Tag Archives: the

My iPod #125: The Who – Boris the Spider

One time when I was bored on YouTube, I remembered this cartoon from the nineties that would show on the BBC. The cartoon followed the adventures of a clumsy spider, who played around with his human friend. I completely forgot what the animation was called, until I found the other day that it was simply called “Spider”.

During that time, I typed in ‘spider’ which instead resulted in videos involving real spiders and “Boris the Spider” by The Who. The video above was the one that I clicked onto.

This time, it’s not a song by Pete Townshend. No, no. “Boris the Spider” was the second song on the band’s second album “A Quick One” which is known for being the only album by the rock band to involve songs written by all four members. “Boris” was the first song John Entwistle wrote for the band, and took a tolling time of five minutes to write.

Seems about right. It’s a tale of a black, hairy and very small spider, who crawls up a wall then drops to the floor, heads toward the bedroom door, comes out again, crawls into a ball and is then squashed with a book by the person who sees all of this activity. The spider’s name is Boris too. And all of this is sung over a simple bass line and a haunting bridge where John puts on his falsetto.

This song is also known for being the first in music history to incoporate the ‘death growl’. Betcha didn’t know that, huh?

So that’s the song for today. That fake spider in the video is very similar to one that I saw on my living room floor the other day. I was so freaked out wandering what to kill it with that it disappeared under the sofa. That bastard hasn’t come out since. It’s only a matter of time.

Until tomorrow.

Jamie.

My iPod #112: Violent Femmes – Blister in the Sun

 

Violent Femmes are a band from Wisconsin that formed back in 1980. They’ve split up twice but have got back together this year.

I’m not a fan of them; this is the only song by the band that I have. Not because I’ve listened to their songs and thought that they were crap, but because I haven’t listened to anything else they’ve put out. Well, apart from “Gone Daddy Gone” (not a Gnarls Barkley song), and “Add It Up” (which I can barely remember). But even those are on the same album as “Blister”.

“Blister in the Sun” came on when I was on the LAUNCHcast internet radio in the mid-noughties. It immediately caught my attention when the catchy riff started, and it’s hard to forget it seeing as the riff melody is the same as the lead vocal too. The song was first released on the band’s debut album in 1983, but sounds like it could have been released in the sixties. I don’t know what it is, when I think of the eighties I think of long hair, Footloose, keyboards and drum machines. “Blister in the Sun” sounds like the complete opposite with it’s minimal instrumentation. It makes for good listening when you’re walking in a park, on a nice summer’s day.

Until tomorrow.

Jamie.

My iPod #97: Pezz (Billy Talent) – Bird in the Basement

“Bird in the Basement” is the title of this song by Billy Talent when they were in their Pezz phase, but the phrase doesn’t appear at all. It’s not sung by anyone, no one in the studio says it or anything. It’s the same for the rest of the songs on the album. Maybe it’s a phrase that only the members of the band are able to get. They probably won’t play any of “Watoosh!” any time soon though, so we’ll never know.

I mentioned how I came to own “Watoosh!” in my post for “Absorbed”, the last track of the album. However, I knew about the album since I was about ten years old. A Billy Talent fan uploaded the songs on their fan site but they were in terrible quality, and were eitther in wma or wav files. I just didn’t listen to this song until my sister bought the album for me in 2009. I think the link for it was broken.

As for the meaning of the song, it’s quite hard to say. I’m thinking it’s about a relationship where the couple feel that ‘everything is fake’ around them even though to other people, they are the problem. They are oblivious to the whole situation though, and look forward to sticking with one another when everything turns to crap.

This is my one hundredth post. Hooray! To anyone who reads this, thank you. You are the reason why I feel like I haven’t been wasting my time since February, when I started this thing.

Until tomorrow.

Jamie.

My iPod #96: They Might Be Giants – The Biggest One

A short and sharp one by They Might Be Giants.

This song was originally released on the “(She Was a) Hotel Detective EP” from 1988, but it was released again on the compilation “Miscellaneous T” – a collection of B-Sides recorded between 1986 and 1989 – released in 1991 after the band’s success with “Flood”. Now I assume that B-Sides are those songs that bands consider to be sub-par to material released on commercial albums, but “Miscellaneous T” is a mighty fine album and no one should underestimate the songs on it.

I first listened to the album in 2011 when I was revising for my GCSEs, and “The Biggest One” was a track that stood out, just because it’s the most ‘hard rock’ song as it gets on the album, with blaring horns and a stomping drum pattern.

“The Biggest One” is sung by John Flansburgh, and is another track where he puts real gusto behind his voice. It’s got a real throaty approach to it. It’s described as an “unlikely song of self-pity” in the liner notes of “Then: The Earlier Years“, maybe because the band weren’t into writing a song about the subject matter. It is about a person who blames everything that happens around him on his ‘fat self’. That’s all there is to it, really. There’s also a small Gloria Gaynor reference thrown in there to for a bit of humour.

Until tomorrow.

Jamie.

My iPod #91: Radiohead – The Bends


Something I didn’t mention in my last post is that I am currently in my cousin’s house for a barbecue. The charcoal is not warming up at all however, and it may be a long time before I get anything to eat. I have only eaten breakfast, and I am quite hungry so something better be put in my belly soon.

Now to the song. A live performance of “The Bends” by Radiohead played on vh2 when I was younger. I can’t remember if I liked the song at that moment, but the album (that takes its name from the song) contains some of Radiohead’s most popular songs, including “My Iron Lung”, “Just” and “Street Spirit (Fade Out)” and I liked those songs when I saw their music videos on the TV. For that reason I asked for “The Bends” for one of my previous birthdays – I can’t remember which one.

The song starts quietly with a thirteen second sample of a guy training some kids outside of a hotel where the band were staying. The song is also about ‘knowing who you real friends are’. My favourite part is the last section when the instruments seem to raise in volume, an great guitar solo occurs and Thom starts wailing ‘I wanna be part of the human race.’ It sounds so uplifting.

I’m edging nearer to my hundredth post. Quite weird. I never thought I could keep this up for so long.

Until tomorrow.

Jamie.