I like it. The bg vocals are interesting, the production is dense, the lyrics are cheesy in a great, bombastic way and the drumming is good as always. What can I say, I'm a fan boy. Hope I find out those are some Sean O'Hagan strings layered under there so I can live up to my name.
― afriendlypioneer, Tuesday, 1 May 2012 13:16 (1 year ago) Permalink
Meh. I wish I could say that there was something interesting about it, but I can't. The background vocals just sounded like the kind of standard, business-as-usual background vocals one would expect from a member of Super Furry Animals; well put together, yes, but all members of that band can do this kind of thing in the sort of state of sleep that this track is threatening to put me in. It doesn't sound like there's anything incredibly flash going on in the drumming department, either. Granted, the song doesn't call for anything but a basic 'Imagine'-esque backbeat, so in that sense the drumming works. However, it's not something that I would drag out and say 'Hey! listen to the drumming on this!'. These are minor complaints, though. The major complaint that I have with it is that it's not particularly very gripping: it meanders, it plods, there's very little in there that approaches a hook... and this is the first single!? It's probably fair to say that if the rest of the album is in the same vein as the tracks that have already been posted, then I'm really going to find this album a bit of a tedious, samey listen.
I did have to allow myself a little smile at that opening lyric, though: "Whatever happened to all the people who gave a fuck?", especially knowing that SFA's audience has been dwindling at a rapid rate since at least 2005. I suppose there'll always be a small portion of real hardcore fans (I loathe the term 'fanboys') that will passionately carry on devouring SFA's product both collectively and individually regardless of whether it measures up to the heights of their earlier work; and admittedly, there is nothing wrong with this at all and I'm not going to sit here and say that people are wrong for doing so. The band (and by extension, the solo careers of the people in the band) have become part of the identities of these fans, and I suppose there's a comfort in buying a record by your favourite artist(s) at a late stage in their career and knowing pretty much that what you're going to get is going to be something that is, at the very least, pleasing to the ear of a fan.
In my case, the music of both the band and the solo careers of those in the band just doesn't seem to have the same 'power' or 'hold' over me that it used to. I've pretty much exhausted all of the 'old' stuff through extensive listening over the years, and the very recent stuff just doesn't impress me to the level that their older work did. Also, at the same time, my listening tastes have been gradually shifting away from the type of music Super Furry Animals make both as a collective and individually. I genuinely find myself getting my kicks from other records by other bands that give me the same 'high' as Super Furry Animals used to, even if these other bands/other records don't sound anything like Super Furry Animals or their solo work. It happens. The group of people behind Super Furry Animals had a good 11-12 years of absolute devout fandom from me, which is a remarkably long time. There's a lot of bands that *don't* inspire absolute devout fandom from people for such a length of time. Even the biggest bands in the world have a revolving door of people that become hardcore fans who either gradually fall off or find their fandom cooling after a few years and move onto something else. Again, it happens. It's really as simple as that.
― The Jupiter 8 (Turrican), Tuesday, 1 May 2012 16:30 (1 year ago) Permalink
That's pretty much exactly how I've felt about They Might Be Giants, and they won me over again. Maybe there's some hope for SFA. Then again, my most recent SFA album is Rings Around the World.
― That's a pretty funky dance, Garfield. Show me how you do it. (frogbs), Tuesday, 1 May 2012 16:34 (1 year ago) Permalink
― That's a pretty funky dance, Garfield. Show me how you do it. (frogbs), Tuesday, May 1, 2012 4:34 PM (45 seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Yeah, I mean these things happen too! There's a possibility that in the future they may release exactly the right record at the right time for me, or in many years to come I'll come back to one of their older records with a fresh ear and I'll be like "hey, fuckin' hell! this is exactly what I want to hear!", and they'll win me back over and I'll get enthusiastic about the band/their solo stuff all over again. It's difficult to say when this could happen, but if it did happen I can't imagine I'd complain about it. For the moment though, I've definitely hit a bit of a brick wall/got a bit tired/got a bit bored with it all and I'm definitely getting my musical 'kicks', as it were, elsewhere.
― The Jupiter 8 (Turrican), Tuesday, 1 May 2012 16:51 (1 year ago) Permalink
Ha, I was thinking pretty much in these general terms myself, that they went from a band who meant a hell of a lot to me to a band that just lost me a bit. But yeah, maybe it'll come back, or maybe it's just me.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 1 May 2012 16:53 (1 year ago) Permalink
I kind of felt like I was getting bored with SFA for Lovecraft and Hey Venus, but they won me back with Dark Days/Light Years
I'm hoping they make another album at some point
― silverfish, Tuesday, 1 May 2012 17:11 (1 year ago) Permalink
So, about Cian's new song... what do the rest of y'all think?
― afriendlypioneer, Tuesday, 1 May 2012 17:39 (1 year ago) Permalink
http://soundcloud.com/e-l-k-1/gulp-game-love
Guto's thing. Might be a bit more of a change for you, Turrican.
― afriendlypioneer, Tuesday, 1 May 2012 19:47 (1 year ago) Permalink
Cian's album is fantastic. The lyrics are cheesy/heavy handed, but the songwriting is strong. I find the album more memorable than Gruff's last one, honestly. Strange.
― poppa11, Thursday, 2 August 2012 16:50 (10 months ago) Permalink