• In 1964, Simon & Garfunkel released the first recorded version of “The Sound of Silence” on their debut album Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M.  Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel performed the song under their old pseudonyms, Kane & Garr, in Greenwich Village in 1963. The song has been thought by many to be a reaction to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, though, the song was performed before that fateful November day in 1963. Paul Simon wrote the song in the bathroom with the light off so that he could concentrate on the echoes and the patterns in the tile. “The Sound of Silence” became a sleeper hit starting in the spring of 1965, a year after its parent album had been a commercial failure. A late-night DJ at Boston’s WBZ played the song and college students loved it. The folk-rock’s ambiguous and poetic lyrics resonated with the counterculture, the silenced young voices who felt unable to make a difference. Once the song gained popularity, producer Tom Wilson gathered session musicians to record a rock-dubbed version of “The Sound of Silence.” Wilson didn’t inform the duo that he had re-released the track because Simon & Garfunkel were “no longer a working unit.” 

    HELLO DARKNESS, MY OLD FRIEND. The remixed version of “The Sound of Silence” became a number 1 hit in America and charted in several other countries bringing Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel back together. The relationship between the duo was always tenuous. They recorded together until 1970 and reunited sporadically afterward. It’s hard to believe that “The Sound of Silence” is now 60 years old. It seems musically and lyrically evergreen. The song has appeared in movies and television shows, always adding a hint of the mysterious wherever it goes. It became one of the musical motifs in Arrested Development when Gob Bluth (Will Arnett) remembered something he was ashamed of before taking one of his “forget me nows” or a rufie that helps erase his memory. In 2015, the nu-metal band Disturbed released a cover of “The Sound of Silence” on their sixth studio album Indestructible. The band had previously covered Genesis’ “Land of Confusion” for their 2005 album Ten Thousand Fists. The cover of “The Sound of Silence,” though, gave the veteran hard-rock band their highest-charting Hot 100 hit. They made several TV appearances promoting the song and even earned the approval of Paul Simon who admired the interpretation. 

    IN THE NAKED LIGHT I SAW TEN THOUSAND PEOPLE, MAYBE MORE.  “The Sound of Silence” is a song about isolation and communication breakdown. Other themes such as religion, idolatry, and indifference make the song’s cryptic lyrics always relevant in contemporary life. In a particularly divisive year, Australian DJ CYRIL remixed Disturb’s cover of “The Sound of Silence,” making the Paul Simon-penned hit return to the charts 60 years after its first release. Disturbed’s gravel-voiced David Draiman delivered the band’s cover in a somber, gothic style with a piano creating a dreamlike landscape. The remix speeds up Draiman’s voice but keeps the gothic piano. Draiman’s voice gets more powerful and theatrical as the song goes on. Sped up, the remix feels a bit like a meme particularly when David’s voice becomes more dramatic. “The Sound of Silence” is a serious song and Disturbed is a very serious band with hard rock classics like “Down with the Sickness,” “Stupify,” and “Prayer.” However, taking to TikTok, Draiman lipsynced to the CYRIL remix, dancing to the club rhythm. I’m not sure how big CYRIL’s remix of “The Sound of Silence” is on the dance floor, though it charted pretty well on the dance charts. Still, it’s an interesting anti-escapist dance floor song. The issues of the day are far too important to turn off our brains in a 2010 Ke$ha, Katy Perry, LMFAO discotheque. We want to be mindful but forget about the seriousness for just a minute.

     

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    It’s time to play mixologist again and set my plan for the new month. This month, I decided to balance bleakness and hope. With its shortening days and gloomy weather, I’ve always found November to be one of the most depressing months. This year, the extra anxiety of the U.S. presidential election also influenced my picks. I always hold the power to shift songs around and change up the formula, and the next few weeks may do that for me. I tried to balance the nostalgic, the dark, and the shiny without giving a feeling too much weight. There’s a contrast I tried to build–the cold outside and warmth. Today’s song “Flights” by Falling Up, starts the month in a misty morning haze that is as mysterious as the day after Halloween, All Saints Day. Tomorrow, we’ll hear Jeremy Zucker’s anxiety lament “a dying world,” which turns into a warm hymn of hope. The playlist will shift to Stone Temple Pilots’ “Interstate Lovesong,” a nostalgic post-grunge ‘90s hit. The playlist will take several shifts from there with some of my go-to artists and a few new entries. 

