My favorite songs:
- Licky Licky
- Kiss Me Red
- Lover On The Line
- Enchanment
- Banana Bay
- Happy King
Tune in next time for more about a few of the songs on an individual basis!
Hello! If this is your first time to this blog, welcome! And if you are returning, welcome back! The goal of this blog is to provide a perspective from three different college students, each focusing in a certain area.
My favorite songs:
Tune in next time for more about a few of the songs on an individual basis!
It's late at night here in Gogginland, and the perfect time for the soothing and altogether mind-deepening music video of “Sexy Boy” by one of my favorite artists, Air. The two members of this French band are Nicolas Godin and Jean-Benoît Dunckel. Their music is pretty much all a smooth blend of resonating electronica, tranquil melodies, and light rock that reminds one perhaps of the seventies. I have never heard any other band quite like Air, a band whose music carries a steady flow and has a feeling both otherworldly and intimate that makes one think of how things will be two million years into the future. They also created the soundtrack for the movie “The Virgin Suicides”, which I have never seen.
My favorite songs by Air:
Now about the music video. The song itself has that fascinating baseline that acquires a captivating overlay of rough resonance between light and dark metal, and the powerfully repeated and eponymous line of “sexy boy”. It is the kind of song you might listen to while falling asleep in order to be taken to a place far out in deep, deep space, where the place you came from looks no different than all the places around you, and so you contently continue your amazing journey to another world far away while thousands of years go by. The music video obviously has a different take on the song, of course based on the words that are mostly in French and so have no impact on my interpretation because I don't know what they mean. But Sexy Boy goes to the moon, so clearly the outer space feeling is strong. The use of drawings and basic animation instead of live action represent the peacefulness and simplicity of the song very well. Although a music video that centers around a stuffed monkey wearing a shirt that says “sexy boy” on it has an inherent humor about it, the video and music together have a strange kind of rare beauty.
Back in the summer of 2005, the Foo Fighters released their fifth studio album In Your Honor. Dave Grohl pronounced that the album is the “ultimate” Foo Fighter’s album. The album came as a double disc album, with the first disc being hard rocking songs, and the second album featuring soft, acoustic driven songs. Guests on the second album included John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin, Norah Jones, and Josh Homme of Queens of the Stone Age. In Your Honor is one of the Foo Fighters’ most successful and highly publicized album to date.
While many critics gave the album rave reviews, I was not one of them. The rock album drew thin, with the only enjoyable songs on the album being the singles “Best of You”, “DOA”, and “No Way Back”, with the rest being completely unbearable. Despite all of the guest appearances on the acoustic disc, as a whole it was a complete mess. To date, I believe that I have given the entire acoustic album a complete listen-through only once.
Ever since the beginning of the summer, when I first heard news that the Foo Fighters were releasing another album, I couldn’t wait for it to arrive, mostly because of my disappointment in the last album. When I discovered that Gil Norton (who produced their second album The Colour and the Shape, which was re-mastered and re-released this year as the 10th anniversary of the original release of the album) was producing the album, I was certain the it would be a success. On September 25th, the Foo Fighters released their sixth studio album, Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace.
The album starts off with a bang with the first single from the album, “The Pretender”. The track is a hard rocking return to the early days of the Foo Fighters. The chorus is very catchy:
What if I say I’m not like the others?
What if I say I’m not just another one of your plays?
You’re the Pretender
What if I say I’ll never surrender?
So who are you?
The first single also includes a very cool music video, with a SWAT team attempting to attack the band:
While the album starts off very strong with “The Pretender”, if unfortunately fades from there. It seems that Dave Grohl and Co. could not steer away from the half acoustic/half rock idea that was used on In Your Honor. Instead of having separate acoustic and rock songs, there are multiple tracks where both of these ideas are meshed together. The tracks “Let it Die”, “Erase/Replace”, “Come Alive, and “But, Honestly” all have a similar recipe; they all end with hard rocking guitars, and include a soft acoustic intro or bridge. While “Erase/Replace” uses the recipe with the most success, the for mentioned tracks become awfully repetitive and boring. There are some enjoyable filler songs on the album, including the acoustic track “Stranger Things Have Happened”. The more enjoyable tracks are ones that most listeners will casually listen through. “Long Road to Ruin” and “Summer’s End” are both upbeat, 90’s rock songs that the Foo Fighters are known for.
The end of the album includes some interesting experimentation. “The Ballad of Beaconsfield Miners” is a sort-of tribute to a man Dave Grohl met before he was involved in the Beaconsfield mine collapse in Tasmania, Australia. The instrumental track guests Kaki King, and is mostly acoustic guitar picking. Another experimental tune is last one of the album, “Home”. The ballad includes only Dave Grohl singing and softly playing the piano. The track includes a tie-in to the album title:
Echoes and silence, patience and grace
And all of these moments
I’ll never replace
While both of these are an interesting change from the Foo Fighters norm, they both come as awkward and out of place on the album. These would both have a better effect if they were included in some sort of B-side or bonus disc. Personally, I would of much rather seen some more upbeat rock songs at the end of the album, instead of these two head scratchers.
Before I bought Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace, I hoped for a follow up album that was better than In Your Honor. Overall, the Foo Fighters put together a decent album. The album had a better structure than their previous album. Unfortunately, the album left me wanting more, for it did not meet my high expectations.
Key Tracks:
Some of my favorite songs:
“Dancing All Alone (Kimono Mix)” is both my favorite SMiLE.dk song and one of my favortie songs of all time. The original “Dancing All Alone” was basically the same song except that for the kimono mix they replaced the words “singing dum-dee-doh” with “in my kimono” which makes the song fifty times better. I don't know why they didn't just do it that way to begin with. My friend thought a kimono was a small wooden house, so I will tell you that a kimono is basically a traditional Japanese dress for women. Anyway, some of the things that make this track great are the beat and baseline that give the song its energetic feel, and the chorus that is easy to pick up and is strangely fun to sing. The song obviously has a sad connotation, but its melody has a kind of content beauty. I also like the instrumental side of “Dancing All Alone (Kimono Mix)”. It's quite a green song, with a dark greenish-black base, shiny green-gray plucky instrument things, and a light green string counter-melody to the chorus. My favorite color is green as well, so it's no surprise that I like this song.
You can listen to “Dancing All Alone (Kimono Mix)” here.
You must remove the downloaded file from your computer within 24 hours. It is only a sample of a track which you can purchase on a CD. The author of this site cannot be held responsible for the misuse or copyright violation of this song as enforced by any given country's laws.