The Arcade Fire we’re able to put lightening in a bottle with The Suburbs.
The Suburbs is more than a successful album that has sky rocketed a band from ‘popular’ to other worldly music stars - at the end of the day The Suburbs is a masterpiece - pure and simple, it will be remembered as such, but will it win the Polaris Prize this year?
That’s a tough question to answer. If this was any other competition we would just announce it as the winner and be done with it. But this is music, subjective and emotional as being technical and structured – so there is no clear right or wrong, winner or loser. There is only a consensus. We’ll see where out judges take us this year.
When I first listened to The Suburbs I was stopped in my tracks at how well crafted it was, how much care had gone into production, artwork, songwriting and the mix. It all seemed so deliberate – but not in a ‘too cool’ for school’ way, in a completely accessible way. The themes that play out within the songs drip with angst and love for a youth we all once lived, and sometimes miss.
It’s hard for me to talk about individual songs, because the whole album resonates so well from top to bottom with me and my experiences in suburbia. As a product of the suburbs myself, when this album is on, I’m taken back to memories of my youth (both fond and hurtful) – driving around in my mother’s car, tunes cranked, dreams of somewhere else, a better time (if one could exist).
Little did I know that 14 years after leaving the comfort of my parent’s Mississauga home I’d find the soundtrack to motivate me to actually leave. I’m sure for lots of us now in adulthood we wished The Suburbs was around to push us out and into the future. At least we have it now, to provide an emotional landscape to look back.
KEY TRACKS: The Suburbs, Rocco, City With No Children, Month of May,
CLINCHER: We Used To Wait.
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