    I don’t have much to say about today’s song, “Flights” by Falling Up. The song was one of the minor hits from the album, and when I saw Falling Up play at Cornerstone, Jessy Ribordy forgot the lyrics. They’re pretty forgettable, to be fair–it’s all atmosphere. So in the absence of words, just enjoy as the scene of November is set. It’s going to be a month of tension.




  • In 2007, it seemed like Mutemath would become a big Alternative Rock band with their breakthrough single “Typical.” With former members of the Christian Rock band Earthsuit, Mutemath had taken technical, jazz-influenced electronic music to late-night TV, on tour with The Fray and Matchbox Twenty, and to Alternative radio. The band’s self-titled album didn’t spawn any other charting singles, but their next move seemed like it would make them bigger. In 2008, Mutemath released “Spotlight” on the Twilight soundtrack. The song was even featured in the film in the scene when Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) and Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) are first seen together as a couple. The soundtrack boasted a strong collection of Alternative Rock songs by Muse, Linkin Park, and Paramore–overshadowing Mutemath’s contribution. Furthermore, inclusion in the soundtrack wasn’t particularly helpful as the vampire novel series and its film adaptations were polarizing with some young viewers loving the franchise and others mocking it. 

    JUST TAKE THE FALL. YOU’RE ONE OF US NOW. Mutemath released their debut album in 2006 and toured heavily for three years. In 2009, the band released their second album Armistice, which would include “Spotlight.” The title of the album tells a story about the recording process. Mutemath began as a project between former Earthsuit drummer Darren King and Earthsuit’s co-frontman Paul Meany. On the band’s debut record, Meany wrote most of the songs, co-writing only with former Earthsuit members Adam LaClave and Dave Rumsey on a few songs. By the time the band released their Reset EP in 2004, they had already recruited King’s friend Greg Hill as guitarist and Roy Mitchell-Cárdenas from Earthsuit on bass. The band began collecting song ideas while touring the first record for their follow-up, but internal conflicts caused them to scrap everything they had written. Rather than self-producing the album as they had planned, the band began working with producer Dennis Herring. The band decided to start the writing process for the album over again, scrapping the sixteen songs they had collected over the past three years. Herring’s involvement was what the band needed to metaphorically sign the armistice.

    BECAUSE EVERYONE WOULD RATHER WATCH YOU FALL. After “Spotlight” was released on the Twilight original soundtrack, the band released the album version of the song with an EP in January 2009 along with a remix of the song by Son Lux and two B-sides not included on their upcoming album. “Spotlight” begins like a horror film soundtrack but quickly takes on a rhythm uncharacteristic of a scary song. The instruments, like all Mutemath songs, are the star and the lyrics feel a bit underdeveloped. The song keeps a similar tempo but changes parts within each section. Claps, keys, and the driving guitar line give the song a frantic energy. While keeping the song’s pace, lead singer Paul Meany’s delivery along with the song’s production is able to convey a melancholy feeling at the beginning of each verse. The lyrics center on an unnamed second person “you” and convey a message of pressure, defeat, determination, and ultimately humility and camaraderie because the first plural “us” is in a similar state. There also seems to be Christian undertones, though, Mutemath’s career was one of trying to separate from Earthsuit’s Christian music career. “Spotlight” became a staple in Mutemath’s live concerts and the band filmed a music video for the song. It was never a hit, and while they held a moderate fanbase throughout their career until 2018 when all but Meany quit the band, Mutemath was truly a one-hit wonder. 


