Wednesday, 10 June 2015

Snarky puppy - Quartermaster

Instrumental songs are great because they don't impose any specific meaning to the song through lyrics, compelling each listener to craft his/her own tapestry. Most of the songs by snarky puppy are instrumentals and are quite brilliant.

One of the major reasons I like snarky puppy,  especially this song is that it reminds me of Mumbai. It has more instruments than you would normally want, yet without even one it would lose its unique character. The dirtiest funk combines with beautiful melodies and takes you on a twisted, turning path.

At one point, after a particularly coordinated section, the song descends into chaos, with each instrument tracing is own unique way. The chaos keeps building up, the song bursting at the seams, exploding, before finally giving way to a pleasant melody on just the piano. This song, like the city I live in, really makes you feel alive.

Monday, 8 June 2015

Ed Lewis & Prisoners - Tom Devil

I choose a song hard to relate to, an old song from the times of cultural stigma that have thankfully died away. The beauty however lies not in trying to relate to the man's reality, but the atmosphere he creates for himself.

Lyrics are difficult to find, harder to decipher. But it doesn't matter - As the song's straightforward tune kicks in, all you need to gather is a simple man's simple way to pass his time, a simple path to take him temporarily away from his reality, carried away by the unanimous chants of his peers.

One can't help but hum along, tap their feet to the ground, feel as if you are right there, toiling away along with the men, and in fleeting moments, wishing to be there, feeling the hope & the vibes of oneness with people.

I think that is the principal beauty of the song; despite their situation, it showcases the hope & unity they feel; it shows a strong human being's stronger will to spot diamonds among the rough.



Lyrics (more-or-less) by "Matty" - http://talkrational.org/showthread.php?t=15337

Sunday, 31 May 2015

Jaymay - Sea Green See Blue

A black coffee in a pointless morning with this song in a zero bass filter within a low audible range and you know you can safely skip your meditation sessions, for this song liberates your mind of all the cares in the world (Unless your house is on fire). From Grand Central Station to Montreal, the beautifully crafted conversations and imagery that have been skillfully handpicked from her inventory of life experiences, begs you to shut your eyes and listen to her paint the lyrics into moving pictures of travel and loss. The soothing melody hums in between the chorus is a signature mark in its own and sways you from one frame of the story to another. It is these simple yet striking pieces of melody that remain in your head whatever the lyrics, it is what you take away from the song along with the repetitive title (of course).

Quote Best Lines
"The Sculptor we hardly knew,
his limbs were lying askew,
sea green, see blue"