Wednesday, July 20, 2022

New songs for July 20th, 2022

 here they are:


"Brad Pitt" by Coin: Why name your latest track after one of the most well-known actors of all time? Because you're using him to represent the idea of eternal youth, that's why! The celebrity's name is not mentioned even once in the song, but in Coin's latest song, the deceptively catchy "Brad Pitt," the indie-pop trio challenge the idea of eternal youth being something worth celebrating. After all, everyone grows old someday. Coin don't really confront the problem head-on as much as they mock it, singing "keep me young forever" during the chorus in a manner that could be interpreted as being partially sarcastic.


"Here to Forever" by Death Cab for Cutie: Musically, Death Cab's latest song, "Here to Forever," picks up where their 2018 songs left off, giving off a lite-goth-rock sound of sorts. It's lyrically, however, where the song really has some weight. Even in the opening lines, Ben Gibbard has deep and rather dark thoughts about the impermanence of life, commenting how everyone he sees on 1950's movies is no longer alive. He spends the rest of the song trying to come to terms with how he, too, will go one day, while still having a sliver of hope that "forever" might be a possibility if there is an afterlife.


"Hurts (But it Goes Away)" by The Head and The Heart: The intro to this song is cool, using a bass in place of the expected piano and/or guitar, but those two instruments do make their way into this song around the 15-second mark. The Head and The Heart's latest song, "Hurts (But it Goes Away)," continues in the more mainstream pop/rock direction the band have taken roughly since the mid-2010's, adding slightly more artificial synth-y instrumentation in back of the central role the piano takes in the song. These days, it's hard to tell if a song like this is a plea for a lover to come back, or if it's about life itself and wanting reassurance from it. I would opt to say it's the latter, though, given both the time it's come out in and how it doesn't seem to be addressed to a specific person.


"It Ain't Over" by The Black Keys: Much like their song "Wild Child" from earlier this year, "It Ain't Over" is another song in The Black Keys catalog that attempts to mix funk and blues-rock into one thing. The song has a very '70s R & B sound and rhythm, but Dan Auerbach's trademark fuzz-guitar sound is still in here, especially during the chorus. A powerful and catchy tune, no doubt about it! The only weakness this song has is probably its guitar solo at the very end, which feels rather anticlimactic compared to the rest of it.


"Records" by Weezer: Seems like as Weezer have aged, they've lost the ability to rock that they once had. I personally have mixed feelings about this myself. I actually think they're really good at being a sweeter and more melodic group, but songs like this one tend to fall flat. Specifically, on "Records," Weezer use a synth-y pop sound for their verses and a chunky, almost "More Than a Feeling"-ish guitar riff during the chorus that rocks a bit less than Boston despite trying to boast otherwise. Not the best mix if you ask me, yet there's still something winsome and fun about this track.