Monday, November 22, 2010

Song Analysis 2


Love can be the best thing in the world for some people, while on the other hand love can make one feel like they have nothing to live for. In most songs about lost love there is a lesson to be learned. In the song “Said the King to the River” by La Dispute, Jordan Dreyer uses interesting view points as well as a plethora of other poetic devices to give multiple stories about the pain of post love.

La Dispute is a melodic post-hardcore band from Grand Rapids, Michigan. They are known for their varying song structure, genius guitar parts, and poetry like lyrics. Most of the lyrics in their songs are haunted by stories of failed relationships. In the song “Said the King to the River”, Jordan weaves his stories of love into the lyrics and gives the listener the sense of disparity between him and his significant other. When he says things like “pack your bags this place is not your home” and “precious pain you’ve given us a name”, you get a sense of him being done with his relationship. At the end of the song he sings as if from the point of view of two lovers in a conversation. The boy says that he has carried his love a long way just to see his lover. While the girl says “’leave!’...’I’ve given in. If love is a bridge, we built it wrong!’”. This could be a direct allusion to something that has happened in Jordan’s life or just a metaphor for his feelings and how they were stomped on by the one he loved. In the part before the scene with the two lovers Jordan sings as if from the point of view of a king speaking to a river and then as the wind speaking to the water. He makes the parallel between the flame of love extinguishing and the wind freezing water. If you actually listen to the pattern of the vocal parts, in the whole song, there is an interesting back and forth feel throughout the song. There isn’t a set verse, chorus, verse, bridge, chorus pattern, but Jordan does a very nice job of separating the parts so as to make sure the listener can tell the differences. Throughout the song he uses a motif of medieval language saying things like “Up M’Lady”, “I Beseech thee, ‘Shed thy beauty.’”, and speaking of a king asking a river for a flood.

La Dispute is a very unique and innovative band. The way the band can fit screaming poetry over complex and beautiful musical pieces and make a stimulating form of art speaks to the artistic abilities of everyone in the band. La Dispute is a pleasant but moody vacation from the monotonous one named “artists” that make up American popular music today. The way Jordan Dreyer can spit out a string of screams that fit so many extended metaphors, examples of imagery and allusions to his own life make La Dispute more a form of poetry with accompanying music than just rock music.

Monday, October 25, 2010

SA 2 video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AXzuptN9xJs

i was there. one of the best shows i have ever been to, and i wish i could relive it.

"Said the King to the River" By: La Dispute (SA 2)


“Up, M’Lady--Pack your things, this place is not your home. Nor was it ever,
Sever every tie, tonight we ride. Tonight we ride.”

“And how we’ve trembled at the way that time’s assembled little fires of desire in the tundra of our skin.
So, do yourself a little favor, savor every time you waver for that shaking in my voice was only slyly feigned chagrin. Tonight we ride.”

“Oh, Lover, uncover. I know it’s warm beneath your sheets and there is ice along the streets but listen—Lover, we will recover. But we’ve no time to waste with meddling in affairs we’ve locked so tightly in our dreams. We are not clean, we are not pure, we can not rest until we’re sure. So, rob your pretty little eyes of sleep’s disguise. I’m at your bedside with a bucket full of lies. So, clear your ears and listen---

Up, M’Lady--Pack your things, this place is not your home.

But I know what is.”

And to the glorious past:

You’ve opened my window but broken the glass. And I beseech thee, ‘shed thy beauty.’
For as a child leaves the womb and learns the cold, you have taught us perils in the present, and you will bring us peril in our surely-soon-to-be. Unless…

The river’s not flooded this time.

Oh, Precious Distance,
Oh, Precious Pain,
You’ve given me a name. And
Etched it in the stones of the river bank.

Oh, Precious Distance,
Oh, Precious Pain,
You’ve given us a name. You’ve
Given us a name.

“Rise!” Said the King to the River, “Never let up! No, bring us a flood and bring it hard!”
“Freeze!” Said the Wind to the Water, “Never give in! No, build us a bridge! And build it strong and angry. Let it stills the King’s decree. Oh, you must contemplate the current, Boy, and command that coward cease. The boy breathes for his love says, ‘I wait.’
His love says, ‘I wait.’
She’s shouting out, “I will come back. Yes, I will come back!
I will come—I have lived my life so uncomfortably. Darling, come for me.
Come for me.”

“Rise!” Said the Boy to his Lover, “Darling, get up. I’ve brought you my love, and brought it far!”
“Leave!” Said the Girl to her lover, “I’ve given in. If love is a bridge, we built it wrong!”

Curb your anger.
Still your fists.
She will never come back, she’ll never come back, she’ll never come—
She will never come back, she’ll never come back, she’ll never come—

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

"You're So Last Summer" -Taking Back Sunday


Taking Back Sunday is a popular Pop-Punk Rock type band from Long Island, New York. Since forming in 1999 they have gone through many lineup changes and only two of the current members are from the original band. They use a layering style of singing where there is a lead singer but also a very prominent back-up singer. The two usually take turns singing every other line giving they’re vocals a pleasing harmony. Adam Lazzara, the lead singer and songwriter, writes most of his lyrics about first hand experiences with love and heartbreak. In the song “You’re So Last Summer”, Adam uses varying point of views to convey a guy and a girl’s feelings during a specific relationship.

The song starts with the lyrics “She said ‘don’t, don’t let it go to your head’”, a lyric from the third person subjective mode. This first line sets the structure of the rest of the song, going back from one point of view to another trying to tell the story a relationship. The main character had strong feelings for the girl, but she only thought of their relationship as a fling. The opening lyric is him recalling something the girl had said to him about “boys like (him) are a dime a dozen”. This statement makes him feel dejected about the love he thought they had. During the chorus he sings “All I need to know is that I’m something you’ll be missing”, this lyric being from the first person narrative mode. The chorus shows his need for this girl to recognize what they had and maybe come back to him. The chorus is a constant that gives the song structure by going back to the first person. The song then switches to second person narrative mode and then back to first person when he says, “You could slit my throat, and with my one last gasping breath I’d apologize for bleeding on your shirt”. This line shows his devotion to the girl and for how much this guy would do for her. Near the end of the song he goes to a mix of third person subjective and first person by giving a quote from the girl and his feelings all during one point. He says “If I’m just ‘bad news’, then you’re a liar” pointing out that at one point the girl had said something that made him feel like she was in love with him, but now she is saying that he is just bad news making her a liar in his eyes.

Without the use of different point of views in this song the listener can’t get the feel of both sides of the story. Even though they are both told from one side of the story the different points of view give a better idea of what was happening to both of the subjects in the story. There could have been some bias or embellishment because of it being told by the guy in the relationship but by having some of the story told from the girls perspective make it easier to understand all of the feelings between them.