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Papalon wrote:Might not be that controversial, but I think the whole "no contact with fans" thing is a bit pretentious. At least talk to us a little bit.
kurt_cocaine wrote:The Campfire Headphase is their best album.
Tomorrow's Harvest was a massive letdown.
Valotonin wrote:What is the deal with people commenting the generic 'so comforting takes me back to childhood' on TH songs like Nothing is real etc etc. TH isn't like other Boc, man. Its delibrately provocative of fear and uncertainty and, in that respect, it fulfills its purpose very well. They had a goal with this one which was to make people think about certain subjects. I really honestly don't think that, despite respecting people's views, it is reflective of childhood or comforting or anything like that. That is what their earlier work does.
jcnporter wrote:Valotonin wrote:What is the deal with people commenting the generic 'so comforting takes me back to childhood' on TH songs like Nothing is real etc etc. TH isn't like other Boc, man. Its delibrately provocative of fear and uncertainty and, in that respect, it fulfills its purpose very well. They had a goal with this one which was to make people think about certain subjects. I really honestly don't think that, despite respecting people's views, it is reflective of childhood or comforting or anything like that. That is what their earlier work does.
It's funny you mention Nothing is Real, because it's probably the only song on TH that that sentiment applies to. I think that track's a stand out in the album in terms of both intention and mood - it's deliberately nostalgic.
The recurring keyboard loop screams '80s American TV theme' to me, it's so perfectly done (one of BOC's purest moments of genius, in my opinion) that I was sure it was a sample (perhaps it is) and takes me straight back to being a kid, although not necessarily in a 'comforting' way, as I don't think that's the aim of the tune.

kurt_cocaine wrote:The Campfire Headphase is their best album.
Tomorrow's Harvest was a massive letdown.
Wildfire wrote:kurt_cocaine wrote:The Campfire Headphase is their best album.
Tomorrow's Harvest was a massive letdown.
Hehe. My opinion is the exact opposite of that.
arvy wrote:jcnporter wrote:Valotonin wrote:What is the deal with people commenting the generic 'so comforting takes me back to childhood' on TH songs like Nothing is real etc etc. TH isn't like other Boc, man. Its delibrately provocative of fear and uncertainty and, in that respect, it fulfills its purpose very well. They had a goal with this one which was to make people think about certain subjects. I really honestly don't think that, despite respecting people's views, it is reflective of childhood or comforting or anything like that. That is what their earlier work does.
It's funny you mention Nothing is Real, because it's probably the only song on TH that that sentiment applies to. I think that track's a stand out in the album in terms of both intention and mood - it's deliberately nostalgic.
The recurring keyboard loop screams '80s American TV theme' to me, it's so perfectly done (one of BOC's purest moments of genius, in my opinion) that I was sure it was a sample (perhaps it is) and takes me straight back to being a kid, although not necessarily in a 'comforting' way, as I don't think that's the aim of the tune.
Deliberately nostalgic, but named Nothing is Real, deliberately delusional maybe ?

arvy wrote:Just like they said in one interview, in Come to Dust you building some sort a temple and after it's taken away from you...after that is just a complete futility...
Valotonin wrote:What is the deal with people commenting the generic 'so comforting takes me back to childhood' on TH songs like Nothing is real etc etc. TH isn't like other Boc, man. Its delibrately provocative of fear and uncertainty and, in that respect, it fulfills its purpose very well. They had a goal with this one which was to make people think about certain subjects. I really honestly don't think that, despite respecting people's views, it is reflective of childhood or comforting or anything like that. That is what their earlier work does.
Tarkus wrote:Valotonin wrote:What is the deal with people commenting the generic 'so comforting takes me back to childhood' on TH songs like Nothing is real etc etc. TH isn't like other Boc, man. Its delibrately provocative of fear and uncertainty and, in that respect, it fulfills its purpose very well. They had a goal with this one which was to make people think about certain subjects. I really honestly don't think that, despite respecting people's views, it is reflective of childhood or comforting or anything like that. That is what their earlier work does.
I think you could replace TH with geogaddi and your statement would make just as much sense.
warphead wrote:Along with Led Zeppelin, who never did interviews for most of their careers and used symbols and occultism and backward masking, there was a band called The Beatles
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_is_dead
Most of the stuff I read on twoism is nerds who love all this stuff. It's all a load of old bollocks. They (BOC) sit and write the tunes, and quite possibly 'others' inject all the other mystical nonsense into their music. Because their music is ripe for interpretation and has a certain fanbase who will see so much wood for the trees a woodland glade becomes a huge fucking forest.
It's all good fun though.
Valotonin wrote:warphead wrote:The Beatles
This is actually one of my favorite conspiracies despite not believing it personally.
lichtenberg94 wrote:Music Has the Right to Children and Tomorrow's Harvest are meant to be played together (;

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