  • The cover of A Perfect Circle’s fourth album, Eat the Elephant, is the most macabre of the band’s albums. The supergroup had a career of creepy, conceptual work. The band’s 2018 album came after a lengthy hiatus after recording three albums between 2000 and 2004. The band formed when Billy Howerdel, the guitar tech for Nine Inch Nails, and eventually Tool, showed the lead singer of Tool some demos that Howerdel had been working on. Maynard James Keenan, Tool’s frontman, encouraged Howerdel to pursue the new musical project. Eventually, Keenan became the band’s lead singer after several other singers could not commit to the project. Tool went on hiatus and A Perfect Circle recorded their first album Mer De Noms. Every member of A Perfect Circle was also a member of other rock bands besides Howerdel. This would cause conflict throughout the band’s career, causing many replacements and breaks during Keenan’s duties with his main band.

    DO YOU RECOGNIZE THE SOUND AS THE GRAINS TRICKLE DOWN RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU? In 2004, A Perfect Circle released their third album, eMOTIVE. The album was hurried to be released on the presidential election day between George W. Bush and John Kerry. Maynard James Keenan had criticized Bush’s first term, particularly regarding the post-9/11 political climate. Guitarist Billy Howerdel had been mostly apolitical, but agreed with Keenan in releasing an album against “politically apathy.” Shortly after releasing the album of mostly musically re-arranged covers, the band went on a long hiatus. All members of the band became involved with other projects including Howerdel who started another project, ASHES dIVIDE. So involved with their other projects both Keenan and Howerdel were noncommittal about the future of A Perfect Circle both stating that the band may only play shows together or release singles. In 2018, A Perfect Circle returned with their fourth studio album, Eat the Elephant, a collection of songs recorded between 2010 and 2018. 

    A TEN NINER EIGHT! If eMOTIVE was an album inspired by the policies and the wars in the first George W. Bush presidency, Eat the Elephant appears to have some inspiration from the political climate surrounding Trump’s presidency, though it explores broader social themes as well. The album, released in 2018, deals with themes of societal division, political disillusionment, and the impact of social media. Maynard James Keenan has explained that the songs are more about the overwhelming nature of the world’s problems and the frustration with society’s passivity rather than targeting one individual. However, he’s acknowledged that the divisive and chaotic political landscape of the Trump era—along with other global issues—influenced the album’s tone and messages. Some tracks, like “The Doomed” and “Disillusioned,” reflect the bleak outlook on society’s moral compass and the consequences of ignoring pressing issues, which were felt to be heightened in the climate of that time. Rather than a direct critique of Trump himself, the album serves as a broader reflection on the sociopolitical atmosphere in which his presidency played a significant role.

    AS THEY BARBECUE THE SENTINELS AND EAT THEM RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU. The songs on Eat Elephant are experimental, even for A Perfect Circle’s standards. “Hourglass” is a bleak song that uses electronic voice manipulation and Maynard James Keenan’s theatrics. Keenan uses frightening images, particularly of violence against animals and plants, ultimately warning of the collapse of ecosystems because of human greed. The Tokyo Kitty references how the Japanese noticed that cats died quicker than humans when eating fish with mercury poisoning. Swallows were used to check the extent of pesticide poisoning, and canaries were used to check if a coal mine was safe from carbon dioxide. In all cases, the “sentinel species” would die for humans to survive. In “Hourglass,” bad people take their sacrifices for granted. The chorus of the song speaks of the inevitable breakdown of Plato’s five regimes, listed in  The Republic, Book VII, plus an American addition “Republicrat,” a combination of the two major parties. Every form of government eventually breaks down, according to the song leading to tyranny. The unnerving end of the song is a countdown that doesn’t end on “1,” but rather resets itself. When will everything break down? It’s political Halloween, ya’ll! The real monsters are in Washington.

