Had a bad day? Throw bullets on. Had a good day? Throw bullets on. Demolition Lovers is the best song ever made and I stand by that. Ray Toro’s music theory and sonic approach isn’t typical for what emo was(although this album clearly has some metal influence)and it’s cool to hear where they started that MCR sound. This is the best MCR album. I could geek out over this album all day every day. And I do. I’ve listened to this easily over 500 times sometimes on repeat three times a day at my boring data entry job. It has saved me. I would inject it straight into my heart if I could.

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not my favorite but I love it a lot. it + danger days get slept on so much!
4d ago
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yes yes by far my favorite mcr album
4d ago
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truly so so good & maybe underrated now . i only really got into it years after they had broken up but it hit me like a truck . also my nomination for the best 9/11 album
4d ago
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The days I don’t want to kill myself are extraordinary. Deep bass. All the people in the streets waiting for their high fives and leaping, I mean leaping, when they see me. I am the sun-filled god of love. Or at least an optimistic under-secretary. There should be a word for it. The days you wake up and do not want to slit your throat. Money in the bank. Enough for an iced green tea every weekday and Saturday and Sunday! It’s like being in the armpit of a Hammond B3 organ. Just reeks of gratitude and funk. The funk of ages. I am not going to ruin my love’s life today. It’s like the time I said yes to gray sneakers but then the salesman said Wait. And there, out of the back room, like the bakery’s first biscuits: bright-blue kicks. Iridescent. Like a scarab! Oh, who am I kidding, it was nothing like a scarab! It was like bright. blue. fucking. sneakers! I did not want to die that day. Oh, my God. Why don’t we talk about it? How good it feels. And if you don’t know then you’re lucky but also you poor thing. Bring the band out on the stoop. Let the whole neighborhood hear. Come on, Everybody. Say it with me nice and slow    no pills  no cliff  no brains on the floor Bring the bass back.    no rope  no hose  not today, Satan. Every day I wake up with my good fortune and news of my demise. Don’t keep it from me. Why don’t we have a name for it? Bring the bass back. Bring the band out on the stoop. Hallelujah!
Jul 4, 2024
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I don’t remember exactly when or how I stumbled onto Push Ups, I want to say it was Jake Lazovick of the band Voyeur's fabulous no-notes “downtown emo” playlist. This is the kind of music I'd play for you if I was outside of your window with my radio. I caught them open for untitled (halo) a few months back, and twice since then, making Push Ups my most attended act this year. Angsty, pining, nostalgic but still inventive, play it in your Skull Candy headphones, long sleeve t-shirt under a short sleeve. These tracks make me feel so “lovelorn” “you wouldn’t get it” “I am so young and so misunderstood” which is not intended to be reductive, it’s more complex than that. All that to simply say— these tracks make me feel exactly how I want music to make me feel (most of the time). Grey is also the best. I walked up to him at a function super intensely, you’re my fave band in NYC rn blah blah I Am Number One Push Ups fan love the tunes and he handled it real nicely (sent me a shirt that I will treasure 4ever/ you should totally cop one for yourself). It is rare that I am inflamed enough to do the fangirl public humiliation thing, but hey
 DraG Ur TIGHtROPE ThrOugH my wiNDPiPE XxX
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@vivi
STAFF
Dec 30, 2024
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The first single from Winter Boyfriend from the upcoming album set a, frankly, very different note. 'anx/bodies' is an outlier for us, musically and lyrically, but when putting the final touches to the album it was one of the songs that people seemed instinctively to engage with if they weren't broadly invested in our main thing, essentially indie/indie-punk made by a would-be emo band. At the very least it provoked a reaction. It's a song inspired by a very specific series of events but is not specifically autobiographical. Outside of the world of this song i am much less forward about sex. I enjoy being 'too much' with friends but i really don't want it going anywhere my family might hear it. Repression is fun! I often wonder if that's similar to what actors feel when doing nudity or whatever. It's a case of, "I don't want to know you've seen me experience that?" Anyway, honesty can help in art, but also maybe so too does a little internal repression. It was written about a memory of going to a university disco, arriving at the club where everyone was looking hot and cool, and i suddenly becoming very aware of my inability to be calm. It is essentially about over-stimulation and amorousness and the confusion of that smashing like a wrecking ball through any semblance of chill i might have had. The verse bass riff is really old, easily over 10 years old. I wrote it for a different project, a Death From Above 1979 rip-off thing, and my pal Martin played bass, while i sang and drummed. The song was unremarkable but the riff was cool. There was no way i wasn't keeping it. Also, it explains why it's the only song that uses a fuzz bass tone. Yet. I have no idea when i came up with the guitar riff but it's one of my favourite parts i've written. It's rythmic and a little bit dissonant, but i think the G# implies an E Major chord, making it A minor natural (sorry music theory experts, probably butchering this). I was also unsure if i could allow myself to write the chorus which used power chords. It always feels too basic. But it worked in the context of the song. I finished it years ago aside from a few lyrical tweaks and the introduction sound (chord played, tremolo arm depressed as it fades out, recorded and reversed). Also when mixing the song my references were very different and included a lot of 00s and 10s music, including bands that have been grandfathered into the whole 'indie-sleaze' thing, and it made me realise the second verse needed, nay demanded!, a cowbell and some percussion (the other percussion is drumming on glass bottles fyi). I feel like 'anx/bodies', and the song that follows it, 'on our way home', are two sides of the same coin. One uptight, repressed yet explosive, and the other unrelenting, desperate and flailing. You could almost imagine the latter being later in the same night, getting existential when worse-for-wear. More on that one later.
Jun 19, 2024

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