Showing posts with label folk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folk. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Dashboard Confessional's "In The Shade of Poison Trees"

Dashboard Confessional was started in 2000, as a side project from lead singer Chris Carrabba's venture with Further Seems Forever. Dashboard Confessional released their debut full-length The Swiss Army Romance in 2000, followed by The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most (2001), A Mark, A Mission, A Brand, A Scar (2003), Dusk and Summer (June 2006). Their latest release, The Shade of Poison Trees, was released on October 2, 2007. Dashboard Confessional has been one of my favorite bands for about 4 years now. They’ve gotten to be pretty mainstream without selling out, and Chris Carabba knows how to write heartfelt lyrics and great acoustic guitar riffs better than anyone. I believe the recurring theme for this album is "leading double lives". Some are “gilded” lives, others are lives of privilege pretending to be down and out.

“Where There’s Gold…”, the opener, features Chris Carrabba’s trademark catchy guitar playing and thought provoking lyrics. The mantra “Where there’s gold, theres a gold-digger." is repeated--it seemed to become more and more meaningful each time it was repeated. This song also contains one of the most amazing one-liners on the album: “Mistresses have all the fun, but no ones ever there to take you home.” It sums up what Dashboard is all about in one line. Simple, to-the-point lyrics, that are easy to understand, yet so clever.

“Keep Watch for the Mines” is my least favorite track on this album. I find the guitar rhythm annoying, and the melody boring and drawn out. This is just a personal preference, because this isn’t necessarily a bad song, I just don’t enjoy the sound or the lyrics very much—I’d call it mediocre. But it sticks out like a sore thumb compared to all of the other amazing songs.

“These Bones” is one of my two favorite songs on this album, mainly because of the great rhythm and melody. The lyrics are not very deep, but I feel that this song is meant to be loved for its melody and pop quality rather than its lyrical content.

Not gonna lie, the first time I heard “Fever Dreams”, I found it so annoying that I changed the song. Chris’s falsetto was so annoying, and I really just wasn’t into it. But the more I listened to it, the more I loved it. However, this was another song that wasn’t so gratifying lyrically. The phrase “Fever dreams can only haunt you ‘til the fever breaks” is said frequently, and I honestly wanna stalk Chris Carrabba just so I can ask him what the hell a fever dream is. Wet dream? Hot flashes? Chris PLEASE explain these things to me for the sake of us all!

We reach the halfway point with “The Shade of Poison Trees”, the track that this album is named for, and with good reason. This is my favorite song of the album. Chris really focused on the lyrics and let them speak for themselves, with just simple chords on an acoustic and occasional violin in the background. This song is so reminiscent of “Dusk and Summer” , the song that Dashboard’s last album was named after. Simple, acoustic, amazing. A theme of duality and secretiveness is prevalent with the phrase “If you knew what I know…” repeated in the beginning of each verse. The song closes with the line “As we lie in the shade of poison trees, are we as safe as we let ourselves believe?” Good question.

“Matters of Blood and Connection” has the most honest lyrics I’ve heard in a while, they actually remind me of kids in my high school. It’s the song that personifies the afore mentioned theme of lying, secrets and living a double life. It’s about privileged kids pretending to be of a lower class and pretending that they’ve been through it all, as shown in the line “Why do you speak with that accent now? Everyone knows you’re not from the streets.” It makes me laugh really, because it reminds me of Vanilla Ice of all things. You know, ice ice baby, the pathetic white rapper who pretended to be hardened by the streets. He really grew up in the burbs with his family, living a life of privilege.

“The Widows Peak” is about a guy who leaves his girl behind, “watching the ships come in”, aka waiting around doing nothing, waiting for his return. He promises that he’ll come home, and that their relationship can only get stronger with the distance, and it will take a hell of a lot more than 200 miles to separate them. So romantic and poetic, other than "Poison Trees" this is the best lyrical effort made by Carrabba in this release. Ships are constantly used as a metaphor for people, they are tethered, they sail, they wait. It’s a great close to the album, one damn good album at that.



Thursday, November 1, 2007

5 Underground Singer/Songwriters Who Won’t Be Underground For Long

Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly- Sam Duckworth, an Essex, UK native of Burmese ethnicity, is Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly. Get Cape is one of the most innovative and interesting projects I have found in a long time. Since Get Cape is a one man show, it consists of Sam playing his guitar and singing, and working with his keyboard/synthesizer on the side. Duckworth is one of the most eloquent and creative acts out today, as well as an activist for many anti-racism campaigns, including one of my favorite organizations, "Love Music, Hate Racism". With a sound bridging the gap between Hellogoodbye style keyboard work and Owen-esque lyrics and musicianship, this is a guy worth checking out. http://www.getcapewearcapefly.com/


Bedroom Eyes- yet another one man show disguised as a group act. Jonas Jonsson, of Ostersund, Sweden, is a man who strives to make simple indie pop songs with meaning and melody. So far he has released the “Embrace In Stereo EP”, as well as the “Valentine Vacancy EP”. One his best loved songs, and my current favorite song, “Dancing Under The Influence” starts off with a banjo solo, then breaks out in all it's folk-rock glory, with an uplifting melody throughout. It’s a good time song, talking about “drinking till we can’t take no more”, a fun notion not many people would object to. http://www.bedroomeyes.se/


Owen- Mike Kinsella is Owen. For those of you who are into the folksy-rocksy, meaningful lyrics and existentialism, Kinsella’s your man. In “Bad News”, Kinsella explores the shallowness of society, as well as people’s inflated egos, stating that “Whatever you think you are, you’re not.” And “Whoever you think is watching you dance from across the room…they aren’t. If anything, they feel sorry for you, because you try so hard.” It’s that kind of brutal honesty and observation that Owen makes in his songs, about all different types of people, from pretty people, to ugly people, to people who’ve just lost someone, to people who are still looking for someone. “Owen” as he’s called, can relate to us all, and give it to us in amazing-song-form. http://www.purevolume.com/owen

Josh Rouse- not so much underground, I know, but still not well known on the pop scene, Josh Rouse is one of those guys who knows how to turn out lyrically amazing, melodically moving folksy songs one after the other, and very rarely does he produce a dud. With his nerdy-cute looks and his timid voice, Rouse feels like a close friend as he tells you stories about past relationships (his album “Under The Cold Blue Stars” narrates an entire relationship, starting with falling in love, and ending in pain), places he’s been, and where he wants to go. Rouse is personally my favorite artist for all of the above reasons. http://www.joshrouse.com/


Dave Melillo- first seen on the underground music "cult" movie “Bastards Of Young”, where he performed “Wait For It” as an impromptu audition for Drive-Thru record owners Richard and Stefanie Reines, Dave Melillo is an 18 year old phenom on the underground scene. With his dark curly hair and puppy dog eyes, girls swoon before he even opens his mouth, and once he does, they’re hooked for life. With only one EP out so far (“Talk Is Cheap”), Melillo’s true-life songs about teenage love and angst are a hit with indie music fans everywhere. Melillo pens honest and heartfelt lyrics about how everyone screws up[including his own gender “Vatican Roulette” is a perfect example of this]. http://www.davemelillo.com/