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“Zero” – Yeah Yeah Yeahs
(Words/music: Yeah Yeah Yeahs, available on It’s Blitz!, Interscope 2009) 

I don’t have a specific date and time for it, but otherwise I can pinpoint the exact moment when I knew I was in love with “Zero.”  It was some time the end of last winter / beginning of last spring when I was driving toward a toll booth on a Friday afternoon, well-caffeinated and generally enthused to have an entire weekend ahead of me.  It was at this moment where I was in a battle with the tiny Karen O trapped in my car stereo for the louder vocals on the chorus.  Without realizing it, I started belting out the words I knew at a volume that would have disturbed any cars next to me.  Over the next few seconds, I felt embarrassed at my complete immersion in the song, relieved that it was still cold enough to have the windows up, and bewildered at this unexpected reaction to the song. 

Even if “Zero” isn’t as noisily confrontational as some of the band’s earlier output, it still thrives on an in-your-face intensity.  Given the artwork accompanying the song (the shattered egg and fist album cover and eyeball surrounded by lips on the single), “Zero” provides enough of a spectacle befitting such striking images.  From the rapid-pulse synthesizer opening to the track through the siren-like squeals in the final minute, the track sounds like a giant neon sign demanding attention.  Karen O sits right in the middle of this neon spotlight; however, rather than command the limelight, she plays it relatively cool.  Sure, she’s still in-your-face lyrically (the hook is “you’re a zero,” after all), but vocally she never crosses back to the screams or snarls she once brandished.  Instead, she bears some of the nuances in her voice, specifically the way it quickly dips on a low note or strains to reach a high note.  Even without her theatrics, Karen O still sounds as arresting and compelling as ever, discovering how she can still sound strong without the same strain.

More on Yeah Yeah Yeahs: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: yeah yeah yeahs | karen 0 | 2009 | 2000s | interscope | car sing along |
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[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

“Maps” – Yeah Yeah Yeahs
(Words/music: Yeah Yeah Yeahs, available on Fever to Tell, Interscope 2003)

I’m always fascinated to see how the emotional resonance of certain lyrics creeps into the musical part of the composition.  Sometimes we’re drawn to happy songs that sound sad or sad songs that sound happy, perhaps because of the novelty and perhaps because it lets us hear what we want or need to hear in a variety of different moods.  Still, I’m always attracted to songs that present a unified front – songs that display emotions not just in the lyrics but in the music as well.  While the emotional resonance within the listener depends on the circumstances revolving around the person listening and reacting to the song, the emotions a narrator experiences within a song might spill out into the rhythm and melody as well.

Maybe it’s from watching the tear-streaming video one too many times, but I imagine Karen O’s narrator as someone trapped in heartbreak.  In the verses, she’s repeating words, contradicting herself, and generally sounding lost.  She sounds like she’s pacing around inside her own head, unsure how she arrived where she is and hesitant about where to go next.  Meanwhile, the drums pound heavily around her like the emotional baggage weighing her down.  Nick Zinner’s guitar sounds like her pulse steadily quickening.  Then, when she finally musters up enough courage to say something – even if it’s just pleading for her lover to “wait,” – the music explodes along with her.  Rather than pounding down on her, the sound feels like it’s radiating off of her (or at least reflecting outward).  Maybe I’m just hearing what I want to hear, but this might be why “Maps” hits so deep with so many people – that the musical shifts work in tandem with the lyrics, reinforcing the shifting moods Karen O sends her narrator through.

More on Yeah Yeah Yeahs: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: yeah yeah yeahs | karen o | 2003 | 2000s | interscope |
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