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Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumBlur - Coffee And TV (Official Music Video)
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Blur - Coffee And TV (Official Music Video) (Original Post)
Sewa
Tuesday
OP
ultralite001
(1,999 posts)1. Songs about Coffee...
Broke a month-long abstention from coffee this morning... Loved every minute of it...
The aroma of the freshly ground beans... The fragrance as it dripped, dripped, dripped...
The "Ooh... Aah" w/ the first sip... Reminded me of this:
Sewa
(1,471 posts)3. That's a fun song
I hope my song post didnt cause you to fall off the wagon.
All is good here!!! Thanks...
jfz9580m
(15,807 posts)2. I love that video
This is one of their recent (okay 2015 so not recent) songs I really like:
https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/blur-there-are-too-many-of-us/
Since the announcement of a new album Magic Whip and their imminent return to the big stage via their BST Hyde Park gig in the summer we have all been waiting for some new music to get our teeth stuck in to. Lucky old us then, we have There Are Too Many Of Us, our Track of the Day.
Albarn and Co. have been working aay at some new music for the last few months and this track proves that it was some time well spent. The Britpop and lad-rock sounds of old have disappeared and the maturity of the band is now starting to shine through.
The song progresses like a Soviet cartoon, endlessly trudging along to post-industrial guitar and the deepening meaning of the title begins to strike through the song with every utterance of Albarns vocal. The song tackles a lot of sticky themes including over-population, religion and our conformity all with complete simplicity. Its a hark back to the Coxon and Albarn collaboration which changed the 90s.
Its a return to Blur as a band but it is a progressive song which has clearly moved themselves along and hints at their individual maturity and their new collectively cultured artistry.
Albarn and Co. have been working aay at some new music for the last few months and this track proves that it was some time well spent. The Britpop and lad-rock sounds of old have disappeared and the maturity of the band is now starting to shine through.
The song progresses like a Soviet cartoon, endlessly trudging along to post-industrial guitar and the deepening meaning of the title begins to strike through the song with every utterance of Albarns vocal. The song tackles a lot of sticky themes including over-population, religion and our conformity all with complete simplicity. Its a hark back to the Coxon and Albarn collaboration which changed the 90s.
Its a return to Blur as a band but it is a progressive song which has clearly moved themselves along and hints at their individual maturity and their new collectively cultured artistry.
Its a song that definitely applies to my part of the world here in Podunk, Global South (I have filed for a patent so no other Podunk in this geographical region can go by that ;-/).
I think of it every time I wait in line at the bank, hospital and hear the endless, grating street traffic noise as I try to focus on work..And I have it better than most. I am relatively far from the street, but of late so much obnoxious traffic is diverted to this formerly quiet street that it has been impossible to work.
Today its relatively quiet so I should get cracking.
Saving this for a later read:
https://cultfollowing.co.uk/blur-there-are-too-many-of-us-review/