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- Aug 26, 2011
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I learned this week that the Mighty Mighty Bosstones are breaking up.
In my middle school years, they were a seminal band for me. I played saxophone in school, liked punk music and was teaching myself bass. At the time, the Bosstones were a perfect conglomerate for my musical development and their pop sensibilities helped me appreciate their music past my angsty punk middle school years.
"The Impression That I Get" was their one-hit wonder that got them international radio play but when I listen to it now in my mid-30s, I see it as a brilliant song. The narrator is a sheltered white man who's lived a life of relative ease and he's dealing with mixed feelings about whether or not he can handle real life pressures if/when faced with it. Just a genius narrative to explore in a pop song.
When done right, one can turn it into a lucrative career.The true genius is the dude getting paid just to dance. I love that.
Bez was in the band Black Grape one of the better funk electronic rock genre bands for just their 1st album which this song is on. I can acutely say is one of my favorites.
Bez was in the band Black Grape one of the better funk electronic rock genre bands for just their 1st album which this song is on. I can acutely say is one of my favorites.
I agree!Best album of the 90s, IMHO.
Heard this yesterday in the car. Not sure I have really appreciated what a great song this is, but yesterday it just registered. Guess I'm getting older too.
Heard this yesterday in the car. Not sure I have really appreciated what a great song this is, but yesterday it just registered. Guess I'm getting older too.
Are you kidding! When this song comes on you have to sing to it, it's just one of those songs. As for anyone in hearing distance? Oh well..... Like avalanche, too funny.It's an awesome song. Funny, I saw a New Orleans supergroup of sorts called Dragon Smoke at Stage One in Fairfield a few years ago and Ivan Neville, a pretty tough dude, covered it. He introduced it by saying something like "All you dudes out there, you know you sing this when it comes on the radio and you're driving in your car alone." And I absolutely do (but not afraid to sing it with others around either...).
Sometime in the past two years or so it dawned on me while singing it that what she's describing is actually an avalanche, or snow slide, but not a landslide. Since that time I have floated this theory twice when it came on around a fire with different groups of friends, and both times much comedy ensued as we tried to sing it with "avalanche" in place of "landslide" each time the refrain came around.
I learned this week that the Mighty Mighty Bosstones are breaking up.
In my middle school years, they were a seminal band for me. I played saxophone in school, liked punk music and was teaching myself bass. At the time, the Bosstones were a perfect conglomerate for my musical development and their pop sensibilities helped me appreciate their music past my angsty punk middle school years.
"The Impression That I Get" was their one-hit wonder that got them international radio play but when I listen to it now in my mid-30s, I see it as a brilliant song. The narrator is a sheltered white man who's lived a life of relative ease and he's dealing with mixed feelings about whether or not he can handle real life pressures if/when faced with it. Just a genius narrative to explore in a pop song.
Just heard this for the first time in a while on Meg Griffin’s weekly “Disorder” show; always loved this cover and now I am thinking I’d love to hear Alison Krauss and Robert Plant cover her cover:
Just heard this for the first time in a while on Meg Griffin’s weekly “Disorder” show; always loved this cover and now I am thinking I’d love to hear Alison Krauss and Robert Plant cover her cover: