Archive for My Chemical Romance

Art is the Weapon

I have been a fan of My Chemical Romance for a few years but it is only in the last year and a half that I have become involved in the fanbase. I have found and met some great people and am truly grateful for that.

One thing that I have noticed, and that is beginning to annoy me, is the criticism. Now I do suggest anyone should be free from criticism and I certainly do not say the band members are perfect, however there are some things I feel the need to get off my chest.

The latest uproar is over the video for Kids From Yesterday. It seems it isn’t good enough for some fans, they are disappointed, the band don’t care. Well let me tell you, whether they care or not (and think evidence is overwhelming that they do) it was their decision to create that video for that song.

The whole idea behind the video fits perfectly with the idea behind the song. To contact a fan and credit her with part of the video, I feel is typical of how this band like to involve their fans. It seems fitting also in reference to the fact that they have spent 10 years together, rising from the clubs of New Jersey to headlining Reading and Leeds.

OK, that’s my say about that.

The main thing I want to say is that art is personal. True artists create what they feel is right at that moment in time; create for themselves not their public. Art comes from the heart not from a need to make money or gain more fans. By all means express your disappointment if you must but temper your complaints with the knowledge that these four men are creating something that makes them happy in the hopes that it makes others happy too – isn’t that more important than creating to gain popularity?

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We Will Rock You

I went to Reading Festival on Friday. I went for two main reasons…

1. My daughter wanted to see 30 Seconds to Mars and I knew they may not be touring for a long time after Reading/Leeds.

2. My Chemical Romance were headlining.

It was wet, muddy and mainly boring until The Offspring came on. I enjoyed The Blackout (saw them supporting MCR in Feb) but the rest of the bands on the mainstage were not my cup of tea at all. I don’t think any of them ‘sang’; BMTH screeched and shouted, Deftones were good musically but the singer droned. I felt quite dreary by the end of their set.

By this time we were leaning against the middle barrier and level with the left hand video screen so not a bad position. We were very glad to lean – older people don’t like to stand for so long :-)

The Offspring were as I expected, professional, tight and I enjoyed their songs although there were a couple I wished they’d played. Then it was a case of waiting for 30 Seconds to Mars. We watched their stage getting set up with the huge Triad and enjoyed the (censored) video of Hurricane on the screen. Unfortunately our view of the stage started to get obscured by tall people standing right in front of us as the area filled up.

Concerts and festivals should have everyone in order of height so us shorties can get to see the stage :-)

I ended up giving my teen daughter (who is actually the same height as me) a piggy-back for some songs so she could see. I hadn’t quite realised how big a fan she was until I heard her sing along more or less word perfect with every song they played. Personally I was glad to have seen them and did enjoy myself but I felt it was more Jared Leto and his backing group than a cohesive band.

Then it was the time we’d been counting down for all day – 10pm.

Daughter dragged me down nearer the front so we could at least have an unobscured view of the video screen, although if we jumped up we could see the stage. I was so glad she did. The atmosphere in the crowd was great, everyone around us were singing along, jumping up and down or waving their hands in the air. The band came on with Na Na Na and that was it.

I have always been a rock fan. I spent my teenage years listening to Judas Priest, Black Sabbath, Van Halen and so on. I went to concerts at places like Manchester Apollo and even conned my mum into letting me go on the coach to Monsters Of Rock at Donnington a few times. Of all the bands it was Judas Priest who I loved the most. I always maintained that thier Screaming for Vengeance gig at Manchester Apollo was the best one I ever went to, with Queensryche’s Mindcrime tour being a very close second. I had the Priest t-shirts, every album (including the really early ones) and posters on my wall. No other band has captured my ears & heart quite like them.

Until My Chemical Romance.

My first recollection of them is I’m Not Okay on Kerrang TV. I bought the first ever issue of Kerrang all those years ago and was made up to find out there was a music channel on Sky. I loved the song & video, I can’t recall whether I bought The Black Parade first but I had that and Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge on my mp3 player for a while. At this point I just enjoyed their music.

