spinofflive
Green Light

Pop CultureMarch 10, 2017

Lordetake 2: The Spinoff’s definitive reviews of ‘Liability’

Green Light

Lorde took the pop world by surprise this morning, dropping new track ‘Liability’ just a week after the release of ‘Green Light’, her first single in three years. The Spinoff Music verdicts are in.

Henry Oliver

When ‘Royals’ was taking New Zealand, and then the world, by storm, it quickly became annoying to hear people (mostly middle-aged bloggers tbh) opine, by rote, not about what was great about that song, and that EP, and then that album, but about all the things Lorde might become. Would she be a one hit wonder with a globe-dominating single that some day would inspire ‘remember this?’ as we danced at weddings, embarrassing our adult children? Would she be a bona fide pop star, producing hit albums every 18 months with incremental progression and chart longevity? Or would she combine her voice, her precociousness and her eccentricity into a long-lived career of artful experimentation and commercial inconsistency? Would she be Tiffany? Madonna? Or Kate Bush? (A false trichotomy?)

But while Pure Heroine refuted the first option, where Lorde would take her music and her career remained an open question that only intensified with each passing albumless year. How different would 20-year-old Lorde sound from 16-year-old Lorde? (That’s a fifth of a young life.) What kind of songs would she write without Joel Little? What is her life like now and what, if anything, would she tell us about it? While a career takes a long time to read, from the heartbreak dance-pop of ‘Green Light’ and the cathartic balladry of ‘Liability’ we start to get inklings of what’s ahead – an expanded sonic territory, an internalisation and contemporisation of classic songwriting technique, and an emotional and lyrical transparency that makes you feel like you’re riding shotgun on a life that is, on one level, so different to nearly every other living person’s, and on another is exactly the same. All of which is apparent in ‘Liability’, a classic piano ballad with hints of the rap-influenced phrasing she used to employ more readily, while working as a formal plinth for the clearer, deeper, warmer voice(s) heard on ‘Green Light’.

It’s a song about a young woman, who burns brighter, who lives louder, who’s “a little much” for the one she loves. It’s universal (about unrequited love) but also specific. Knowing Lorde has confirmed the autobiographical nature of the record, you can’t help but hear, in those lines, that the song is about someone who makes their living, in some sense, from their living, and so lives with different incentives and constraints than those around her; about someone who is famous and knows that fame can be both an attraction and a burden. It’s just as heartbreaking because you’ve been there, as it is heartbreaking because you haven’t.

Elle Hunt

To characterise the response to ‘Green Light’, it was Lorde as we’d never heard her before. Well, we’ve really never heard her like we do on ‘Liability’, her first piano ballad. At first that initial sequence of descending chords triggered memories in me of a time when every rock band would have “a piano one” on their album: even Jet had a “Beatles-esque” number, a comparison I make not as a reflection on Lorde but as evidence of how token and hokey ballads can get.

The attention to little details set ‘Liability’ apart – the syncopated, half-rapped verse; the momentary swelling when Lorde is detailing the dizzying highs. That’s been a feature of her songwriting since essentially the get-go; the new terrain for her this time is vulnerability. “The truth is I am a toy that people enjoy ’til all of the tricks don’t work anymore” – ‘Liability’ is about the being a “little much”, not knowing to dim your light or be left alone with it, the question grappled with by every Ask Polly column. If anyone still sought to dismiss Lorde as purely pop, this is the plain old-fashioned mastery of craft that might change their mind.

Stevie Kaye

Well, I have to credit the press releases – this is Rihanna’s ‘Higher’ with all the blood sucked out of it by fun.’s Jack Antonoff. A torch song with Lorde sitting at the bottom of her vocal range is a bold choice for a second single, and I’m sure it’ll sound better at 3am than 8am.

Miriama Aoake

‘Liability’ should come with a discretionary warning; may cause long-buried feels to manifest. I wish that when I was Lorde’s age I had the capacity to voice feelings of unrequited love, being gaslighted by an ex, isolation and a burden to your friends. Few would dream of exposing our vulnerability so publicly, but there is a generation of young women who rely on the courage of artists like Lorde to elucidate their shared experience. She has carried fragments of her former self and amalgamated new experiences to deliver a poignantly honest and complex ballad of raw, female emotion. Word to the wise, because of the natural mood progression through the piano used in both tracks, ‘Green Light’ should follow ‘Liability’.

