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Archive for April, 2009

17 Days of Adore - Pug

Posted by Jason On April - 8 - 2009

adoreblog

Adore - Track 9 - Pug

The Pumpkins album of “arcane night music” continues with Pug, possibly the hardest rocking song on Adore.  Of course, we are speaking of Adore, so it’s not too hard, comparatively speaking.

Pug features the only semi-guitar riff on Adore.  I saw semi, because it’s played on a synth for part of the song.  This song really feels like Corgan going back to what he is familiar with as far as his songwriting goes, but is funneling it through a channel of electronics and drum loops.

The song focuses on the main riff, but really takes a turn when it hits the chorus.  Instead of a normal increase is volume and intensity, Pug steps back into an anticlimactic refrain, sprinkled with piano.

In my estimate, Appels + Oranjes and Pug are the best back to back songs on AdorePug once again showcases the maturity in Corgan’s songwriting when compared to previous works like MCIS or Siamese Dream.  On MCIS Corgan would opt for bombast, feedback, and guitar riffs when a song needed a change.  On Adore, Corgan uses well placed melody, atmosphere, and paints moods to build songs.

Listen to Pug

17 Days of Adore - Appels + Oranjes

Posted by Jason On April - 7 - 2009

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Adore - Track 8 - Appels + Oranjes

Appels + Oranjes is one of my favorite tracks on Adore.

The track evokes the electronics of bands like New Order and Depeche Mode, both bands Corgan sites as influences.  In fact, the Pumpkins covered Depeche Mode’s Never Let Me Down Again, which appeared on a compilation of Depeche Mode covers, and as a b-side on the Rocket single during the Siamese Dream era.

During the Adore recording sessions, Corgan took a different approach.

“I thought I was going to do this really different album,” Corgan told EQ Magazine.  “So typical me, I didn’t use any of my gear.  Like, any.  I went out and bought new guitars and strange amps…Most of my memories with Adore have more to do with programming.”

The success of Eye certainly gave Corgan confidence is his abilities to write with electronic instruments, and Appels + Oranjes showcases that more than any other song on Adore.

I don’t have any information on when the song was completed, but sonically it seems to fit in with early Adore era, post MCIS-era songs like Eye, and The End is the Beginning is the End.

The Adore sessions began with producer Brad Wood (Placebo, Liz Phair), but after an unsuccessful beginning, Corgan re-enlisted Flood to help him shape his ideas into completed songs.  Flood, who has worked with the likes of U2, Depeche Mode, and produced MCIS, was able to forge Corgan’s reels of 1-inch tape with the electronic Pro Tools sessions, and samples to give Adore a more cohesive feel.

Flood’s direction, and experience with bands like Depeche Mode, and Nine Inch Nails more than likely helped Corgan nail down the great sonic elements on Appels + Oranjes.

The song incorporates layer after layer of drum machines, ebow, and synthesizers.  Each one floating in and out at the perfect moment.  Pay special attention to the delay-drenched ebow that enters right after Corgan sings “What if what is isn’t true?”  This is a great example of using melody to fill vacant space.  Once again, the ebow takes center stage, adding to the spacey quality of Adore.

Appels + Oranjes showcases another signature Pumpkins trait: misspelling titles.  Corgan does this often.  Other examples:

Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness

Thru the Eyes of Ruby

Tonight, Tonite

Just to name a few.

Listen to Appels + Oranjes

17 Days of Adore - Crestfallen

Posted by Jason On April - 5 - 2009

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Adore - Track 7 - Crestfallen

After the epic guitar onslaught that was Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, it’s easy to see why Adore, and songs like Crestfallen would alienate Pumpkins fans.

Pumpkins fans, including me, were originally hoping to hear more songs like Bodies, BWBW, and Jellybelly.  Then Corgan and Co. released The End is the Beginning is the End on the Batman and Robin soundtrack, which introduced a new Pumpkins sound, infusing electronics with the dark, driving melodies we’d previously expected.

Another song, Eye, appeared on the Lost Highways soundtrack.  The song, which was originally written as an instrumental for Shaquille O’Neil (seriously), pushed forward with this new electronic sound.

At the time of the releases of TEITBITE and Eye, Corgan told fans they could probably  expect more music in this vein from the band on their upcoming release.  One reviewer even called the songs “full-energy chargers,” writing off any previous statements from the band saying the new album would “rock-less.”