It was at some point during early 2010 that I really began listening to the lyrics and discovering just who they were as people. I got hold of Bullets and Life on the Murder Scene and realised how much I really loved this band. I was gutted to miss their small tour in October and eagerly anticipated the release of Danger Days. I was in Asda first thing on release day and texted my poor daughter at school to tell her how great the album was.

I loved the messages behind their songs. I now listen to some other bands’ lyrics and find them mundane because I used to the intricacies of MCR words. As soon as I found out they were touring again in 2011 I told daughter I would be taking her to her very first concert. It was my first ‘rock’ concert for years (Bryan Adams and Robert Plant don’t really count) and the vibe was just how I remembered it from my teen years.

From there on I was hooked completely. I am not ashamed to admit I fangirl a little over them. I admire them for overcoming their problems, I applaud them for daring to be different, I love them for telling us all messages of hope and encouragement.

I never thought that, at my age, I would be such a fan of a band like I was as a teenager. But this group of men have given me back something of my younger years. The excitement of gigs, the emotions of great lyrics resounding through me (yeah Priest weren’t exactly renowned for deep lyrics) and the feeling of wonderful music making me tap my feet or, even in the middle of Sainsbury’s, dance!

I was breathless during Friday’s gig and not because of my asthma. The adrenaline, the emotion – I cried during Kids From Yesterday – everything affected me on so many levels. If I had the money and the energy I would have tried to blag tickets to Leeds Saturday night.

I am sad knowing that it’s probably going to be a year at least before they tour again but excited that at some point next year there will be a new album. In the meantime they play constantly over the stereo while I am in my office working and I have my memories to play over and over in my head.

Thank you My Chemical Romance for helping me rediscover my total love of music.

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Android Girl

It was the taunting that started it. Girls poking fun at her because she hadn’t had a boy’s tongue in her mouth or hand up her blouse. Boys sniggering about the ‘frigid ice queen’ whenever she passed by. But it was the pity that finished it. Her friends trying to fix her up with reluctant boys who fumbled around while she sat in her cool innocence that effectively iced their ardour.

Leaving high school for college Anna discovered a button within her, only in her imagination but it worked. Leaving her home she erased her emotions, pressing the button with a simply manicured finger and becoming the unobtainable one. She created a persona where her mind was a computer; her blood was liquid ice pumped around her synthetic body by a battery driven machine.

Throughout her first year that button became her saviour. Taunts did not penetrate the chilled exterior she cloaked herself with. Young men never considered enticing her out on a date; she seemed too distant to even think of asking. Anna attended classes, was polite with her classmates, gave deference to her tutors and nothing touched her.

Of course, she wasn’t an android girl and eventually something was going to pierce the plastic, kiss the battery and re-spark the humanity. Eventually. Just not yet.

 

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Hang ‘em High

I did something bad last night. Something that I really didn’t want to do but could see no other way of getting to hear what I desperately wanted to hear.

I illegally downloaded some music. Three tracks that I didn’t know about til well after they were released on a special limited edition of the album that I bought the day it was released.

I would love to have paid for them. Hell I even downloaded the dreadful monster that is iTunes to buy some tracks the other week. But I couldn’t find them to buy anywhere.

I do feel bad. My hubby is in the music industry so I know how hard bands work and how little money they get from record sales (unless they’re mega big)  – buy official merchant and see them live if you want your favourite bands to make money. If I knew of a way to send this band the money to cover the cost I would. But I can’t.

Yeah. I hear the comments about how I should have just not downloaded the tracks. But then I wouldn’t have got to hear them. So what I hear you cry? My reply – have you never been obsessed with a band, so much that you want to had every track no matter how obscure? That’s how I feel about this band. Yeah, even a woman in her 40s can get the obsessions supposedly reserved for teens.

Please don’t sue me (I haven’t got any money anyhow) but bands should realise that if the don’t make their music catalogue available legally then they are only pushing people to download illegally.

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keep running

… coz standing still ain’t gonna get you anywhere.

Yesterday I heard the latest Eminem single and realised that he has not changed at all for years. He still seems to be regurgitating the same old formula – and it seems to still sell.

» Read more..

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