Matthew McAuley

So this morning I was on the train from Sylvia Park thinking about how, thematically and structurally, ‘Green Light’ is basically Lorde’s ‘Someone Like You’. Obviously it sounds nothing like Adele’s iconic sadbanger, but in my 8:15estimations that made total sense, because their respective wheelhouses are so obviously and cosmically distant that obviously Lorde’s never going to release a song that’d make the comparision fit on a pure aesthetic level. Then I came out of the Glen Innes → Orakei 4G deadzone to a Twitter feed slowly but consistently losing its shit about this. And then I listened to its unadorned, unembellished, unbelievably sad Didion-at-a-Steinway undulations four consecutive times in transit from Britomart to my anonymous 11th floor office in an anonymous inner city sub-skyscraper, and I realised that I was both wildly premature and hopelessly, desperately wrong.

All of which is a long-winded, frantic way to preface my official take on the song, which is as follows:

Robyn Gallagher

‘Liability’ gives us an insight into the new direction of Lorde’s music, far removed from the electropop of Pure Heroine. Where ‘Green Light’ was a bright shiny single, ‘Liability’ feels like a quiet album track. But that’s ok. It uses the classic chord progressions of Pachelbel’s Canon, as so many other pop songs have done before, giving it a familiar and solid structure for Lorde’s heartbreaking lyrics. OMG, the lyrics! Lorde’s tale of a woman whose rich, complex life makes her less appealling as a long-term girlfriend. It’s similar territory to that covered by Taylor Swift in ‘Blank Space’, but while Tay-Tay can shake it off, Lorde’s song is about the hurt that all the rejection based on “girl, u crazy” can cause. But it’s not always a sad piano song – a highlight is the Rihanna/Sia style that turns “everyone” into “Eh-eh-na-na-na-eh-everyone”. Lorde, please bless us with more new music.

Pete Douglas

A week ago Lorde was blowing up the internet with the full-on pop of ‘Green Light’ – something more danceable, catchy and beat-oriented than anything she’d done before. Breathless praise followed (with even alt-rock queens converting to super fans and getting in on the action) and conventional wisdom suggested it would be a decent wait until another single dropped, before album Melodrama arrived on June 16. But Lorde excels at delivering music in a way that maximises its impact in the digital age, and so arrives ‘Liability’, just as the dust begins to settle on the grand ‘Green Light’ unveiling.

‘Green Light’ was a left turn from the sound Pure Heroine, but ‘Liability’ is perhaps even more of a shock – a solo piano-accompanied ballad so direct, raw and crushing that it’s a little disorientating at first. Lorde has never been this direct; her clever lyrical turns were previously often cloaked in a sharp cynicism, a big part of her pull on early recordings. Here she acknowledges she’s a liability, too much hard work for anyone, and she totally gets it. On the surface the obvious modern pop comparison to this are Adele’s torch songs, but this is more a spiritual cousin to the messed up, self-loathing, “but I’m still walking away in some strange kind of cinematic triumph” of cult hero Harry Nilsson. In short – ‘Liability’ is great, and June 16 seems like a lifetime away.


The Spinoff’s music content is brought to you by our friends at Spark. Listen to all the music you love on Spotify Premium, it’s free on all Spark’s Pay Monthly Mobile plans. Sign up and start listening today.

Keep going!
feature

Pop CultureMarch 10, 2017

The best television soundtracks in the world ever… RANKED

feature

Pete Douglas runs down his favourite TV soundtracks of all time after killing the mood at a party with some tense Twin Peaks tunes.

Here’s a hot party tip: if you play the theme song from Twin Peaks in the middle of a Saturday night gathering it’s a bit of a mood dampener. I learned this the hard way on the weekend when it popped up on a playlist – that trebly 50’s guitar, the slow build to a daytime-soap-theme-sounding crescendo that would be cheesy, if it wasn’t so bloody unsettling. You could see guests stop their conversation dead and quietly reflect on the part of the show that creeped them out the most (for me it’s still “the man from the other place” and his backwards talking).

