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“Always on My Mind” – Phantom Planet
(Words/music: Alex Greenwald, available on The Guest, Epic 2002)

Like many people, I first fell for Phantom Planet because Max Fisher from Rushmore played drums for them.  Thus, the one time I saw Phantom Planet years ago the goal was to meet actor Jason Schwartzman (Phantom Planet’s former drummer) and try not to geek out by asking any questions about Bill Murray.  Between a cult film star playing drums and a song used as the theme song to one of the more iconic teen shows of the decade, Phantom Planet faced an uphill battle that a little power-pop band wasn’t equipped to handle.  It’s a shame, as they played power pop with the best of them, and put on a hell of a show too – including an unexpected cover of Radiohead’s “Airbag” and Weezer’s “El Scorcho.”

My favorite Phantom Planet performance is their cover of Jackson Browne’s “Somebody’s Baby,” so that might explain why I think of “Always on My Mind” as its kid nephew.  Like Browne’s perfect pop composition, “Always on My Mind” piles melody upon melody.  Alex Greenwald’s cheery vocals join the keyboard, slide guitar, and a perfectly placed mandolin (right?) in the solo section.  Most importantly, “Always on My Mind” carries itself with the same effortless charm that makes Browne’s song so ebullient.  Even if the transitions aren’t completely seamless, the verses and choruses roll right into each other, creating one big melodic chain for three and a half minutes.  If it’s not as good as the masters of power pop, it’s clearly aiming in the right direction.  While Phantom Planet might be on an “indefinite hiatus,” I wouldn’t be surprised to see a few more gems of this caliber if they find their way back together.

More on Phantom Planet: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: phantom planet | rushmore | jason schwartzman | radiohead | weezer | 2002 | 2000s | Epic Records |
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“Harrowdown Hill” – Thom Yorke
(Words/music: Thom Yorke, available on The Eraser, XL Recordings 2006)

In interviews around the time The Eraser came out, Thom Yorke alternately acknowledged, denied, and distanced himself from the inspiration for “Harrowdown Hill.”  I’m not as interested in pinning down the subject as I am by Yorke’s statement about the song’s evolution.  “It’s one of those really odd things where I wrote half the lyrics before considering what I was writing about.  It happened over a long period of time.  By osmosis, these things were going on and they ended up in the tune.”  I’m not really interested in Yorke acknowledging or distancing himself from David Kelly, a British chemical weapons expert found dead in a mysterious manner, because that’s not what the song is “about.”  If Kelly was the inspiration for the song, Yorke moved it beyond a factual report of the situation and tapped into the underlying emotions.

Yorke’s lyrics with Radiohead touched on ideas of paranoia, detachment, and recognition of a dark undercurrent, yet he called “Harrowdown Hill” the “most angry song I’ve ever written in my life.” His anger, in this case, comes from exasperation.  The “we think the same things at the same time / we just can’t do anything about it” comes from the same place as the Orwellian visions in Radiohead’s songs, but Yorke seems more focused on the inability to act against these forces rather than the things he detests.  If Yorke felt incredulous before at the things he saw in society, he’s rendered speechless by the methods used to perpetuate the cycle.  In that sense, it’s no wonder Yorke wants to distance himself from the song’s origins, lest he go back down that rabbit hole of frustration and anger again.

More on Thom Yorke: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: thom yorke | radiohead | 2006 | 2000s | xl recordings | orwell |
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“Video Tapez (f/ Del tha Funky Homosapien)” – Amplive
(Words/music: Radiohead, remixed by Amplive, available on Rainydayz Remixes, Self Released, 2008)

If The Beatles is the band that crosses generation gaps, Radiohead is the band that crosses gaps within my generation.  In high school, Radiohead was the one band that all of my friends, whether they were into metal, punk, jam bands, or Brit-pop, agreed on.  They are a musician’s band, a geek’s band, and (often forgotten) a hell of a rock band, so I understand this strange crossover appeal.  Of course Radiohead, like the Beatles, has its detractors (even if many do so just to be contrarians), but it amazed me in the late ‘90s to see so many people with different musical interests agree on such an odd band.  It helps that Radiohead constantly push the envelope – with In Rainbows alone, Radiohead turned the system backwards by self releasing an album digitally and then negotiating with labels to issue the physical product, not to mention several successful public remix campaigns spurred by the band releasing “stems” of different isolated instrumental tracks calling for remixers of all skills to take part. 

