The National -
High VioletOK, The National. Depending on the day of the week, these guys are either 1)
actually pretty good, 2)
mildly annoying, or 3)
The Most Overrated Band in the World. So I guess now it's time to settle on a single opinion and stand by it. It'd be easiest to go with that last option, and a part of me would certainly like to. This band certainly has a disproportionately large and growing fanbase for the type of wholly unexciting Interpol-but-less-stupid indie rock that they peddle. (Or The Walkmen with lazy vocals instead of strained and frayed ones, if you prefer.) Of course then there's always that first opinion nagging at me, that they really aren't
bad enough to be
The Most Overrated Band in the World. So, predictably I guess, I'll settle on the middle option. It's probably the most honest, anyway.
In keeping with my contrarian stance towards this band's loyal fans, my favorite song on this album is their least favorite, opener "Terrible Love". I suppose I
like the fact that it's a demo as opposed to the grandiose, polished
~Majesty~ of the rest of the album. It mostly goes downhill from there with only a few moderately bright spots. I suppose I like "Afraid of Everyone" and "Bloodbuzz Ohio" (OK, so I'm in agreement with their fans there) to some extent but the lyrics to both kind of bug me. A lot of the lyrics on this album bug me, honestly. Their last album,
Boxer, was my introduction to this band, and I thought at the time that the lyrics were the bright spot, this band's big draw. Now I feel just about the opposite. I hate a lot of the word choices, the muddled imagery, the funereal cadence, and most of all the nagging insistence that it's all supposed to actually be
really meaningful. That "insistence" may just be in my head, a result of all of the hype, but I think the sweeping, downcast, cinematic music kind of supports it. The "melancholy" here is about as shallow and empty as it gets for me, though. Again, the lyrics confuse any feelings that the music might have given rise to, and the music isn't moving enough to ever overcome that. After those two tracks, the downhill plunge continues all the way to the end. "Conversation 16" is probably the worst offender. Just a lot of lyrical non-sequitors (for all I care, anyway) that lead up to a zombie metaphor ("I was afraid I'd eat your Brains"). I mean I guess because it's called "Conversation 16" it's supposed to sort of ramble around or something and be a little unfocused, but I find it, simply, irritating. Even if I can relate to some of this guy's self-deprecation, and even if all the lyrics have some brilliant underlying meaning that ties them all together, I just hate the way
they sound and the clumsy way that it all "fits" together. I don't even really want to talk about the last two tracks. The same criticisms pretty much apply. This stuff just isn't for me.
Rating:
6/10