This got me thinking, what are the best TV soundtracks of all time? Any list is going to cause debate (don’t @ me Mad Men bros), but here are my favourites:

10) True Blood

A modern vampire tale set in Louisiana swamp country is probably going to be heavy on the music, but True Blood doesn’t just use atmospheric southern tunes (though there’s plenty of that, including the killer opening theme ‘Bad Things’). The soundtrack roams through modern country, alternative rock and even pop, with every episode being named after a song that features prominently within it.         

9) Nashville

A great little show about the last corner of the music industry that plays by its own odd set of rules, Nashville unsurprisingly has music at its core. Under the guidance in the first season of American roots music gatekeeper T-Bone Burnett, and in later seasons producer and songwriter Buddy Miller, the original songs more often than don’t adhere to the rules of shiny modern country, giving some grit to the soapy gloss.

8) Life on Mars

Named after the David Bowie song, time travel procedural yarn Life on Mars was probably gonna feature more than a few great tunes, but it avoids cliche by digging into the slightly underappreciated world of early ’70s British glam rock. Cue some great trashy T. Rex, Slade and Sweet cuts.    

7) The Americans

A Cold War thriller about a couple of Russian spies posing as an American couple in Washington D.C., The Americans uses period music particularly well to ratchet up the paranoid tension. See: the coke-addled ranting of Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Tusk’, or how the bizarre international game show essayed in Peter Gabriel’s ‘Games without Frontiers’ almost seems like it was written specifically for the show.

6) Empire

This soap opera about a hip hop impresario (Lucious Lyon, played by Terrence Howard) – and the backstabbing that takes place between him and his family after his rise from rags to riches – could have fallen flat on its face if the music wasn’t right. But under the guidance of bona fide hit maker Timbaland, and with show’s genuinely talented young stars, the soundtrack to Empire has worked brilliantly, even generating some actual real life hits.

5) The O.C.

Elle Hunt’s terrific reminisce on The O.C. the other day made me remember all over again how this often dubious teen soap had all the best music at its peak (well, all the white indie music anyway). Seth Cohen’s Death Cab for Cutie obsession got the band signed to a major label, and getting a song on the show meant you had truly made it. My favourite episode features Sandy (Pete Gallagher) serenading his wife Kirsten at her birthday party, having such a great time he turns his initially grand romantic gesture into his own personal soul revue. God bless you and your great eyebrows Pete.  

4) 30 Rock

30 Rock creator and comic genius Tina Fey, along with her composer husband Jeff Richmond, executed some wonderful musical moments over seven seasons of the beloved show. There are simply too many great send ups to capture (‘Night Cheese’ for life) but big shout out to Jenna Maroney’s Britney-esque ‘Muffin Top’, the soft rock Christopher Cross in-joke of ‘Lemon’s Theme’, and best of all, Tracy Jordan’s bizarre and utterly inspired ‘Werewolf Bar Mitzvah’ (“spooky, scary, boys becoming men, men becoming wolves”).       

3)  Underground

Rather than trying to stay at all true to period music for the critically acclaimed slave drama Underground, musical director John Legend instead brought on board a range of great contemporary hip hop and R&B, which makes the action urgent and vital rather than what it could be – a 19th century-style museum piece. Kanye West’s ‘Black Skinhead’ was identified early as a key touchstone, and it makes for a brilliant opening at the very start of the series.

2) Twin Peaks

It’s not only the main theme that makes the music of Twin Peaks great; how about the late night dread of ‘Laura’s Theme’, or maybe the jazz-shuffle-in-a-horror-house of ‘Audrey’s Dance’?  Composer Angelo Badalamenti somehow takes Mark Frost and David Lynch’s weird obsessions and puts the perfect soundtrack to them, something which seems all the more remarkable listening all these years later.        

1) The Sopranos  

Sure, aside from that famous opening song by Alabama 3, The Sopranos did lean a bit hard on musty old boomer music, but the show always used slightly obscure gems deftly, particularly in closing scenes. See Johnny Thunder’s ‘You Can’t Throw Your Arms Around a Memory’, the jaunty Van Morrison number ‘Glad Tidings’ playing over the utterly tense season five closer, or the sad resignation of The Rolling Stones ‘Thru and Thru’.


Click below to watch Underground – ft. a hand-crafted John Legend soundtrack – exclusively on Lightbox today

This content, like all television coverage we do at The Spinoff, is brought to you thanks to the excellent folk at Lightbox. Do us and yourself a favour by clicking here to start a FREE 30 day trial of this truly wonderful service.