Looking back, Amplive’s Rainydayz Remixes collection seems inevitable – in addition to Radiohead’s history of innovation, Thom Yorke’s solo album The Eraser featured more distinct beats, lending a track to the “Us Placers” collaborations between Pharell, Kanye West, and Lupe Fiasco.  Even The Beatles, the other critic-proof English rock band, received a remix treatment that made its DJ famous.  The skeptic in me wants to think that Amplive took on this endeavor for similar ambitions, but that’s not the point.  Rainydayz Remixes turned out just as I imagined – some of the tracks are forgettable and some are interesting.  In particular, the remix of “Videotape,” here redubbed “Video Tapez,” might be the sole example of a remix that improved on the original. I hadn’t heard the In Rainbows songs in any of the live recordings before the album came out, but my friends who had seemed most disappointed with the mellowing out of “Videotape” when compared with its more dynamic live version.  Amplive takes the slow piano line and gives it a quicker, stuttered feel; this works especially well on Thom Yorke’s vocals, turning his mournful vocal into a viable hook.  I’m not saying this is what “Video Tape” should sound like (I like the In Rainbows version, specifically for that weird percussion at the very end), but it’s interesting to hear how someone who had an entirely different agenda for the album interpreted the song.  Judging from his Youtube “thank you” disclaimer, Amplive seems thrilled that the band (potentially) heard his remixes, and I’d be curious how Rainydayz Remixes and the remix sites for “Nude” and “Reckoner” will influence the band going forward.   It also makes me wish I did something with those “Reckoner” stems I downloaded.

More on Amplive: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: amplive | radiohead | del tha funky homosapien | 2008 | 2000s | track comparison | remix | implied comparison to the beatles |
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“Let Down” – Pedro the Lion
(Words/music: Radiohead, available on Tour EP ’04, Jade Tree (digital) 2006)

Radiohead’s OK Computer stands as a giant in my personal musical history.  It was the first album that I loved that I didn’t love immediately.  Most of my early favorites were “safe” purchases because I knew most of the songs before buying them.  Thus, because I already loved four or five songs from the radio, I had confidence that I would love the rest of the album.  I bought OK Computer after hearing “Karma Police” a few times on the radio and occasionally catching a glimpse of the strange “Paranoid Android” video on MTV.  I probably bought it at the same time as other albums (maybe the Foo Fighters’ The Colour and the Shape) because I didn’t get much deeper into OK Computer than those two songs.  This is a bad habit that I still maintain – I’ll get a new record, listen to it once or twice (or, on occasion, not at all) and then for whatever reason (distraction, being preoccupied with work, or buying the record while being obsessed with another album) I let the album slip through the cracks.  For whatever reason, I picked OK Computer back up again and remember sitting through the whole album while playing Super Nintendo (probably F-Zero, but I’m not 100%).  The record finally caught hold of me – not just the loud parts at the end of “Paranoid Android” and “Karma Police” that I already loved, but a lot of the more subtle songs like “Subterranean Homesick Alien” and “Lucky.”  I remember being surprised at how much I enjoyed the album and that it was strange that it hadn’t already caught on with me.  It hooked me in enough that afternoon to earn the repeated plays that burned most of that record into my brain.

One of the things that I love when I hear songs from OK Computer is the way the band utilized the studio to build their songs.  I’ve always loved the way they layered all of the different elements in “Let Down” – letting the vocal harmonies, the different guitar lines, and the crisp percussion weave together to create this sonic tapestry.  Ultimately, though, my favorite element is the way Thom Yorke sounds tunefully morose.  It’s this melodic gloom that makes the song work, drawing on both a beautiful melody and the banal details of life’s disappointments.  This is why I’m drawn to David Bazan’s version of the song.  His voice carries a similarly melancholy tone, but while Yorke easily slips into the electronic ether his bandmates create to the point where he occasionally sounds more like a musical instrument than a vocalist, Bazan stands at the front of the arrangement.  This is how Pedro the Lion’s version, recorded live in the studio, works as a more stripped down arrangement.  Even without the same layering effect that makes Thom Yorke sound oppressed and overwhelmed in Radiohead’s version, Bazan’s strained voice occasionally sounds exhausted.  If he’s not being crushed like a bug, Bazan sounds fatigued from all of the strain.  Yorke’s protagonist loses himself in his existence, where Bazan’s version makes him sound entirely human, and perhaps too tired to continue to create meaning in a meaningless world.  Still, some might find beauty in the struggle, and both Yorke and Bazan sing “Let Down” in a way that makes me agree.

More on Pedro the Lion: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: pedro the lion | 2006 | 2000s | jade tree | radiohead | david bazan | track comparison | cover song |
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