Against my better judgment, I recently decided to listen to
the local rock radio station for a few days to catch up on developments in the
world of modern music. After two days of being subjected to the newest
offerings, I am ready to declare that rock lyricism is dead. The days of lead singers
plumbing the depths of their souls and slaving over layered allegories are long
gone, replaced by what I can only assume were words hastily jotted down on a
napkin at White Castle.
The first offender is Ohio-based rock outfit Foxy Shazam, a
band whose chart topper “I Like It” is a subtle tribute to the posterior of an
African-American female:
Verse Sample
My gangsta girl
With the wavy curl
And a sexy
Street talking slang
You mesmerize
Me and you mess with I
When you booty pop and drop it
Like it aint no thing
Chorus
That’s the
biggest black ass I've ever seen
(And I like
it, I like it)
That’s the
biggest black ass I've ever seen
(And I like
it, I like it, a lot)
(repeat ad nauseam)
While I can appreciate the ethnic
diversity expressed by the group, their delivery makes Sir-Mix-A-Lot seem
poetic. Plus, if her buttocks warrant such attention this poor woman may very
well be suffering from elephantiasis or some other chronic medical condition in
which case the lyrics may as well be “That’s the most debilitating case of Type
II Diabetes I’ve ever seen” (And I Like It).
The narrator does seem to have formed
a deep emotional bond with the young lady so I was dismayed when the song ended
without a resolution. Did she reciprocate? Did the “poppin’ & droppin’”
continue like it “ain’t no thang?” In my mind the couple is currently planning
a medieval-themed destination wedding and making plans to open a bail-bonding
service called “Big-Ass Bonds,” but I am a bit of a romantic……
The next offender is Canadian
collective Theory of a Deadman, whose single “Lowlife” is a high-brow ode to
those who exist outside the boundaries of acceptable societal norms.
Verse Sample
A
gun-packing, bitch-smacking, mess with me it's gonna happen
Loving life
living in sin
No sleeves,
can't read, doesn't even phase me
Naked,
sleeping like a baby tonight
I'm a
cash-stealing, drug-dealing loser without any feeling
Getting
trailer trash tonight
Chorus
'Cause I'm a
low life, and I'm loving it
I've got the
whole damn world in the palm of my hand
I'm a low
life, so f*****g deal with it
No you can't
change something that you don't understand
While a lesser group might have
simply declared the protagonist a lowlife and asked the audience to accept
their categorization on faith, T.O.A.D provides a wealth of empirical evidence
to support this classification. The citizen in question enjoys domestic
violence, narcotics trafficking, and embezzlement between bouts of extreme
inebriation. Of course, the career options for an armed, illiterate alcoholic
with anger issues are somewhat limited. Outside of starting a militia or
Canadian rock band the future can seem pretty dim.
The next offenders are Pennsylvania
rockers Halestorm, who latest single “Love Bites (And So Do I)” speaks to an
entire generation of men looking for a meaningless rebound relationship with an
overly-aggressive stranger.
Verse Sample
I slither
like a viper And get you by the neck
My lips are
pale and vicious. You’re foaming at the mouth.
They say
it’s blind they say it waits but every time it seals your fate
And now it’s
got you by the balls it won’t let go until you fall
You’ve
suffered in the darkness. I’ll suck the pain right out.
So come and
taste the reason I’m nothing like the rest.
I kiss you
in a way you’ll never forget about me.
Chorus
That bitch
can eat her heart out
Love bites,
but so do I, so do I.
Love bites,
but so do I, so do I.
Love bites!
One could reasonably argue that the devastation
of lost love is an inexhaustible source of material for songwriting; and while
there are a plethora of songs dealing with the emotional aftermath few, if any,
openly reference testicles.
While I am glad to see more women
fronting rock bands, I am just a bit confused by the serpent imagery. Is she
the snake? If she is the snake doesn’t it seem superfluous for her to suck out
her own poison? I cannot tell if this is a metaphor or a first aid course.
I do love it when lyricists utilize
commonly-occurring behaviors as the basis for their exclusivity. What makes her
unique? Is it the fact that she believes herself superior to the young man’s
previous love interest? For instance, if
your song gains popularity because a large number of people identify with the
line “I’m nothing like the rest” doesn’t that nullify the line’s meaning? Just
once I would like to hear a rock song that says, “While I may not make you
forget about her, I possess a nurturing disposition and understated sensuality
that she is unwilling or unable to showcase.”
While we can attribute the other
bands’ lyrical shortcomings to inexperience, the final entry has no excuse. Van
Halen’s long-awaiting David Lee Roth comeback album launched with the body-art
ditty “Tattoo”.
Verse Sample
I got Elvis
on my elbow and when I flex, Elvis talks
I got hula
girls on the back of my leg and she hula's when I walk
Best believe
that needle will hurt you
Best to see
these true colors than follow one of your false virtues
Chorus
Swap meet
Sally, tramp Stamp Tat
House-wife
to bomb-shell in the time it took to get that new tattoo
Tattoo Tattoo
Tattoo Tattoo
Show me your
dragon magic
Tattoo Tattoo
So
autobiographic
Including the title, the word
“tattoo” appears no less than 20 times in the song. Even for a guy whose sole
purpose is to provide marginally-palatable lyrical accompaniment to Eddie’s
playing this seems sub-par. While I do applaud the way he highlights body art’s
ability transcend one’s station in life (house-wife to bomb-shell) I think he
could have been a bit more specific. After all, a tastefully placed butterfly
could be alluring while a prominently-displayed Yosemite Sam might go the other
way.
Roth is also sending mixed signals
concerning his overall fitness level. While being able to “flex” one’s elbow at
57 is impressive, the fact that his legs jiggle so violently as to animate
several hula girls seems troublesome. To be fair, he does get somewhat
philosophical concerning a tattoo’s ability to “hurt you” by showing “true
colors”. At least I assume his intention was to pre-emptively warn would be
recipients of body-ink’s ability to convey one’s unspoken thoughts and not to
literally decry physical pain and unintended color saturation.
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