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TITLE: A Special Report on the Frontlines of Generational Angst ARTIST: Sam Thatcher WRITERS: Sam Thatcher LENGTH: 3:52 GENRE: Folk, folk rock, folk blues, soul PRODUCER: Sam Thatcher It's hard to know what to expect out of an album like this, especially from an artist that has never before released any music to the public before now. Sam Thatcher was sure that he was going to catch his audience off-guard when he started his album with a song like "A Special Report on the Frontlines of Generational Angst," which is a song about dating older women, and he certainly did. Sam is quick to show off his range within the first few songs of the album before settling into a more mellow, slow sound, but until he reaches that point, he takes his time with track one, showing off how he sounds with a big band playing with him.
The first thing the listener hears when the song starts is a bass guitar strumming out some low, very soulful notes before being joined by a small group of stringed instruments (violins and cello), who follow the same notes that the bass is playing. It's an easy, very bluesy beat, like the type you would hear in a coffeeshop or relaxed bar, and that relaxed sound is increased when the strings fade out, giving room to Sam's voice being heard for the first time on the album. His voice is low and husky, but also very clear. He doesn't seem to be trying very hard to gets the notes out - almost like he were singing to himself rather than for a recording that's going to be shown to the world. He sings directly to the woman the song is about, telling her that the problem with dating a girl like her is that when they go out (he uses the example of going to an Egyptology exhibit at a museum), he could explain canopic jars to her, and she'll look at him, thinking, "You're younger than me, and know things I don't, and that scares me." When he sings, "and that scares me," the strings come in for their big band sound again, making Sam's voice much more passionate as he sings the fears of this woman he's dating. The strings fade out before the second verse begins - this verse follows much of the same beat as the first one, maintaining a very easy sound as Sam sings about him and his older girlfriend walking around the Egyptology museum, and his girlfriend asks him if the mummies could have ever predicted that one day they would be on display. Sam sings that questions like that make him feel like he's on display, and he looks at her, thinking, "You'll be that corpse before I'm that corpse, and that scares me." The strings come in one the "and that scares me," part again, as they had in the verse before, and follow him into the chorus.
His passionate voice sings out about how his girlfriend's perfume reminds him of dead things as he smells the faint traces of the chemicals on her skin. "On your skin," is repeated softly by two other voices - Robert Coughlan and Andrew McGovern, who each provide backing vocals throughout the album. Every time the line "With faint traces of chemicals on your skin" is repeated, Sam's voice grows more and more desperate sounding, the emotions building in his voice, until he finally sings, "Fighting to be alive again," his voice dropping back to the relaxed way he had sounded before, that emotions dying just as they were fighting to be alive again, as Sam had sung before.
Even though that passion had dropped out of his voice at the end of the chorus, he still picks up a little bit of it at the beginning of the third verse. As he sings the pet name "Honey," he sounds much more desperate as he tries to tell his girlfriend why their relationship is so hard for him - a stark difference to how he sounded before, when he seemed so relaxed about the difficult relationship. He tells her that there are so many problems with dating older women like her, and then describes another situation where she buys him something from the museum gift shop that he didn't know he wanted until it was in his hands, and they look at each other, thinking, "I want you, and I'm afraid of what that means." Once again, the strings pick up when he sings, "I'm afraid of what that means," launching him into the chorus again, which he sings twice before the song completely fades out with his final line, the strings playing them out.
The song does well to depict Sam in a certain light - and depending on how the listener interprets the song, they could see Sam in either a sympathetic light or a negative light. He continues to be in a relationship with this woman that is older than him, even though both of them are scared as to what the future might hold for their relationship. He sees himself as the more intelligent one out of the two of them, and knows that the woman sees that, too, and is scared by the fact that this younger man knows more than she does. He is frightened by the realization that she will die before him, and that she has had so much more life experience than he has. They're both scared by the fact that they're attracted to each other and they don't know what that means - is something wrong with them? why do they feel such an attraction each other despite the age gap? does it even matter? what will other people think? In the end, as depicted throughout the chorus, Sam starts to become somewhat disgusted by his older girlfriend, finding that the perfume that she wears reminds him of death and the way that she seems to be fighting to find her youth again by dating him. The listeners know that the relationship that Sam is singing about is over, but in the song, there's no conclusion - just a sense of bitterness that the couple seems to have towards each other for things that neither of them can control. The song was an interesting choice for a first track on a debut album, but it sets up the tone for the rest of the album, letting the listener know that the topics of the songs are not going to be easy. Honey You know the problem with dating a girl like you, honey Is that we could go to the Egyptology exhibit And I'll explain canopic jars, and you'll look at me like, "You're younger than me and know things I don't and that scares me"
And honey You know the problem with dating a girl like you Is that you'll ask if the mummified corpse could have ever predicted That he would one day be on display And I feel like I'm on display, looking at you like, "You'll be that corpse before I'm that corpse, and that scares me"
Oh, your perfume reminds me of dead things With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin) With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin, honey) With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin, oh) Fighting to be alive again
Honey There are problems with dating a girl like you And honey You'll buy me something from the gift shop Something that I didn't even know I wanted until I did And we'll look at each other like, "I want you, and I'm afraid of what that means"
Oh, your perfume reminds me of dead things With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin) With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin, honey) With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin, oh) Fighting to be alive again
Oh, your perfume reminds me of dead things With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin) With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin, honey) With faint traces of the chemicals on your skin (On your skin, oh) Fighting to be alive again Edited by user 20 March 2015 07:12:33(UTC)
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11 users thanked snap_itshannah for this useful post.
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erich hess on 20/03/2015(UTC), AmyJayneXoX on 20/03/2015(UTC), freestylechamp on 20/03/2015(UTC), Realms Of Darkness on 22/03/2015(UTC), C4AJoh on 23/03/2015(UTC), GirlSpice on 23/03/2015(UTC), kandii on 23/03/2015(UTC), Andre Gandra on 24/03/2015(UTC), Princess_Valentine on 30/03/2015(UTC), mebeme101 on 07/04/2015(UTC), genocidal king on 07/04/2015(UTC)
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