Tagged: progressive music

Animal Collective – My Girls (Marriweather Post Pavillion, 2009)

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I’ve been agonizing over weather to do this song or not. I mean, as it is, I’m not sure I really have a lot to say about it. Not because it’s a bad song. But more that it’s all built around layering, repeating sections over and over, and building on them. Similar to what we heard in David Gray’s Please Forgive Me. Only, instead of being fairly simple stuff being added, this is awash with arpeggios, synthesizers, and fun little drum parts.

But actually what I really wanted to point out is the lyrics. After hearing it once (or maybe you’re listening to it right now?) I think you’ll see that it’s really easy to just get caught up in the music and energy of the song, without really paying attention to the lyrics. When I first started listening, all I could really pick out of it, is the bridge/break which goes:

I don’t mean to seem like I care about material things like a social stats

Let me just pause to say, on it’s own, that’s a pretty great line. There’s another part after that, but I could never really make it out. Luckily for us, the internets provide us with the answer. However, we’ll address that later. Anyway,what does it all mean? How does it fit into the rest of the song? Well dear readers, that’s what we’re going to talk about today. So, let’s look at the first verse, which gets repeated bunch.

There isn’t much that I feel I need
A solid soul and the blood I bleed
With a little girl, and by my spouse
I only want a proper house

Oh. Okay. So he’s talking about wanting a house for his wife and kid. That makes sense! Wouldn’t really catch that from the song. After that it moves on to what can be considered the chorus part.

I don’t care for fancy things
Or to take part in a precious race
And children cry for the one who has
A real big heart and a father’s grace

So he’s telling us that really all he wants to be, is a good father! Man, what a sweet guy. Okay, now remember the bridge/break part?

I don’t mean to seem like I care about material things like a social status
I just want four walls and adobe slabs for my girls

Ahhhh. He’s reassuring us that it’s not actually the possession of the house that he’s worried about. More the fact that he wants a place for his wife and kids to live. Who saw that coming?

Anyway, the fact that this song is so… emersive, that you can totally lose track of what the lyrics are, is a real credit to the amazing songwriting ability of Animal Collective. I strongly encourage you all to check out the rest of the songs on this album, as they are equally as good.

-James out

David Gray – Please Forgive Me (White Ladder, 1999)

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I’m sure that you’ve heard Babylon, arguably David Gray’s most famous song. If you ever listen to the radio in the late 90′s, it’s bound to pop up. But that’s not the song we’re going to talk about. Today, we converse about the first track off of the White Ladder album, Please Forgive Me.

The thing that I love about this song, is the simplicity. It starts out with really basic progressions, and just builds on it.

It starts out with a run-of-the mill drum loop. Some simple string synths and a piano with a bit of reverb. Then bit picks up, repetitive high-hat hits, with a backing bass part. Then we get a little high string synth part. Then, at the sort of, apex, if you will of the lyrics, a little guitar part is added. After that, simple hand claps! Then we back down to just piano and strings, as we return to the first verse again. Then we get pulled back in, with a little drum breakdown part, and fade out.

All of that, is pretty text book song writing, in my opinion. But there’s something about it, that doesn’t really seem to be annoying, or really repetitive. Which is impressive, in my opinion, because, like I said, he’s really just taking the same chord progression over and over and over, and building more and more and more on it.

But, the real triumph  of this song, I think, is the really good lyrics that are hidden in the song. To take it at face value, it’s just your run of the mill love song. This guy is really in love with this girl, ect ect. But if we look closely, just in the first verse, he’s breaking out very… descriptive lyrics.

Feels like lightning running through my veins
Everytime I look at you

“Lightning running through my veins”! Very very nice. Also the last verse, the sort of climax of the song, really hits it home for me. There’s something about his voice, perhaps maybe the way he sings it. I don’t know but the last verse:

I got half a mind to scream out loud
I got half a mind to die
So I wont ever have to lose you girl
Wont ever have to say goodbye
I wont ever have to lie
Wont ever have to say goodbye

is very powerfully and movingly delivered. I must also confess, myself being a hopeless romantic, I have experienced the sentiments expressed in this song, and David Gray does an excellent job describing them. All in all, a good listen. Really, I would encourage you to check out the rest of the album. It’s got some pretty good tracks on it.

-James out