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Den wrote:I feel this too right now. The second section sounds like the band on the cover of Societas X Tape playing a pastiche (as someone mentioned earlier) of a BOC song live. And it’s one of the less hi-fi sounding songs on the album, which accentuates the mixtape quality of Inferno. I’m just wanting to emphasis that there are aspects of this track - despite its explicit references to their sound - that is unlike anything they’ve ever released before. I’m still perplexed.
mechanismj wrote:2020k wrote:Quote this when it makes you cry.
I was just so pumped on adrenaline when this one hit at the listening session. I was beaming.
Last night I did my second playthrough of the album. Headphones, laying on the floor. It hit me much harder. Instant classic.
Just played the album for the third time. Listened on the home stereo while sitting on the couch with my wife. This song broke me this time. I knew it was going to eventually. Overcome with a sense of feeling super grateful that I got to share something like this with someone I love. I am grateful that we all made it to this point and we all got to experience this. In the midst of everything, this feels like a special time I will not ever forget it.
Fucking incredible song. It feels like a gift. It joyfully and tastefully hits so many of the past BoC tropes most of us know and love. It is truly the HOLD MY BEER song on the album.
Corny or cringey? Sure, whatever. I have been waiting 13 years to feel exactly this feeling. It was fucking worth it.
drvaughan wrote:Something about the opening chords, the feel of them, and that first half - the best way I can describe it is feeling like a convergence of the past and the future, like holding your newborn baby and thinking about your dead father.
I think this song is the emotional payoff of the album, but it has to be accessed by listening to the album in full. It's the emotions and experiences of the other songs that give this song its power.
I don't think anyone's "doing it wrong" if they're not putting it with the rest of the album; I just mean the song seemed to gain a lot of power once the experiences from the previous tracks are loaded into it, similar to how "Corsair" has the feel of wide-eyed, hard won knowledge or insight that comes after a significant psychedelic experience (the preceding events of Geogaddi).
drvaughan wrote:
So happy to read something like this about this song. I had a similar experience with it a few days ago.
I first heard the album at an in-store event with my cousin and his wife. My cousin and I got into BoC back between Geogaddi and TCH. Hearing this song in the same record store (they changed locations, but it's the same store...record store of Theseus?) I bought my first BoC album (MHTRtC), not to mention several more after, really felt like a full circle moment. When the second half came on, I immediately thought of "Everything You Do..." and was really looking forward to hearing it in more detail later.
I've gone through the whole album probably 5 times at this point, and several songs have been on repeat outside of the tracklist proper, but this past Friday I had the opportunity to enjoy the album alone with some magic tea. My wife was out of town at a retreat, so I was by myself.
As I went through the album, I kept thinking about this song approaching and the other tracks in relation to it. I knew I would have to "deal" with it when it arrived, and sure enough, I got emotional and teary when it came around.
Something about the opening chords, the feel of them, and that first half - the best way I can describe it is feeling like a convergence of the past and the future, like holding your newborn baby and thinking about your dead father. The song felt like a node or a meeting place of what has happened in our lives and what meaning those experiences will take as they inform our futures. The weight of the dead and the laying down of burdens; reconciliation and coming to terms. The future pulling us away from those who've passed, who are retreating into time and space.
I think this song is the emotional payoff of the album, but it has to be accessed by listening to the album in full. It's the emotions and experiences of the other songs that give this song its power. I felt a lot of genuine emotion in "Age of Capricorn" and "Memory Death," for example, but in a sense those emotions ended up being ingredients that contribute to the fullness of "You Retreat..."
Once "Platonia" was over, I sat there in silence for a bit and then texted my wife the type of thing you text after you've cried alone on the floor from drinking magic tea. I then decided to put this track away for a bit and haven't listened to it since; I think I want to keep it from becoming like overchewed gum.
All this to say that I don't get a cheesy, cringey feel from the track. I don't think anyone's "doing it wrong" if they're not putting it with the rest of the album; I just mean the song seemed to gain a lot of power once the experiences from the previous tracks are loaded into it, similar to how "Corsair" has the feel of wide-eyed, hard won knowledge or insight that comes after a significant psychedelic experience (the preceding events of Geogaddi).
Den wrote:I feel this too right now. The second section sounds like the band on the cover of Societas X Tape playing a pastiche (as someone mentioned earlier) of a BOC song live. And it’s one of the less hi-fi sounding songs on the album, which accentuates the mixtape quality of Inferno. I’m just wanting to emphasis that there are aspects of this track - despite its explicit references to their sound - that is unlike anything they’ve ever released before. I’m still perplexed.
lumpenprol wrote:Den wrote:I feel this too right now. The second section sounds like the band on the cover of Societas X Tape playing a pastiche (as someone mentioned earlier) of a BOC song live. And it’s one of the less hi-fi sounding songs on the album, which accentuates the mixtape quality of Inferno. I’m just wanting to emphasis that there are aspects of this track - despite its explicit references to their sound - that is unlike anything they’ve ever released before. I’m still perplexed.
Not that different from, say, "Poppy Seed (Reprise)". And no more-pop-oriented than "Dayvan Cowboy". Sort of a mash-up between Poppy Seed Reprise and 84 Pontiac Dream outro, actually...
mechanismj wrote:LOVE reading your experience, drvaughan! 100% agree with You Retreat having a more powerful impact in the context of the album. I am trying to only listen to it in that way.
Slight change of gears here but, you all hear the She is P drums in there, yeah?
drvaughan wrote:mechanismj wrote:LOVE reading your experience, drvaughan! 100% agree with You Retreat having a more powerful impact in the context of the album. I am trying to only listen to it in that way.
Slight change of gears here but, you all hear the She is P drums in there, yeah?
Thanks! Glad it's resonating with some of us here.
I'm not sure I hear the drums. I hear something kinda sorta similar, but I personally can't claim they're the same. Sounds like a similar pattern though (kick/snare/kick...kick kick/snare). Maybe the hi hats and production on AFOT is also doing some work in obscuring it for me. And who knows; they may have tinkered with it enough to repurpose it. If so, it would definitely fit the overall mood and title of the track. What a callback!
Funnily enough, looking at the artwork for AFOT, it says "all live drums by Mike," basically the same credit on Inferno. Which now makes me wonder if Mike is usually the one behind the kit.
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