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My first impression of this song at the movie event this past Tuesday was fairly middling. But I gotta say, listening to it this morning on headphones, walking to the train to get to work, it grabbed me. This one might just end up being a favorite once the dust settles!
Joined: Thu March 21, 2013 1:08 am Posts: 2622 Location: Pennsyltucky
The weight of expectation for this one massively clouded my initial listening experience. With each listen, it's unpacking and turning into a monster... starting to feel like quintessential Pearl Jam and the perfect album opener
The weight of expectation for this one massively clouded my initial listening experience. With each listen, it's unpacking and turning into a monster... starting to feel like quintessential Pearl Jam and the perfect album opener
i am annointing Scared of Fear a five star designation in my rankings. This may be better than Life Wasted, my current number 3 opener
Coming in hot, stip...that's a strong stance for being so early in the game.
Not sure I'm fully onboard with either (yet?), but, I support the possibility.
_________________ We still make records to be listened to — not that everyone will listen to a record track one to twelve in a row or side A or Side B — but we still make 'em in case somebody does want to listen to it like that, that's how we make em…
I think this is my favorite straight ahead PJ rock song off the last few albums, which is saying something since Gigaton had some truly great ones. I have a fondness for songs that are uptempo and musically aggressive but melodically very pretty, a somewhat rarified commodity in PJ's music that pops up in some weird places and absolutely does in the chorus of this song. It's like there's this propulsion and ferocity in the music that is softened by a sense of sweetness in the vocal melody that somehow swells bigger than the tempestousness in the music. To my ears, the chorus to "Marker In the Sand" is like this. The verses to "Green Disease" are like this. Through a certain lens, "Last Exit" is like this. Not that the songs sound similar, but they share this quality -- you could pull these melodies out, adorn them differently, and you'd never guess that they originated in uptempo rock songs (check out the String Quartet version of "Last Exit" for proof of this).
After "Upper Hand," this is my favorite song on the record.
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 40108
I love that last exit strings performance
Scared of Fear has probably knocked Setting Sun out of the way into my number two. Is it better than Superblood or Who Ever Said - too early. But it is in their elite company, and could be. It's a more consistent listen start to finish, and Eddie's performance is incredible for all the reasons you just captured
I think I'm warming up to this song, after it left me a bit cold on the first few listens. I think I'm often attracted to those PJ openers that feel like a line in the sand or statement on how this album is going to differentiate from what you heard last time (Last Exit, Go, Sometimes, Who Ever Said fall under this). But the band doesn't always do this and they don't always need to. Sometimes it's okay to ease into what's coming with a really good rock song, as long as it delivers; I feel like Yield and Binaural both do this. Scared of Fear feels more in that vein, and I appreciate it more through that lens.
I think this is my favorite straight ahead PJ rock song off the last few albums, which is saying something since Gigaton had some truly great ones. I have a fondness for songs that are uptempo and musically aggressive but melodically very pretty, a somewhat rarified commodity in PJ's music that pops up in some weird places and absolutely does in the chorus of this song. It's like there's this propulsion and ferocity in the music that is softened by a sense of sweetness in the vocal melody that somehow swells bigger than the tempestousness in the music. To my ears, the chorus to "Marker In the Sand" is like this. The verses to "Green Disease" are like this. Through a certain lens, "Last Exit" is like this. Not that the songs sound similar, but they share this quality -- you could pull these melodies out, adorn them differently, and you'd never guess that they originated in uptempo rock songs (check out the String Quartet version of "Last Exit" for proof of this).
After "Upper Hand," this is my favorite song on the record.
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