     

  • In 2005, when Kids in the Way released their sophomore album, Apparitions of Melody, the band challenged their listeners to a new sound. The band’s first album Safe from the Losing Fight was full of serious emotional punk rock songs. The first one on the album, “We Are,” was a kind of introduction to the band. What was probably meant to be a comment on parenting in America as boomer parents in the 80s and 90s sometimes viewed their children as an obligation to work around busy work schedules and personal lives, ultimately made the band sound immature. If the first album was about childhood, the second album was certainly an angsty teenage one. The album’s first single, the title track, was accompanied by a stormy music video in which they wore all black and performed in a CGI tornado. 

    THESE DEAD LETTERS WON’T SURVIVE. Kids in the Way’s stylistic change was toward the gothic and emo. Singer Dave Pelsue incorporated more screaming in the verses of the songs on Apparitions of Melody, giving the album a post-hardcore style. As a result, many of the songs were not radio-friendly like the band’s first album, which had three singles. When the band released Apparitions of Melody, many Christian Rock bands started to crossover to rock radio. Flicker Records labelmate Pillar had a hit with the song “Fireproof,” in 2002,  also from their second album. In 2006, Kids in the Way re-released their sophomore album, rearranging the tracklisting similar to how Pillar had re-released Fireproof. Apparitions of Melody: The Dead Letter Edition also featured music videos from the band’s career and a new song called “Fiction.” The new song was released to Christian radio and was accompanied by a music video, though the song never charted on non-Christian radio charts. The dark Emo song felt like the band was trying their best for radio. Replaced were the shrill screams or the sometimes overbearing vibrato of Pelsue’s voice with a steady, yet deeply emotional tone. The music was tight, too. Bass and drums led to the palm-muted guitar verse and then to the anthemic chorus. 

    I HAD THE STRANGEST DREAM… Like much of Kids in the Way’s discography “Fiction” was a song that wasn’t purely spiritual. The cryptic lyrics deal with loss and memories, often misremembered. The speaker claims “We’re making fiction of our lives” yet “burning pages as we write,” implying that the writer is intentionally changing the story, perhaps to make him or herself look better compared to the actual events. The bridge offers a rebuke: “We are not poets / We have no right to make amendments.” Fiction is the answers to the dead letters, unanswered correspondence, between two parties once closely associated.  Fiction is the stories that make me the hero and another person the villain. Fiction is the ideologically lost cause we fight for when a closer examination shows us that our world is really narrow and that we should give up those ghosts. The speaker views fiction as a flawed, temporary solace—a means of self-deception that ultimately cannot hold up against the realities of life. Fiction doesn’t survive the burning pages or the passing of time, and the speaker seems to realize that, in the end, stories don’t change the truth; they merely mask it, leaving behind only ashes and unfinished, unresolved emotions. But this is only one view of fiction. Fiction as a metaphor explores truth that is too painful to see directly. As a metaphor, fiction instructs and broadens our worlds. Fiction is a tool to be used or abused.

     

  • When Red‘s producer Rob Graves posted on Twitter a picture of a note on Red’s guitars tuned to “A#, A, and G,” some fans thought that the band’s third album would be heavy. The band experimented with recording on the road during their whirlwind touring schedule from their second album Innocence & Instinct, arranging hotel mattresses to create a makeshift studio. For their third album, the band brought a portable case that unfolded into a mini recording studio. When waiting for a show to start at the venue, the band could flesh out ideas, many of which came from their former guitarist Jasen Rauch, who had stopped touring with the band to take a job closer to his family. Rauch remained a member of Red until he joined Breaking Benjamin in 2014. Rauch contributed guitar parts which the rest of the band built songs around for their  February 2011 album Until We Have Faces.

