Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Song Spotlight: The Promise Ring's "Red and Blue Jeans"



            Because I am a pretentious jerk, I've always defined myself as someone who is drawn to songs steeped in intelligent writing. Of course, I thoroughly enjoy simplicity of a thrashing punk riff or a straightforward blues, but the tunes with lyrics that are wrapped in layers of metaphor or that spin unique and vivid images tend to take precedence in my shuffles. However, if a song manages to take the basic pieces and push them to their limits, squeezing every drop of emotion and meaning from each note or word, I cannot but help playing them incessantly, listening until I am sick and then still again. These songs prove that significance doesn't require anything complex or even thorough, and the most recent such tune to overcome my senses is "Red and Blue Jeans" by The Promise Ring.
            From the first time it appeared on my Pandora playlist, my ears were instantly glued to the speakers, and my obsession with "Red and Blue Jeans" has only grown since. With nary a second of drum fill, the whole band launches into the song’s tender, almost self-conscious main riff. Davey von Bohlen quietly croons his single line of lyrics over gentle chords, while Jason Gnewikow’s accented lead knits itself into a counterpoint for the vocals. Scott Beschta's intricate bassline ushers the band out of the first section and into a spacious prelude to the song's apex, a loud and thrashing reprise of the main theme. From there the song essentially repeats one more time, except that instead of rehashing or mimicking his initial verse, von Bohlen eschews language entirely, favoring punctual, nonlexical vocals which lead "Red and Blue Jeans" into its driving instrumental coda.


            "Red and Blue Jeans" rings in my ears as amazing, sonorous, and complete, but it is perhaps one of the most structurally unadorned songs ever written. The Promise Ring utilizes only a few chords and fourteen total words to assemble "Red and Blue Jeans," yet every second feels like a sprawling odyssey of energy and emotion, part of which stems from their expert application of dynamics. From open to close, the band maintains their essential musical theme defined by the interlocking guitar work of von Bohlen and Gnewikow, creating variation by alternating the feel and attack of the theme between a stroll, a saunter, and a sprint. Similarly, von Bohlen's decision to sing lyrics at the beginning and wordless vocalization towards the end pushes to the forefront the melody rather than the message, diffusing the spotlight among the entire band instead of focusing it on the vocal.
            The Promise Ring uses some very basic principles of music and songwriting in their composition of "Red and Blue Jeans," assembling a modest but poignant foundation in which the listener can cultivate meaning and significance. The band makes its choices in line with an austere aesthetic, following a "less is more" ethic and applying it like adepts. Rather than writing another verse or repeating the opening and only line, von Bohlen slips into his humble "doo doo"s, leaving his sentiment only as defined as the first line allows. In the same vein, the band chooses to rely on dynamics alone for complexity, but never once draws out a riff or progression too long at one energy level, always giving their theme room to breathe and evolve without making it redundant.

 
            Despite the plain ambiguity of the lyrics and the subjective feel of the instrumentation, "Red and Blue Jeans" is a song laden with emotion, but the straightforward and plain presentation provides a ton of room for the listener to interpret and evoke that emotion. Davey von Bohlen's simple statement of "Nothing feels good like you in red and blue jeans and your white and night things" is simultaneously broad and inclusive; PunkNews remarks the lyric can be read "as sensual, longing, romantic, desperate; it can be all these things because of what it implies,” based upon how the listener connects with it.[1] On one side, von Bohlen's statement of "nothing feels good like you" can be seen as a celebration, a declaration so definitive that no other words can improve it and thus leaving him simply speechless in the second half of the song. Conversely, his lyric can be viewed as mournful longing, a realization that "nothing feels good" without the presence of his lover, and that her absence inevitably leaves him wanting more from his life.[2]
            For all its space and simplicity, "Red and Blue Jeans" is loaded with a quiet significance that is as malleable as the listener needs it to be, and therein lies its brilliance. With this song, The Promise Ring takes the idea of repetition and molds it into a tune that is both intricate and inviting. Because of its sparing shape, there is no limit to the connections and connotations that "Red and Blue Jeans" can carry, and effectively, no barrier between song and listener. "Red and Blue Jeans" is truly unlike any song I've ever heard, and I don't doubt that I will be uncovering new meanings and moods within these two-and-a-half minutes for years to come.

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