Tag Archives: my ipod

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 #425: Manic Street Preachers – The Girl Who Wanted to Be God

“The Girl Who Wanted to Be God” is a track from Manic Street Preachers’ album “Everything Must Go“, released in 1996. This album was their first after the disappearance of lyricist and rhythm guitarist Richey Edwards (which happened twenty years ago yesterday, if you didn’t know) though some tracks on it included lyrics that Edwards had left over – today’s track is one of them, though Nicky Wire did contribute lyrics too. I’ve personally never looked into the lyrics much though the title is also the name of a poem by the late Sylvia Plath, whose work Edwards was known to study. Take from that what you will.

Admittedly the part of the track that got me straight away were the sensational strings that give the track this elating feeling of freedom. After seconds of a choppy guitar and a meddling rhythm section that start the track off, the strings suddenly appear to play the chorus melody and I’m launched into the air and find myself soaring through the sky, faster than the speed of sound. And then James Dean Bradfield reinforces that feeling by belting out the title phrase which makes up the song’s chorus. The verses are good; they have a good melody to them. But that chorus…. some days it will pop in my head, and I can be repeating it for minutes on end.

If I were lucky enough to be a member of Manic Street Preachers in 1996, I would definitely have wanted this to be a single. Could you imagine thousands of people singing back that chorus to you at concerts? Man. Better than “Kevin Carter“, I think. Though however glorious the strings and wailing guitar may be, it still reminds me of music that should be in the background of a flight advert or the theme music to a soap opera. I really don’t know why, I just get that vibe from it.

My iPod #424: The Beatles – Girl

“Girl” is the ninth track on the album Rubber Soul, the second album The Beatles released in 1965 and their sixth album overall. Written primarily by John Lennon, the track concerns a relationship where the narrator is strung along by a cold-hearted lady who wears the trousers in their relationship, putting him down at any given opportunity. Though the narrator knows she is bad news he just can’t stay away, and carries on living through the torment.

This song is smooth and very calming to listen to despite the seemingly desperate subject matter. Acoustic guitars dominate the mix, or the left speaker if you’re listening to it in stereo. “Girl” also has a bit of a swing vibe about it too and makes use of the group’s spot-on vocal harmonies. The backing vocals even sing the word ‘tit’ repeatedly at various points, they’re very subtle but once you hear them you can’t forget.

I think the first time I ever heard the track was when I watched its ‘dreamscape’ (the video above) from the Rock Band game on YouTube. We all need to thank Harmonix for the work they put into that, even if they didn’t release all the albums as DLC.

My iPod #423: John Lennon – Gimme Some Truth

“Gimme Some Truth” is a snarly, protest track by John Lennon from his second album Imagine. A criticism of Richard “Tricky Dicky” Nixon and general politics around the early 70s, Lennon produces one of his roughest vocal performances yet for a vitriolic work with a powerful message that still holds its weight in today’s society.

Honestly, it’s not my absolute go-to track from the album. Though I hold it in high regard for it being of the only rockers on the album; John is mad and puts all of his negative energy into the music and the lyrics. Never again could the phrase “schizophrenic, egocentric, paranoiac, prima-donnas” be used in a song. Apart from that, there are the subtle parts of “Truth” that make it that much better to listen to: George Harrison’s fierce slide guitar solo, the sudden falsetto ‘wooooooo’ John lets out after the first chorus, the emphatic ‘aah’ before the last verse, the rising intensity in his voice during the fadeout, all of which are set to a stomping and commanding drum beat. Just a few things to look out for.

My iPod #422: Super Furry Animals – The Gift That Keeps Giving

“The Gift That Keeps Giving” is a song by Welsh band Super Furry Animals “conceived as a Christmas single” and eventually released as one on Christmas Day in 2007. It was also the final single to be released from their then most recent album Hey Venus!, their eighth overall.

Although all this time has passed, I have never got round to listening to the album. But “Gift” remains as my constant reminder of why I should one day, never mind the fact that the band’s whole discography is one of the most consistent by any group. I remember its music video being repeated again and again during the festive period on MTV2… it doesn’t quite match up to the tracks joyous message. But it still did its job of getting inside my head because of how warm and homely it sounded.

A track of a steady tempo with beautiful vocal harmonies and rich instrumentation, “The Gift That Keeps Giving” maintains a comfortable groove and infectious melody resulting in one of the band’s most mellow and yet enjoyable pieces of work.