    YOU MUSTN’T DISAPPOINT THEM. Red’s third album takes its name from the 1956 C. S. Lewis novel Till We Have Faces. The band delivered a more cohesive, harder rock sound than previous efforts with songs like  “Faceless,” the album’s opener “Feed the Machine,” and “Lie to Me” (Denial). A theme the band explored in the album’s lyrics about finding one’s identity, particularly in the singles “Faceless” and “Feed the Machine” as well as the album’s closer “Hymn for the Missing.” The hard rock opener “Feed the Machine” sets a heavy tone for the album, venturing away from symphonic, classical composition—though composition and strings do finish the song and make appearances on the album. Until We Have Faces tightens the templates from the band’s first two albums, deepening their commitment to hard rock. The heavy guitar guitars and lead singer Michael Barnes’ scream give the songs a renewed energy lacking in the two previous albums.

     

    GO BACK TO SLEEP.  In “Feed the Machine,” Until We Have Faces’ second single, Red constructs the “machine” as a metaphor for oppressive systems or societal pressures that demand conformity and submission. The accompanying music video sees the band members and others as part of a world in which people are plugged into a machine that transforms them into soulless soldiers. If soldiers become lucid, they are sedated until once again compliant. The metaphor of the machine is a trope in rock music, often referring to governments, corporations, or specific industries, like in Pink Floyd’s “Welcome to the Machine,” targeting the exploitative practices of the music business. Red’s Christian rock background uses an unexplained faceless machine as a possible metaphor for the worldly structures Christians war against. The song is vague enough to allow listeners to attach their own meaning and angry enough to lead listeners to the front line of their own causes!


     


  • A month before releasing The Thrill of It All  in October 2017, Sam Smith began dating actor Brandon Flynn. Smith’s sophomore album dug into the singer’s misfortune with love and religion in a record full of soulful, almost Gospel-inspired songs. But in June 2018, Smith and Flynn seemed happy as an Instagram-official couple. Smith told V Magazine, “I’m in a relationship for the first time; I think I deserve to be happy.” But by June, the relationship had ended. Following Sam Smith’s break up, the singer began releasing singles, which were intended for a new album. First was a collaboration with Calvin Harris called “Promises” and a song, “Fire on Fire,” for the Netflix original animated limited series Watership Down based on the novel of the same name. Then Smith changed musical directions leaning into a much more pop-oriented style. 


    AS I WANDER DOWN THE AVENUE.  Sam Smith began full pre-album promotion in 2019 starting in January. “Dancing with a Stranger” was a fresh sound featuring former Fifth Harmony member Normani. The song was a resolution to get over an ex with “somebody new.” Next Smith released the Max Martin produced “How Do You Sleep,” a danceable lullaby about deep betrayal.  After releasing a fifth single to be included on their third album, a cover of Donna Summer’s “I Feel Love,” Smith released what was intended to be the title track to the album “To Die For” in February 2020. Smith ended up delaying the album from May to October, changing the title to Love Goes… out of sensitivity for the victims of the Covid-19 pandemic. “To Die For” continues on the themes of pain and loneliness in the other songs that had been released for the album. In the ballad, Smith laments about the absence of a lover stating that they “just want someone to die for.” The song samples dialogue from Jake Gyllenhaal and Katharine Ross in the 2001 film Donnie Darko. The scene sampled is when Donnie (Gyllenhaal), under hypnosis with therapist Dr. Thurman (Ross), confesses that his deepest fear is being alone.  