When Adore finally hit the airwaves, many fans were underwhelmed by the album’s lack of guitar, and hard-hitting songs.  Corgan would later regret the miscommunication saying that if  he “would have told everyone Adore was the Pumpkins’ acoustic album we would have never had the problems that we had.”

After Ava Adore, and Perfect failed to meet label expectations as singles, Crestfallen was never released to radio, though it had been slotted to be the third single from the album.

Crestfallen was a broad departure from the classic Pumpkins sound.  The old-school drum machine beat, and rolling piano left little room for guitar.  Even the mix hides the slow strummed chords during the chorus.  They hide far in the distance, being heard only after the piano slowly decays.  Corgan’s vocals rest up front, showcasing his unique voice.

Lyrically, this song, and Adore in general, go far beyond previous Pumpkin albums.  Once again Corgan appears to sing from his heart, addressing what seems to be his broken relationship with his wife.  While songs like Jellybelly, and TEITBITE dealt in the abstract, Crestfallen lays it all out, leaving little room for interpretation.

The very end of the song ends with the sound of a closing door.  Probably signifying the end of a that period of his life, and possibly indicating the passing of his musical past.

Listen to Jellybelly from MCIS - What Fans Hoped For

Listen to TEITBITE - What Fans Expected

Listen to Crestfallen

Hope

Posted by Jason On April - 4 - 2009

Jason wrote “Hope” then made this video shortly after.  This performance is the first time he played completely through the song.

17 Days of Adore - Tear

Posted by Jason On April - 4 - 2009

adoreblog

Adore - Track 6 - Tear

After the quiet Once Upon a Time ends, Tear comes roaring through your speakers drenched in mellotron strings.

The song pounds away for a few bars, then drops out to Corgan’s vocals, and a quiet drum machine beat.  Tear is one of the least electronic songs on Adore.  It’s one of the few songs to feature real drums, which were performed by Matt Walker of Filter.

All in all, Tear is another one of the beautifully dark songs on Adore.  Lyrically, the song speaks of lost love, possibly dealing with Corgan’s divorce which was occurring during this period.     I don’t have a ton to say about this song.  It’s better to just listen and enjoy it.

Once again, for the live performance of Tear, the Pumpkins beef the song up with big guitars and aggressive drums.  I would love to hear the songs on Adore re-recorded as these live versions.  They would make a completely different album.

Listen to Tear

Listen to the live version of Tear

17 Days of Adore - Once Upon A Time

Posted by Jason On April - 4 - 2009

adoreblog

Adore - Track 5 - Once Upon A Time

Once Upon A Time is one of the high points on Adore.  The song really showcases Corgan’s songwriting ability.  Being a songwriter myself, I’m just astonished at some of the beautiful, subtle transitions in the song.  Particularly the transition at the end of the chorus.  It just flows so well.  The transition into, and out of the bridge is just perfectly written.

Lyrically, this is where Adore starts getting heavier.  While Ava Adore, and Daphne Descends seem more abstract, Once Upon a Time is bitterly honest and too the point.  At the time when Corgan wrote this song, his mother had been diagnosed with cancer, and would eventually pass away.  Corgan, being at the peak of his career reveals a lot of regrets about being away from his mother, and probably his family in general.

In Corgan’s career he usually opted for the abstract when it came to lyrics.  One of the reasons I love Adore so much is because the majority of it is just the opposite.  In places where Corgan would normally choose creative word-play, instead he opts for vulnerability.

Sonically, this song is great.  The use of the strings, the gentle drumming, and another appearance by the ebow make this song dreamy, and melancholy.  This song makes me ache…in the best of ways.

Listen to “Once Upon a Time”

17 Days of Adore - Daphne Descends

Posted by Jason On April - 3 - 2009

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Adore - Track 4 - Daphne Descends

I have to be honest with you.  Daphne Descends is not my favorite cut from Adore, but because it is on Adore, I still enjoy the song quite a bit.

The song features a lot of ebow, as does most of Adore.  If you’re not a guitar player, you probably have no idea what I’m talking about, so let me explain.

Ebow is short for “electronic bow.”  Instead of plucking a string with a guitar pick, you can use the ebow to get a feedback, or violin-type sound out of the guitar.  The device creates a magnetic field around the string, causing it to vibrate.  It’s really a gorgeous sound when used correctly.  You can hear the ebow when it enters at the very beginning of the song.  The tool has also been used in a lot of other songs, including With or Without You by U2.

