Fluxblog #288: Gabriels • Hot Chip • Tom Petty • Omar Apollo
October 25th, 2020
Moving Faster Than A Hurricane
Gabriels “Love and Hate in a Different Time”
There’s a musical shift in “Love and Hate in a Different Time” that’s so sudden and surprising that mentioning it here before you hear it ought to be preface by a spoiler warning: The part where this solemn but groovy soul number moves into an instrumental break and instead of a piano or guitar solo, there’s a wild analog synth part that tosses out melody in favor of what sounds sorta like an R2-D2 freestyle. It’s an inspired choice, but it also does a good job of grounding this song which in many ways feels rooted to the 1960s in the present. That tether between then and now is musically interesting but also serves the concept of the song, as singer Jacob Lusk tries to make sense of how peaceful coexist always gets disrupted by people who insist on yanking everything back to a previous state of discord.
Buy it from Bandcamp.
October 26th, 2020
There’s A Pleasure In This Fear
Hot Chip featuring Jarvis Cocker “Straight to the Morning”
“Straight to the Morning” is a joyful disco/house track with lyrics about partying all night and into the next day. It functions perfectly well at face value, but this being a Hot Chip song, there’s some subtextual layers of pathos under the boppy beats and bright chords – scratch the surface just a little bit, and it’s a song about aging. This is three middle aged men singing about going out all night, and how saying all of this feels a bit different in the context of being older. When Alexis Taylor announces “we’re going out tonight,” it comes across as announcing something that’s more of an event than a regular occurrence. The idea of dancing all night seems a little more daunting than it would be for guys in their 20s. When Joe Goddard sings “it’s a small slice of heaven,” the joy feels a bit more hard-earned. When the ever-droll Jarvis Cocker says “we’ve only just begun to get it on,” the words sound a little overly optimistic. But this song isn’t a joke at their own expense, it’s a song arguing that there shouldn’t be an arbitrary age limit for dancing and having fun. If anything, they’re arguing that there’s always a time for this sort of release.
Buy it from Amazon.
October 28th, 2020
Half Of Me Is Ocean, Half Of Me Is Sky
Tom Petty “Walls” (Live)
“Walls” is a song that exists in a limbo zone between a relationship falling apart and fully moving on from it. It’s part of an emotional journey but only just the longest, most boring part of the trip, like indefinitely cruising down a featureless interstate of the soul. This sort of thing but be tedious in fiction but it’s perfect for a song, particularly one like this that so perfectly evokes an emotional palette with well-mixed shades of ennui, regret, bitterness, and affection.
Tom Petty’s lyrics strive towards a warm-hearted clarity, like he’s just trying to be reasonable and patient as he processes it all. But the song resists its own attempts to put feelings in perspective – sure, some days are diamonds and some days are rocks, but that’s just what you say in the verses. The real feeling of the song is in that simple, beautiful chorus where he can’t quite get over this person with a heart so big it could crush this town, and he has to admit that one way or another he’s gonna crumble along with all those walls.
Buy the Wildflowers box set from Amazon.
October 30th, 2020
If I Could Switch Bodies
Omar Apollo “Stayback”
There’s some things about “Stayback” that very obviously point in the direction of a heavy Prince influence, but the most Prince-ly thing in the song is fairly subtle – that line where Omar Apollo sings about wanting to switch bodies with the person he’s in love with. A lot of people can be a funky minimalist, sing falsetto, or rip a hot solo, but not everyone can approach that desire for a freaky, unreal intimacy that twists gender and crosses boundaries. It’s all the more interesting in that this isn’t a “I’m so into you I want to be you” song, but more of a breakup song. The desire to switch bodies is a desire for control, to somehow give himself closure by treating this other person like a puppet. Weird stuff.
Stream it on Bandcamp.