Category: epic

VNV Nation – Testament (Judgement, 2007)

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Alright, you’re in for a treat. VNV’s latest album boasts the ruthless lyrical social critique and driving instrumentation that I love them for. This whole song is more or less a rant about how much we’re fucking things up:

Procrastinating, pretending to worry
Solving problems by pushing them aside
Wasting time like we’ve all the time in the world

Deliberation instead of solution
Another term for blatant lies
Biding time like we’ve all the time in the world

What a way to start things off! You kind of suspect you’re in for a treat as soon as the song starts – the quiet little pad at the beginning, then the synth that bubbles up into a relentless percussion + crunchy synth line combo that easily carries you through the rest of the song, and doesn’t distract at all from the bold lyrics:

We conquer paradise just to burn it to the ground
And we build a future to honour pasts we left behind
We bring destruction, we bring war without an end
And then we live in hope that tomorrow never comes

Everything there is totally right, and something that everyone should think about – we’re making a total mess of a lot of things right now, and we always have. We become stronger then anything else on the planet, able to weather nearly any disaster, and what do we do with that power?

And if you think we’re the future, that we build tomorrow
When was the last day without war?
We speak of greatness we have never been

When was the last day without a war? The delivery there is a little spine-tingling, the slight quaver in his voice as he asks the question – and think about it, when was the last day without a war? Can you remember? We’ve been in the middle east for 6 years or so now, and that’s just the ‘current’ conflict – we were there, and all over before, and if it wasn’t us it was someone else. Humans like to mess things up.

Finally, towards 4:00, things drop off, and we get a weird little reflective section…

It’s just you and me now
It’s just you and me against the world

Sort of an odd way to end things, I think, enough of a departure from the previous feel that it feels off when that sound returns at 5:18. I kind of want that part cut off – so that the song barrels along, heaping scorn on humanity, and then just stops abruptly. Maybe I should try that and see what it looks like – that’s essentially what happens already at the end, but with that middle part cut out it might be better… although I will say that the departure does lend itself well to leading into a few other songs I can think of if one were so mixtape/mashup inclined.

This album, Judgement, is great, as is a compilation called Burning Empires - if you like this song, grab the others and give ‘em a listen, you’re sure to be satisfied.

The New Pornographers – All The Things That Go To Make Heaven And Earth (Challengers, 2007)

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This songs starts out fast and never slows down – the driving percussion, heavy with sizzle and loose handclaps, couples with the piano and occasional flute lines to make it almost impossible to stop bobbing your head to the beat.

And that’s just the first part – after a couple of verses, the flute falls downards at 1:08, and some toms kick in for the chorus:

All of the things that go to make heaven and earth are here.
All of the things that go to make heaven and earth.
Put your new weight in gold and see what its worth.
All of the things that go to make heaven and earth are here.
All of the things that go to make heaven and this.
Success was survival and, kid, it still is.

The play between the female and male vocalists makes this part incredibly catchy, and dramatic – the words ‘heaven and earth’, and ‘success was survival’ contribute too.

Also, it’s got a great line in the last verse:

Crashing into horizons, on the brink of…success! Hurrah!
Success which was survival gone too far.

Just in that line, you get a deffinte feel for a story – all they were trying to do is survive, and they somehow ended up with success, not just in survival, but in life.

My all-time favorite album by The New Pornographers is “Twin Cinema” (2005), but “Challengers” (2007), featuring this song, is a close second.

Covenant – Bullet (Northorn Light, 2002)

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This one is all about what happens at 1:34 – you think you’re done with the chorus, there’s the little bass break, and then it throws you into the bridge:

as the water grinds the stone
we rise and fall
as our ashes turn to dust
we shine like stars

“As the water grinds the stone, we rise and fall” is a fantastic line. There are some other good ones in here – “kisses on the dancefloor” and “we are the only ones who are dying”. It’s interesting too, the song seems to be split between two ideas: entropy, the inevitable passage of time and the weathering effect it has on existence; and a sort of stoic optimism in the face of that reality:

drowning in the flood of morning light
I’m only human just like you
do you hear the city waking up
I will survive and so will you

As usualy, Covenant’s synths feel like they’re rolling along, carrying the song and you with them, and the drums are precise, breaking things up into bite-sized peices. The piano line is a much appreciated accent to the afore-mentioned “water grinds the stone” section.

