Tag Archives: sleep

#933: Enter Shikari – No Sleep Tonight

If I was writing this to you on the home computer rather than my personal laptop, I could tell you the exact date I downloaded Enter Shikari’s second album. I guess I was something of a follower; I owned a physical copy of Take to the Skies, and if the first single ‘Juggernauts’ was anything to go by, Common Dreads was going to be massive. And it was. At least to me anyway, I think a lot of critics weren’t feeling it at the time. I think it goes down as their best these days.

I have to admit, ‘No Sleep Tonight’ didn’t make that big an impression on me on that first listen through. It was probably a track I’d forgotten about until its music video started playing on MTV2. It was going to be the second single. Through repeated watches and listens, the track inevitably seeped into my consciousness. The video’s entertaining enough. A narcissistic businessman bumps into frontman Rou Reynolds as they pass each other on the street, and for revenge the band and a crowd of fans gather in his back garden and play a concert until the dead hours of the night. It certainly depicts a disdain for those types of people, a theme that runs throughout a lot of their music. But the track is properly about wondering how scientists accept money from companies to deny climate change and are still able to sleep at night. Enter Shikari also care about the environment, another major theme in a lot of their material.

Listening to this through headphones rather than the TV speakers particularly changed my feelings on the whole track. Obviously, there would be, I hear you murmur in your heads. But to the teenager I was then, I didn’t understand. It begins with a bit of rhythmic ambiguity. When the bass initially starts playing, you might be thrown off thinking that it’s come in at the completely wrong time. The drums start to kick in though, and things start to properly set off. What I really, really enjoy about this track though is the music during the chorus. There are no cymbal strikes during them, so it’s like this huge glossy wall of guitars and synths blaring at you while Reynolds belts out the refrain. You’ve got to love the sudden key change that occurs for the final choruses, cheesy as they may be, but you may notice that Reynolds subtly changes the melody of the refrain so he doesn’t reach a high note. Got to do what you’ve got to do to save your voice, but I sometimes wish he did.

#580: Ween – I Saw Gener Cryin’ in His Sleep

Not a very festive or momentous song for the coming new year, I know. But these things aren’t planned. I just do whatever song is next on my phone. And on this New Year’s Eve the track is ‘I Saw Gener Cryin’ in His Sleep’, the thirteenth track on Ween’s major-label debut Pure Guava.

For any Ween fan reading (quite unlikely) wondering where I would place Pure Guava in my favourite albums of the band, I’ll say to you that it probably isn’t in my top five of theirs. To me it just feels like The Pod Part 2, though with less songs and… a bigger sound to it maybe? There’s a larger emphasis on grooves and the drums on Guava, but The Pod in itself is just a lot more interesting and has a lot more variety – no matter how out there it is. I only have four songs from Guava on my phone and for some reason ‘I Saw Gener’, which I feel a lot of people would probably skip over after a while, popped out to me on that first album listen in 2015 or so.

I guess it’s because Ween are known for being this silly band who make a lot of silly stuff (even though their music is actually amazing and you should listen to anything of theirs as soon as you can) and this song details an instance where things aren’t as they seem. Dean Ween – real name Mickey Melchiondo, affectionately known as Deaner by Ween fans – sings about seeing bandmate Gene Ween crying in his sleep and offers some advice to help him through bad times. It’s all a bit heavy.

However, it’s shoddily recorded and set to upbeat, bouncy music which completely overshadows the downbeat lyricism. The drum machines skip out of time and some points, the drum machine cymbals thrash about wildly, there’s some piercing feedback after the first chorus. It’s a great listen. It makes it so funny, but it’s not supposed to be. It’s so conflicting. But that’s the beauty of many a Ween song.

That’s the end of 2017. Hard to believe I revived this back in August when I was stuck at home relentlessly searching for jobs online. Now I have one. I start next week. Hopefully this is the start of something special. Will see you in 2018. Many more songs to come.

#566: The La’s – I Can’t Sleep

The self-titled debut album by The La’s remains to be the band’s sole release almost thirty years later. Having been recorded over and over again for over two years with about four/five different producers due to songwriter Lee Mavers’ relentless perfectionism, the final product produced by Steve Lillywhite arrived in 1990 and was immediately disowned by the band members before they parted ways in 1992. It has gone down as a fine album in history, a staple of the jangle pop genre. Mavers has gone to label it as a “piece of shit”. Make of it what you will.

‘I Can’t Sleep’ is the album’s second song and, after the light acoustic starter of ‘Son of a Gun’, provides the album’s first kick in the balls with its raw feel and punchy rhythm. The track has a prominent stop-starting groove that emphasises its downbeat with powerful chord blasts and an occasional strike on the floor drum that comes like an explosion. And with Mavers signature raspy vocal, it makes out for a very rough and rowdy affair.

When it comes to what it’s about, I can’t say anything for sure. I used to think it was about going out to parties due to mentions of big black cars (limos?) and the inability to sleep due to said party. Though I did see an interpretation involving being sad and taking drugs to get away from those feelings. It may be so. Let’s just enjoy the music, eh.

*You may have noticed that I’ve taken away the ‘My iPod’ from post titles.  I think you know what these posts are about by now. If you don’t…. I’m not sure I can help you.

My iPod #438: Radiohead – Go to Sleep. (Little Man being Erased.)

“Go to Sleep.” was the second single to be released from the album Hail to the Thief, Radiohead’s sixth album released in 2003. The record marked a return to the guitar oriented music the band were known for, after taking a few years down the electronic/experimental route with “Kid A” and “Amnesiac“. Though it gets a bit of flack for not being as cohesive as other Radiohead albums, and because its almost-hour-length is a bit too much for some to handle. Thom Yorke had the same feeling; he posted an alternate tracklist showing what the album may have been had the band taken more time on it. Good to see that today’s track made it on there.

The song has many twists and turns to it. It starts off with an acoustic guitar driven riff playing at a 10/4 time signature that after being accompanied by Thom Yorke’s wailing vocals for a while is joined by Phil Selway’s drums and delicate electric guitar touches via Jonny Greenwood. The track then takes another turn when tom-tom drums dominate the mix as Yorke starts singing about the possibilities of the loonies and the monster taking over and Greenwood’s guitar becomes more distorted and frantic, eventually producing random noises and glitched out sounds as the song fades out.

It’s one of the songs from the album that I’ve known for the longest; I watched the video on the television way before I ever bought the album. It will always be a favourite track of mine from it.