s ‘return’ to the room, get all hazy and pan all over the place in the ears. Simply a great passage of music to get lost in.

Think a shout-out should be made to Kevin Parker’s drumming throughout the whole song. I remember seeing a video where someone described his fills as the sound of a drumkit ‘falling down the stairs’, and I think that’s quite the accurate way to portray it. I think the same fill pattern is replayed over and over during the verses, but the way they fall from the snare to the toms and then are finished off with the cymbal crashes on each guitar strum is pretty wicked. Hard not to flail along and air-drum to them. Like other songs on Lonerism, the track has a rather long instrumental jam – one where the synthesizers are allowed to do their own thing, blipping in and out of the soundscape and doing some genuinely freaky stuff among the intensifying drums, before proceeding to undergo a solo that leads right back to the song’s introduction. So nice how circular the song is, and its probably the musical climax of the entire album before things slow down for its closer.

#688: Tame Impala – Keep on Lying

A five year wait for a new Tame Impala album ended last month when Kevin Parker gave the world The Slow Rush. I gave it a listen on Valentine’s Day (that’s the day it was released on). I’ve given it a few more since. And I have come to my conclusion that it just doesn’t hit the sweet spot for me. ‘It Might Be Time’ is probably my favourite song on there. As Parker moves towards his pop-oriented singer-songwriter , it felt like the whole album was missing a proper groove. There weren’t many interesting rhythms that were always so present on the preceding three albums.

The majority of the time, the bass guitar has been a major melodic element in Tame Impala songs. ‘The Less I Know the Better’ is a prime example where the instrument takes the centre stage. There are many others too. Some of which I’ve written about. ‘Keep on Lying’ is another in which the the rhythm section is just as, if not more interesting than the vocals and production that surrounds it.

Parker sings about being a terrible person who can’t stop lying to their other half, hiding important information and generally causing emotional distress. In the end, he’s left alone to face the truth that ‘it never really was love’. That is in the first minute and 45 seconds of the track. What follows for almost the duration is an instrumental passage led by a thick bassline, dueling guitar riffs, organ solos and keyboard vamps which are sometimes drowned out by sped-up and spun round clips of people having conversations. It gets crazier and crazier as the song goes on and on before a guitar suddenly starts freaking out at the four minute mark. And just when the track is about to close its first verse comes back in again, I guess to signify the repeating nature in which Parker will just continue to lie to the next lady he meets.

This song’s a jam. Not to say that Kevin Parker has to make another Lonerism. We already have one. It’s done. But, for me, if there weren moments that matched this music on The Slow Rush…. I would have enjoyed it more by a large margin.

My iPod #318: Tame Impala – Elephant

Didn’t know what Tame Impala was until a sample of “Elephant” appeared in adverts for a new Blackberry product. Why Blackberries are still being made is beyond me because I don’t know anyone who uses them anymore. But you can’t say that the people behind that advert have bad taste in music. Wouldn’t have listened to “Innerspeaker” or “Lonerism” because of them, so I probably have to say thanks to them.

For those of you who don’t know, Tame Impala is an Australian psychedelic rock project led by Kevin Parker. He plays almost every instrument on the two albums so far, and he also sounds a bit like John Lennon when singing. The whole thing sounds like if The Beatles and Pink Floyd got together and made babies, or something similar to what I saw in YouTube comments one time. Overall, he is a very talented guy. As are the other members who play with him on the live shows and stuff.

“Lonerism” is the album on which “Elephant” can be found. The majority of tracks on it contain a significant use of synthesizers, and then adding effects to make everything sound wavy and colourful. That isn’t the case for “Elephant” though. The track’s really groovy, carried along by its chugging, bluesy guitar line and shuffling drum beat. Yeah, there’s a bit of synthesizer and stuff in the middle section but that’s about it in this song. It does make it seem like the odd one out on the album, but if it wasn’t on there “Lonerism” wouldn’t be the same.