Basically my theme tune. Nice song to do the can-can and shout a lot to. The video gets kind of bizarre towards the end though - I still haven't quite figured out why Mark Hoppus randomly turns up in it. The workings of Mark Hoppus' mind are an enigma.
my favourite music, new music, music you should definitely listen to.
Wednesday, 20 February 2013
Fall Out Boy - I Don't Care
Basically my theme tune. Nice song to do the can-can and shout a lot to. The video gets kind of bizarre towards the end though - I still haven't quite figured out why Mark Hoppus randomly turns up in it. The workings of Mark Hoppus' mind are an enigma.
Tuesday, 19 February 2013
My Songs Know What You Did In The Dark: FALL OUT BOY ARE BACK
I know this is a bit late, but still, it's a big thing in music at the moment and something relevant to me as a Fall Out Boy fan who never thought I'd get to see them perform.
My Songs Know What You Did In The Dark (Light Em Up) is the first single off Fall Out Boy's new album Save Rock And Roll, due out April 15th of this year, which is the first we've heard from the band as a whole unit - they've all done various individual projects, such as Pete Wentz's group Black Cards, Patrick Stump's Soul Punk, Joe Trohman's With Knives, and Andy Hurley's Enabler (can I just say that, shamefully, that this is the first time I've looked at any of their side projects, and 'pleasantly surprised' would be a massive understatement) - since the release of Believers Never Die, their greatest hits album, which was released three years and three months ago. As you can imagine, fans of the band are quite worked up.
My Songs Know . . . was released on February 4th, just after Fall Out Boy announced their return, and just before they started touring again - they were playing a gig in Chicago within 48 hours of the announcement, I believe.
I have to admit, at first I was a bit let down by it, but for stupid reasons. I think what I was expecting from the song was something that would fit right in on From Under The Cork Tree (released 2005), something all heavy and screamy. As you can tell if you're listening to the song now, it's not like that. It's a lot more poppy, and not really that much like anything they've done before. The most widely circulated version of it is the 2Chainz version, which is definitely not what I or any of the other fans were expecting, I'm sure. I listened to it once and then left it for about a week in a bit of a sulk.
But people have kept going on about it, making gifs and edits and just generally talking about it, which made me think that maybe I should give it another listen with a bit more of an open mind. Knowing what to expect now, I actually really like it. It's not the Fall Out Boy that I know best, but I still think it's an awesome song, and I love how the video actually hints that the next album's going to be different with the burning of their old albums (or maybe I should hate that because it makes me look stupid).
So actually, in the end, it's all turned out pretty well. One of my favourite bands is back with a new single and a new album that I am probably going to be annoying the upstairs neighbours with for a very long time, just like when I got hold of Infinity On High, which I played very loud on constant repeat for at least a week straight, and that's nothing on when I got Danger Days (most recent album of my very favourite band, My Chemical Romance).
My Songs Know . . . was released on February 4th, just after Fall Out Boy announced their return, and just before they started touring again - they were playing a gig in Chicago within 48 hours of the announcement, I believe.
I have to admit, at first I was a bit let down by it, but for stupid reasons. I think what I was expecting from the song was something that would fit right in on From Under The Cork Tree (released 2005), something all heavy and screamy. As you can tell if you're listening to the song now, it's not like that. It's a lot more poppy, and not really that much like anything they've done before. The most widely circulated version of it is the 2Chainz version, which is definitely not what I or any of the other fans were expecting, I'm sure. I listened to it once and then left it for about a week in a bit of a sulk.
But people have kept going on about it, making gifs and edits and just generally talking about it, which made me think that maybe I should give it another listen with a bit more of an open mind. Knowing what to expect now, I actually really like it. It's not the Fall Out Boy that I know best, but I still think it's an awesome song, and I love how the video actually hints that the next album's going to be different with the burning of their old albums (or maybe I should hate that because it makes me look stupid).
So actually, in the end, it's all turned out pretty well. One of my favourite bands is back with a new single and a new album that I am probably going to be annoying the upstairs neighbours with for a very long time, just like when I got hold of Infinity On High, which I played very loud on constant repeat for at least a week straight, and that's nothing on when I got Danger Days (most recent album of my very favourite band, My Chemical Romance).
Monday, 18 February 2013
Conventional Weapons
My Chemical Romance's most recent album, Danger Days: True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, was released on November 22, 2010. That was their first album since the stupidly successful The Black Parade, in 2006 - a pretty long gap, right? Part of that was because of the extensive touring they underwent because of TBP, and subsequent recuperation, but another part of that was writing an album that wasn't even Danger Days.
This album-that-never-was has never really been much of a secret with the band, as they've explained how it helped them create the songs that became Danger Days in various interviews. What we do know of this album is that it was an attempt to break from the band's previous traditions of costumes, themes and very meaningful songs (the thought of Gerard Way coming up with meaningless lyrics is actually laughable), and just make something dancy and light.
