Friday, January 30, 2009

A Blurb

Today I realized one of the most beautiful forms of music: uplifting songs from otherwise depressing artists. I enjoy depressing music and the melancholy atmosphere and its unique beauty, but when an album is full of mellow, depressing songs, and one that doesn't fit, that oddball is usually a gem. I'm taking about the likes of "No Sunlight," "Blackest Eyes," and "Let Down" from Death Cab For Cutie, Porcupine Tree, and Radiohead, respectively. The joy I derive from those types of songs is a unique one. Optimistic, almost euphoric, and beautiful in a way that Sigur Ros doesn't do.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Between The Buried And Me - Colors




Never before did I think that a band based off of heavily distorted guitars, blast beats, and screams could be so beautiful. I enjoy listening to albums full of \m/ moment after \m/ moment, but I have more respect for guys that can be brutal and branch out into other genres. (That's one of the reasons that I like bands such as Dream Theater and Coheed and Cambria so much.) In Colors, Between The Buried and me expands their remarkably heavy metalcore style to a wider realm, including progressive, jazz, and acoustic elements. A tasteful combination of beautiful, brutal, and epic moments makes Colors not only one of the heaviest albums I own in terms of metal, but also in terms of listening ease and pure musical creativity.

More to come.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Rant: On




I seem to be alone in this, but I have a huge pet peeve with bands doing covers. It really bothers me when bands cover songs and don't give the original band credit. I know there's a ton of legal stuff behind this, but that's unimportant to me. Its a matter of the creator of a song taking credit for writing it. I can't take a friend's paper, put my name on it, and turn it in, but bands can do the same with songs.

For example, Van Halen covered The Kinks' classic "You Really Got Me Now." Save a tiny mention in the liner notes that nobody actually reads, the song labeled just as any other song on the album. No "You Really Got Me Now (The Kinks cover)" in the name slot or any mention of the song's authors. I had heard it before, but not known that it was The Kinks', and it seemed to be right up Van Halen's alley. So, being my stupid self, I was led to believe that Van Halen wrote the song. Wrong. I still love Van Halen's music, but not crediting the band who wrote a song that you cover is just something that grinds my gears.

I don't hear much about this from other people. Ugh.

Rant: Off.