SeepeopleS Return With the Urban Folkloric Examination of Our Habits of Psychological Self-Abuse in the Video For “Shame”

“Anti-genre” indie rock tricksters SeepeopleS (which includes Tim Reynolds of Dave Matthews Band and members of Mophine, Paliament/Funkadelic, Spearhead and Lynrd Skynrd) are back with a video by Pete List for the song “Shame.” In the melancholic colorings and tone of the song and the situation of what’s clearly a family splitting up. A father is shown arguing with a mom with the child looks on, fire bursting from the father’s mouth depicting the kind of heated rhetoric that happens sometimes when a relationship splits in the not at all amicable way. A tender guitar riff runs through even as the song reaches an almost orchestral climax. The song unfolds in slow blooms of melody and the vocals are regretful and introspective spelling out the ways one can become disheartened. Lines like “with every passing moment I struggle to believe in love” and “someone’s always crashing the bus, you get used to the horror, the pain” hit hard but then there are them moments of realization such as “Life is not a game or a labor, living isn’t waiting for an angel or a savior, it’s insane.” And the choruses that include the word “shame” use the word as a mantra as a reminder that being able to feel how you know things don’t have to let fear or the heartache color every moment of your life even when it all feels like a chain of misfortune and tragedy. One could take the line “Don’t be afraid because you’ll be dead soon anyway” as a resigned, cynical but the video puts it in a different kind of context. The kid seems to have absorbed the angry ghosts that had gathered around him and turned into an animal that goes on the run from his troubles only to find himself facing down an armored military faction from which he and others of his have to run but only escapes by turning into himself and witnessing what looks like his own funeral but it’s a meta moment as the animal spirit waves goodbye to the kid as if setting him free from the shackles of his own anxieties after a dream conflict of epic proportions. It fits a song that really is a journey through dark, existential realizations that seem to hit us as the absolute truth in those low periods in our lives when everything seems to pile up and seem completely insurmountable. But the song with this video shows us how we can build the monsters in our minds better than anyone else and dissolve them as well and we can take on the real world as it is once the internalized melodrama fades. Shame in this song serves many rhetorical and symbolic roles including our conscience, our ability to take on psychological baggage because of our cultural conditioning and an assessment of the world we see and what it shouldn’t be but too often is. It’s a catchy pop song but has unexpected depths. Watch the video on YouTube and follow SeepeopleS at the links below.

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The Worst Makes the Sudden Realization of One’s Own Role in Undermining Your Life Seem Survivable on “Monomania”

The Worst, photo courtesy the artists

The Worst’s single “Monomania” from its forthcoming second album Yes Regrets (out June 3 on RascalZ RecordZ) combines determined punk rock grit with power pop tunefulness. Singer Brooke Binion often gets compared to Joan Jett for a good reason because she has that sort of forcefulness but tonally her vocals are more reminiscent to these ears of one of Jett’s former bandmates in the Runaways: Lita Ford. The latter even on her more metal solo albums had/has a huskily melodic power in her voice. For the music video Joshua James Hand shows Binion performing on a dimly yet colorfully lit stage juxtaposed to running through fields of snow into a forest as though running from something and getting lost only to find a mirror that stops her in her tracks confronted by the person responsible for that desperate state of things. The song, as the title suggests, is about how we often pursue something thinking it’s what we want and need having convinced ourselves of the viability of that thing because it worked for us before. Specifically the chorus of “you go chasing feelings/you’ll be sorry every time” speaks directly to the cycle of undermining our lives that everyone can find relatable if you’re the kind of person that has a passionate streak. It can be hard to admit to your shortcomings and mistakes but this song by The Worst makes it somehow seem okay and absolutely necessary even if you stumble. Everyone does. Watch the video for “Monomania” on YouTube, follow The Worst at the links below and look out for Yes Regrets out June 3 with production by Will Holland and includes guest drumming from Nikki Glaspie (Beyoncé, The Nth Power) and features members of Morphine, The Distillers and SeepeopleS.

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SeepeopleS Mix Surreal, Fantastic Imagery With Tones of Melancholic Acceptance in the Video for “Two Silhouettes”

SeepeopleS, photo courtesy the artists

With figures animal heads (maybe a llama, dogs, rabbit, birds) frolicking as if in an animated collage of classical paintings and later fish swimming in the painting of a sea dissolving to reveal an aquarium in which one of the aforementioned figures is sprinkling in fish food flakes, the video for SeepeopleS’ single “Two Silhouettes” should seem extremely weird. But the delicate psychedelic, chill country pop flavor of the song makes the bizarre seem accessible especially if you’re already someone that has long appreciated the surreal and you grew up with Yellow Submarine, The Krofft Supershow series and Nickelodeon’s Calliope program. The shimmer on the guitar work like pedal steel in the context of the band’s genre-bending instincts this time threading chamber pop with countrified freak folk makes the tone of melancholic acceptance and wistful nostalgia of the song seem more poignant and hit a little harder. Songs about breakups can be a little corny but this one really expresses poetically how your limitations as a human and the little mistakes you feel you made can really come back to haunt you. Watch the video for “Two Silhouettes” on YouTube, connect with the pop rebels SeepeopleS at the links below and look for the release of the group’s eighth album Field Guide For Survival In This Dying World on their own RascalZRecordZ imprint later in 2022.

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