The thing was, it never went right. The band said the songs didn't sound right together, and they couldn't come up with an order to put them in for the album.
So they scrapped them and came up with Danger Days, which did have a similar, poppy sort of mood to it, but was still created with a theme and costumes and a whole concept behind it - Gerard Way (vocals - also co-creator of the comic series The Umbrella Academy) is currently creating a comic series based around the 2019 post-apocalyptic California the album's based in.
But it's not Danger Days I want to talk about here, it's Conventional Weapons. Back last autumn, rumours were surfacing that My Chemical Romance were back in the studio and working on a new album. Then they came out with the new logo, and everyone went mental. I remember sitting there myself, squealing for several days on internet forums and coming up with fantastical ideas about the content of the next album.
Then, on October 14th, Frank Iero made a post on the band's website (www.mychemicalromance.com) talking about the failed album that came before Danger Days. He said that they'd decided that, although they maybe didn't work as an album, some of the songs were too good to just forget about, and so they'd be releasing them, two at a time, once a month for five consecutive months.
Much fangirling was done. I don't think I've ever been so over-excited since my ex mentioned that he could play the bass part to Hysteria and I accidentally hit my head on the wall. I'd come into the MCR fandom (the MCRmy, if you're hardcore) in 2011, a few months after Danger Days had been released and the fuss had died down, so I'd never had the privilege of being excited for them working on new stuff - aside from their appearance on Yo Gabba Gabba - so this was all new for me. Actually, I was still pretty new to actually liking music properly, so it was equally strange.
Boy Division
Tomorrow's Money
Ambulance
Gun.
The World Is Ugly
The Light Behind Your Eyes
Kiss The Ring
Make Room!!!!
Surrender The Night
Burn Bright
Those are the tracks on each album, and above you will see a lovely display of their artwork (which I put together myself, thank you very much, because putting up the individual pictures sends the blog into a tantrum for some reason).
All of them are very distinctively My Chemical Romance, and they all sound similar to some of their other stuff, mainly The Black Parade and Danger Days - after all, a lot of this stuff is what helped form their newest album. Some of the stuff, I have to admit, doesn't sound quite right and you can tell why the band decided not to release them as an album, because it's not them at their best - although they're still a lot better than some other 'artists' trying their hardest (or rather, paying their songwriters to try their hardest). Plus, if you put all ten songs together and play them, there is a sort of cohesion there. I don't know, they just sound really nice if you play them all.
1, 3 and 5, I took to immediately and had on repeat on my iPod for ages - I spent most of my New Year's holiday in Berlin hopping about train stations to Conventional Weapons 1. 1 sounds like Danger Days to me, with the lyrics - "We got no heroes, 'cause our heroes are dead" - and the sort of anarchic feel to it (I feel so cheesy saying that, I sound like a talking head off Channel 4), but still a bit different. There's a slight bit of TBP in there too.
2 took me a little while to get around to. I think it was because of the sort of Glee-style choir bit on the start of Ambulance. I was taken by surprise and a bit worried, so I didn't really go for it until I decided to try it again a week or so later, and I grew to love it. Gun's the easier to 'get' of the two on CW 2, but also a bit less exciting for that as well, although it is a lot more Danger Days-y as well, with the slightly paranoid lyrics ("The government wants your gun") and the sort of general feel of it. It sounds kind of like the song you'd use for a roadtrip scene in a film.
My favourite is definitely 3. I love it love it love it love it. Everyone in the bandom (fandom of a band = bandom, if you're not up on your internet slang or can't grasp the obvious) was getting quite worked up, because The World Is Ugly is not a new song. They did it before, years ago as a live performance only, and when asked about it said that the day they released it as an official record would be the day they stopped making music together. There's already been rumours going round - groundless, I'm sure - of strife within the band, so naturally that got everyone worried. However, it came out and they're still recording their new album, so all is well. It's a very big, dramatic sort of song, and reminds me a lot of The Black Parade, although at the very end there's a reference their first album, I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love, with the lyrics "lost forever like ghosts in the snow, like ghosts in the sun" (see their song Vampires Will Never Hurt You). The Light Behind Your Eyes is more chilled out, and if possible even darker, but no less brilliant. It sounds very personal, like they're sending a message to someone - who, we don't know - an apology or something.
4 still kind of throws me off a bit. This is the one where I think they succeeded most with the light-hearted, meaningless kind of thing. Kiss The Ring is fast and a bit angry, and the kind of thing I'd jump about to or use to psyche myself up to get into a fight, but not get tattooed on my arm or anything. Make Room!!!! is my least favourite of the Conventional Weapons songs. I still like it a lot, but it just doesn't sound quite right. However, it does contain a spookier version of some of the lyrics in Na Na Na (first track on Danger Days) - "Everybody wants to change the world, but no-one, no-one wants to die" which I quite like, because I love a good reference.