MGMT – Electric Feel (Oracular Spectacular, 2007)

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The haunting upper synth line at the beginning of this track is what it’s all about – and it’s woven amongst the no-nonsense drums and bassline, a declarative establishing first few bars, easily sliding into the first verse:

All along the western front
People line up to receive
She got the power in her hand
To shock you like you won’t believe

It’s epic sounding, and has enough funk/disco to make you think of disco balls, fog machines, flashing floor tiles, and brooding bass players. The apex of the song at 3:15, “Do what you feel now, electric feel now!” is almost a relief, as if you’ve been waiting all that time for a storm, and the rain has finally broken – just in time for the song to fade out.

The lyrics are about a girl, obviously, one so good that she’s like electricity. It’s not ground-breaking, but the words fit perfectly:

All along the eastern shore
Put your circuits in the sea
This is what the world is for
Making electricity
You can feel it in your mind
Oh, you can do it all the time
Plug it in and change the world
You are my electric girl

The mention of the western front and the eastern short, the ocean, the amazon, all of it makes the song seem somehow bigger and more encompassing, as if everyone were dancing in a blissfull trance, turned on by the electric feel.

edit: I just realized that the distinctive open synthline and chorus are in 6/8 time, while the verses and rest of the song are 4/4. Crazy! It’s the percussion in the intro that tipped me off – the stereotypical drum pattern would be ‘kick – snare – kick – snare’ in a 4/4 measure, but instead we get ‘kick – snare – kick kick – snare snare’, which fits perfectly into 6/8. I wonder if that’s part of the appeal?

Covenant – Call the Ships to Port (Northern Lights, 2002)

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(the first 14 seconds or so are quiet, so be patient – or turn it up!)

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a billion words ago
the sailors disappeared
a story for the children
to rock them back to sleep

tonight we light the fires
we call our ships to port
tonight we walk on water
and tomorrow we’ll be gone 

a billion words ago
they sang a song of leaving
an echo from the chorus
will call them back again

It’s nearly midnight, and the wind is bitterly cold – yet the entire population of a small arctic fishing village stands in a line along the shore, facing outwards into the frigid bay. Wrapped in animal skins and furs, the children watch intently as an old woman stands before the congregation, raising her mittens, her breath puffing out in tiny clouds lost amongst the sparse snowfall.

She tells the story that they’ve all heard on the same night every year – none alive remember, but all imagine the sailors guiding their proud ships out of the harbor and outwards towards the ocean, never again to return. As she finishes her story, she steps back and joins the line of villagers. In her hands she holds a small box of matches and a expertly folded paper boat, coated in wax. She removes one of her mittens, and, with numb fingers, lights a match. Fumbling, she manages to light the edge of the paper sail before the match is extinguished in the wind – immediately, the people on either side of her edge closer, to tip their own paper boats against hers, spreading the flame one by one down the line. As the fire spreads, the woman carefully walks to the place where the icy waves lap ceaselessly against the pebbles of the beach, and sets her sputtering boat afloat, watching as her friends and family do the same.

When all the boats have been launched, everyone watches the ragged ‘V’ sail outwards, towards the darkness. Everyone quietly hums an old hymn as they wait for the long-promised return of the sailors they lost so many years ago – hoping against all odds that their lost fellows will let the flambeaux armada guide them back home.

I’m not sure if I read a folk story along these lines somewhere, but that’s what this song sounds like to me. There’s some interesting imagery used in the lyrics: “a billion words ago”, “a million burning books”, “a fabric of ideals to decorate our homes”, “a mountain of mistakes for us to climb for pleasure”, “a hundred clocks are ticking”, and of course the chilling: “a billion words ago they sang a song of leaving. an echo from the chorus will call them back again”.

Fire seems to figure heavily in the verses, as well as the final chorus: “tonight we light the fires, we call our ships to port. tonight we walk on water and tomorrow we’ll be gone”. It creates an almost tactile environment for the song to take place in (helped by the album title, ‘Northern Lights’) of cold wind, snow drifts, icey water, and guttering flames.

This song has its apex at the final chorus (3:51) – throughout the song, the melody has stayed low, and at this point it nearly jumps an octave, until the lead singer’s voice echoes the sustained synth lines that were carrying the song along up to that point.

The instrumentation is driving and keeps things saturated, with only a couple of breaks around 1:47 and 2:17. The bass synth almost steps in to shore up the percussion (a single kick drum) and keeps a sort of rolling beat that carries everything along, and the ghostly higher synths float above, keeping things interesting while you wait for the next verse to start.

This is quite possibly my favorite track on this album, although Northern Lights is full of good ones. If you’re into this kind of music, Covenant has put out a couple of albums that I’d recommend: Northen Lights and Skyshaper.