    WHILE MY WORLD’S CRASHING DOWN. Sam Smith’s masterful sample of the cult film Donnie Darko along with the creepy music video for “To Die For” got me thinking about the themes in the film and how relevant they were for the time and still relevant now. The film is set in a fairly politically conservative Catholic community in Middlesex, Virginia, around Halloween and the 1988 presidential election between George H. W. Bush and Michael Dukakis. The presidential election is a subtle motif in the film symbolizing a perceived fear of losing conservative values of the Reagan administration, contrasted with Donnie Darko’s quest for knowledge of time travel by the suggestion of an ominous rabbit that speaks to him. That thirst for knowledge causes him to question the existence of God. The film was released in theaters on October 26, 2001, eight months after George W. Bush took office. The film’s ad campaign—slated to be a Halloween psychological thriller—was pulled due to the trailer containing a plane crash—the film was cursed with timing being released a little over a month after the terrorist attacks of September 11. In 2020, the global pandemic caused Sam Smith to delay and rework the album To Die For. The year was a turning point election year, and Americans voted out of fear of incompetence of the previous administration.  Halloween is once again upon us. It is also an election year. Again the world’s fears influence our votes. But this time the conservative values of 1988 look very different and the mental gymnastics one has to do to understand the difference between labels like “conservative” and “liberal” are harder to master. It’s usually not the best to vote out of fear, but this time the fear of fascism, global war, a collapsing economy, and the portension of climate change all influencing our votes like the otherworldly bunny that haunts Donnie Darko throughout the film. Sam Smith’s quest to find someone they love so much to “die for” comes from a post-1988 world in which many countries have given queer couples rights not only to exist but thrive. But in 2024, the time loop’s gravitational pull is beckoning us to go back. 




     



    Read the lyrics on Genius.


  • In 2012, Family of the Year released their second album, Loma Vista. This album was noticed by several publications, from Entertainment Weekly to Billboard, and the band performed its second single, “Hero,” on several late-night shows. They played many festivals and began building their name among other ‘10s indie and alternative acts like GROUPLOVE and WALK THE MOON. In 2014, the song was featured in a pivotal scene toward the end of Richard Linklater’s film BoyhoodIn 2015, the band released their self-titled album which was not as commercially successful as their second album Loma Vista. The band released a fourth album, Hello Sunshine, Goodbye Nighttime, in 2018 before going on hiatus “Due to personal circumstances beyond [their] control.” In 2021, the band released a single and have since released several singles both solo and collaboratively since then. Time will tell if we will have more music from Family of the Year. 


    FEATHERS AND FACEPAINT IS ALL THAT SHE WEARS. Family of the Year was founded by brothers Joseph (guitars and lead vocals) and Sebastian Keefe (drums, backing vocals) who played in several bands in Boston, most notably The Billionaires. Family of the Year formed in Los Angeles with James Buckley on guitar and backing vocals and Christina Schroeter on keyboards and backing vocals. The band was modeled on folk music popular in the ‘60s and ‘70s and incorporates textured vocal layers with every member singing at times. While Joseph is almost always on male lead vocals, occasionally Christina takes lead vocals. The band has drawn comparison to Fleetwood Mac and touring-mates Edward Sharpe and the Magnificent Seven for this sound. While Family of the Year may be influenced by folk, their sound is far from the Nashville song, avoiding twang and any notion of country music opting for a Los Angeles studio-corrected sound. On the band’s third album, Family of the Year, they flirt more with rock than their previous efforts. Songs like “Facepaint” and “Dead Poets” demonstrate how folk influences a harder rock sound. 


    WATCH AS THE ANIMALS GATHER AT HER FEET. Family of the Year’s “Facepaint” is a song full of images about a free-spirited girl. The repeated imagery of “feathers and facepaint” emphasizes her unique, almost shamanistic style, suggesting that she might represent a symbol of freedom, mystery, or rebellion. The lines “Up on the mountain, down on the street / Watch as the animals gather at her feet” reinforce her elevated status. She’s admired, almost worshiped, as an enigmatic figure that both transcends and connects to the rawness of nature. The speaker sings with a great admiration for this New Age/ perhaps Native American holy woman. The chorus line “She got so high that she’ll never get down” can be interpreted both literally and metaphorically. It might refer to a literal high from substances, suggesting her escapist tendencies. Metaphorically, it implies that she’s ascended to a place emotionally or spiritually that separates her from others, perhaps even alienating her. This height she’s reached could be a sort of untouchable, elevated state, reflecting her distance from the ordinary world. Musically, the song takes harmonies from folk and rock electric guitars. The layered vocals give the song a spooky, campfire feel, and that is why it makes my late fall playlist close to Halloween. 


    Read the lyrics on Genius.