5 is good. I don't think I've listened to it enough yet, but to me they have the same sort of feel as CW 3, with the darkness and the slightly melodramatic side. Surrender The Night's my favourite of the two, I think, because of the big shouty chorus (I am a fan of big shouty choruses, as you may find if you continue to read the blog), although it sounds more like Danger Days by night than TBP.
They're all definitely worth listening to, anyway, and if they don't hit you with their awesomeness straight away, they'll grow on you, because that's how My Chemical Romance songs work.
My Chemical Romance - Helena (So Long And Goodnight)
Sunday, 17 February 2013
Hello.
So this blog is essentially a sort of project. I've been told that apparently I need to know more about handling social media, which is partly being corrected by this blog, and partly by my twitter, although twitter's not a preferred platform of mine because of the bastard 140 character limit.
The idea of this was to pick a subject and blog about it. One subject that I have a lot to say about is music. I am all over music, all over it like a powerful moss.
This, however, is a little introduction to me; the person behind the blog.
My name's Izzy, I'm currently 17 and I live in the north of England. I have various interests, including foreign languages - I'm studying German and Spanish at AS level (*coughshowoffcough*); reading, especially fiction and especially stuff where everyone dies very painfully; writing, of a similar nature to the stuff I like to read, but lacking in skill and plot; drawing with varying degrees of success (I draw a lot of band fan art, which may end up on here because it's kind of relevant); and, most pertinently to this blog, music. I'm learning guitar verrrry verrrrrry slowly, but I am progressing. I have, however, sworn never to take part in guitar douchery (loudly proclaiming that you can play guitar while in a public place and proceeding to play Wonderwall to the swoons of adoring girls completely lacking in musical knowledge).
I like a lot of bands. I mean a lot. There's so many bands that I like now that it takes me a couple of days to remember them all because I'll forget about six of them each time. Also, when I say 'I like bands', that's a bit of an understatement as well; I get so excited about some bands that I listen to that I have been driven to tears in the past. Just so you know what kind of blog you're getting into, and because I love lists, below is an actual list of the bands that I love the most.
My Chemical Romance, Pierce The Veil, Fall Out Boy, Sleeping With Sirens, Of Mice And Men, Panic! At The Disco, Without A Face, Rise Against, You Me At Six, Blink 182, Green Day, The Blackout, Cancer Bats, Slipknot, The Cure, The Smiths, The Cribs, Leathermouth . . . I am now panicking slightly because I know I've forgotten some of them and I can't remember which ones. Just so you know, my absolute favourites are My Chemical Romance and Pierce The Veil. I will actually eat your face off you while you're still alive for the opportunity to meet them (that may quite accurately sum up my blog title).
This blog will be about a range of things within the world of music. Songs and albums I like, why I like them, new bands and artists I'm listening to, issues within the world of music and such - anything that I believe is relevant and I can be bothered to write.
So yes, there you have it. That is me and my introduction post. Goodbye.
The idea of this was to pick a subject and blog about it. One subject that I have a lot to say about is music. I am all over music, all over it like a powerful moss.
This, however, is a little introduction to me; the person behind the blog.
My name's Izzy, I'm currently 17 and I live in the north of England. I have various interests, including foreign languages - I'm studying German and Spanish at AS level (*coughshowoffcough*); reading, especially fiction and especially stuff where everyone dies very painfully; writing, of a similar nature to the stuff I like to read, but lacking in skill and plot; drawing with varying degrees of success (I draw a lot of band fan art, which may end up on here because it's kind of relevant); and, most pertinently to this blog, music. I'm learning guitar verrrry verrrrrry slowly, but I am progressing. I have, however, sworn never to take part in guitar douchery (loudly proclaiming that you can play guitar while in a public place and proceeding to play Wonderwall to the swoons of adoring girls completely lacking in musical knowledge).
I like a lot of bands. I mean a lot. There's so many bands that I like now that it takes me a couple of days to remember them all because I'll forget about six of them each time. Also, when I say 'I like bands', that's a bit of an understatement as well; I get so excited about some bands that I listen to that I have been driven to tears in the past. Just so you know what kind of blog you're getting into, and because I love lists, below is an actual list of the bands that I love the most.
My Chemical Romance, Pierce The Veil, Fall Out Boy, Sleeping With Sirens, Of Mice And Men, Panic! At The Disco, Without A Face, Rise Against, You Me At Six, Blink 182, Green Day, The Blackout, Cancer Bats, Slipknot, The Cure, The Smiths, The Cribs, Leathermouth . . . I am now panicking slightly because I know I've forgotten some of them and I can't remember which ones. Just so you know, my absolute favourites are My Chemical Romance and Pierce The Veil. I will actually eat your face off you while you're still alive for the opportunity to meet them (that may quite accurately sum up my blog title).
This blog will be about a range of things within the world of music. Songs and albums I like, why I like them, new bands and artists I'm listening to, issues within the world of music and such - anything that I believe is relevant and I can be bothered to write.
So yes, there you have it. That is me and my introduction post. Goodbye.
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