Check it out on Wikipedia if you want some more info on the Ebow.

The song has a very dreamy, yet sinister quality to it, and features some unusual vocal harmonies.  On the album the song just kind of trots along, but live the Pumpkins beefed it up a bit.  The Pumpkins were known to have multiple versions of songs when touring, and although the live version isn’t that much different, the bigger guitar sounds, and heavier drumming really take this song to a different place.

Check Out the Album Version of Daphne Descends

Check Out the Live Version of Daphne Descends

17 Days of Adore - Perfect

Posted by Jason On April - 1 - 2009

adoreblog

Adore - Track 3 - Perfect

Perfect, more than any other track on Adore, reminds me of a period of my life.  It was the beginning of my junior year in high school.  I was running cross-country because our basketball coach wanted everyone on the team to be in shape before basketball season came around.

Every morning that fall I would have to get up around 5:30 am, and meet the team to run at 6:30 am.  Nearly every morning the video for Perfect would play on the TV as I ate my breakfast.  The song would play through my head as I ran through the backwoods of Missouri, trying to find my way back to school before class started.

It sounds like a bad memory, but every time I hear this song, I get what CS Lewis called a feeling of longing or joy.  Lewis described it as a painful type of joy, but the type that once you’ve felt it, you never want to give it up.  He explained this “joy” as our human longing for heaven.  It’s a  thirst that cannot be quenched on earth.

Lewis said he often felt this feeling a boy while reading books, and as an adult seeing beautiful art.  This song gives me that ache inside.  I have no explanation as to why, but when I hear Perfect, I ache to relive those memories from that period of my life.

Perhaps the video for Perfect subconsciously implanted this feeling in my brain. 

Perfect is often considered the sister song to 1979, off of MCIS.  So when the Pumpkins set off to make the video, they hired the same team of directors, and actors who created 1979.  They developed a storyline that would act as 1979’s continuation, tying the two songs together musically and visually.

Perfect would be the second, and final single for Adore, although To Sheila and Crestfallen would eventually be released on a promotional basis.  The song would also be remixed numerous times by artists like Nellee Hooper, and Puff Daddy.

Watch the video for 1979

Watch the video for Perfect

The Smashing Pumpkins performing Perfect on David Letterman

Like Waves, Like Sea - Lyrics

Posted by Jason On April - 1 - 2009

Like Waves, Like Sea (EP1)

Maybe You could tell me why
I keep pushing
Why I even try

All these thoughts
They temper me
They keep moving
Waving like the sea

If there’s a God
Looking down below
I hope He sees
All that He controls
And if He chooses
Not to intervene
Maybe it’s best
I don’t succeed

Maybe I have missed the point
Caught up in the
Details and the sort

I could fight to no avail
Though He slay me
I will not despair

(Chorus)

And I collide
With the fate I try to hide
Shaken to my roots

And all I know
Has been tossed and turned
Like waves, like sea

Maybe You could tell me why
Everything is broken
Turned up dry

If there’s a God
He’s looking down below
I hope He sees
All that He controls
And if He chooses
Not to intervene
Maybe it’s best
I don’t succeed

I hope it’s best
I don’t succeed

I trust it’s best
I don’t succeed

Icarus - Lyrics

Posted by Jason On April - 1 - 2009

Icarus (EP1)

Set the tether to the heavens
All things new
It’s the age of progression
Awake in you

Building towers to the sun
Like Icarus upon the sky in flight
Are we not the chosen ones?
In you, it’s me
In me, it’s always true

Who loves you more?
Loves you more than I can?
Who loves you more?
Loves you when the chemicals react

We’re gods below the surface
Dawns anew
Like ghosts among the atoms
Free from rule

Setting up the temple walls
Tying up the feathers to suspend
We are now the one and all
In you, it’s me
In me, it’s always true

Who loves you more?
Loves you more than I can?
Who loves you more?
Loves you with the wings upon my back
Who gave you all?
Gave you all that you have?
Who loves you more?
Loves you when the chemicals

React to the visions
React to the voices
React to the water
Below us, the end of all
React to the coming
React to the going
React to the fear
That we’re wrong
And not alone at all

Tell me if the armor cracks
Tell me if the clocks are turning back
Over, and over
The sun, the heats attacks

Who loves you more?
Loves you more than I can?
Who loves you more?
Loves you with the wings upon my back
Who gave you all?
Gave you all that you have?
Who loves you more?
Loves you when the chemicals