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Total ratings: 1565
Length: 3:30
Plays (last 30 days): 2
Of your favorite dress and I'm sneaking glances
Looking for the patterns in static
They start to make sense the longer I'm at it
Ivory lines lead
Woah, woah
Your heart is a river
That flows from your chest through every organ
Your brain is the dam
And I am the fish who can't reach the core
Ivory lines lead
Woah, woah
Oh, instincts are misleading
You shouldn't think what you're feeling
They don't tell you what you know you should want
''Ivory lines lead
Woah, woah''
Ivory lines lead
Woah, woah
Oh, instincts are misleading
You shouldn't think what you're feeling
They don't tell you what you know you should want
Ivory lines lead
Woah
Ivory lines lead
Woah
A very large majority of pop music (which this is) is about the depressing and disappointing side of love. Most others manage to write songs which don't make it worse. Death Cab is just awful in their commercially-driven cynicism, and Ben Gibbard's voice is like razor blades on a dreary day, taunting you to slit your wrist.
2
I can't imagine listening to this song and thinking any part was "commercially-driven." Not the pace, lyrics or instrumentation. If someone doesn't like the music, to each their own. But what commercially driven pop music sounds anything at all like this?
For those arguing about the tempo: it's a slow 4/4 (approx 72 bpm) but the measures are probably written out with lots of eighth-note triplets — four groups of them to be precise. And there are hemiolas and syncopations sprinkled in for good effect. Hemiolas are indicated by two groups of three beats being spread across three groups of two beats, so the music feels like it's shifting between duple (two-beat) and triple (three-beat) meter. The second and third verses has lots of examples of this: Your heart is... your brain is... oh, instincts are mis...
Here is a short YouTube video demonstrating the quarter note, eighth note, and eighth- and sixteenth-note triplets. The base tempo is 60 bpm, a tad slower than the DCFC song.
You an' yer fancy book-learnin'!
oowaho oowaho! I don't think so. Cheap hooks leave me cold.
Here is a short YouTube video demonstrating the quarter note, eighth note, and eighth- and sixteenth-note triplets. The base tempo is 60 bpm, a tad slower than the DCFC song.
And annoying 100%
I would say it is in 6/8
apd wrote:
isn't it also the title of a Beatles song? (Or the same song, perhaps?)
It's not a Beatles song. The Bonzos are seen performing the song in the "Magical Mystery Tour" film; the song was written by Neil Innes (later of Monty Python) and Viv Stanshall.
isn't it also the title of a Beatles song? (Or the same song, perhaps?)
A very large majority of pop music (which this is) is about the depressing and disappointing side of love. Most others manage to write songs which don't make it worse. Death Cab is just awful in their commercially-driven cynicism, and Ben Gibbard's voice is like razor blades on a dreary day, taunting you to slit your wrist.
2
Commercially driven cynicism? Yeah, most other bands manage to put the depressing stuff into a neat little package and present it to the public who is so conditioned 'not' to delve too deeply into the raw, deep emotion swirling around inside of them. God forbid more people delving into their abyss, from whence they may not return. Prozac, number one prescribed drug in America. 8 - just for not 'conforming.'
A very large majority of pop music (which this is) is about the depressing and disappointing side of love. Most others manage to write songs which don't make it worse. Death Cab is just awful in their commercially-driven cynicism, and Ben Gibbard's voice is like razor blades on a dreary day, taunting you to slit your wrist.
2