I am very excited about this topic. Only because I have envisioned the perfect song. It’s not necessarily about music that accompanies a different mood, but music that would accompany me in battle. This is what would play during a battle scene where I met my ultimate demise. It has the best rise and fall of any songs I have heard. Just about 4:30 into the song is where I would be running slow-motion at the enemy sword brandished. After my valiant effort taking down the rebel army around 6:30 I would discover I had been stabbed and would check my stomach for wounds only to discover the blood on my hands. I would stare into the sky and fall to my knees as the world grows ever darker. As my life flashes before my eyes the music fades and with it so do I. The title just says it all. The Birth and Death of Day by Explosions in the Sky.
Category: Music
On Music I Like (Part 2 of Many)
Artist: Tokyo Police Club
Album: Elephant Shell
Release Date: 4/22/2008
I had to get this out there. I have been listening to it on repeat for the last three or four days. It is by no means a new album nor a groundbreaking one. It is, however, intoxicatingly catchy. Back in the day (2007-2008) when I worked at the Purdue Student Radio (Not the other nice radio stations at Purdue like Cary, this one was in the basement of the union with a soundboard that’s heyday was before I was in existence) we used to receive tons of pre-release and promo albums so they bands could try to get some airplay. Purdue Student Radio might not have been the place to send it as our station had such a limited range and the stream was broken for a while. I mean no disrespect to PSR as it was tons of fun, it was just in bad shape when I was there. Anyway, this post isn’t about PSR it’s about Elephant Shell. So, this album showed up in a stack one day and the band’s name intrigued me, so I gave it a play. On the first listen I was hooked. It has some of the best hooks and the songs have a quirky charm to them. Even now I find myself singing along to Centennial and The Harrowing Adventure Of… (Ouuurrrrrr Cen…Tenniallllll). The lead’s voice (Dave Monks) is unique and suits the indie pop jams of Tokyo Police Club. As I said, it’s not Earth-shattering, but I just really have fallen in love with this album. Go check it out and tell me what you think.
Artist: Pedro the Lion
Album: Control
Release Date: 4/16/2002
I was first turned on to this album in High School by a friend of mine during one of our music swap hangouts (Those were always so much fun, discovering tons of new music and always knowing whatever you were getting was going to be amazing). This album is brutal, and I mean that in the best possible way. Control is honest and blunt in a way most music can’t touch. Not new topics to Pedro the Lion or David Bazan (lead singer/songwriter), Control deals with infidelity, romance, and greed and does so with a sound that is entirely too fitting. When I say this album is honest, I don’t just mean honest in content, but honest in performance. Everything is saturated with pain and regret. Not to get too far removed from reality, but this is an immersive album. I am taken in every time I listen; it never fails to elicit an emotional response. I can’t recommend this album enough. It is heartbreakingly honest and amazing even years after my first listen.