Fallulah – Strange World

“Let’s call it inspiration rather than ‘bandwagon we totally jumped on’.”

Tim: Here’s a synthy track for you, and, well, have you seen Stranger Things?

Tom: No: it’s not really my sort of show.

Tim: Fair enough. There is reasoning for my question, though – have a listen, then I’ll explain.

Tim: Thing is, I’ve a hunch that people’s feelings for this may somewhat mirror their attitudes to the TV show. “You like 80s stuff? Well then here’s the song for you!”

Tom: And if you think that the majority of songs from the 80s were a bit rubbish, same as the majority of songs from any decade, and that the only reason we look back at the 80s with such nostalgia is that all the terrible music has been forgotten in hindsight, and that all the retro 80s bars and radio stations play from essentially a list of a few hundred tracks at most…

Tim: Well, look at you cutting all the bullshit right down to size. I don’t know, I may be being too cynical here – God knows it wouldn’t be the first time – but given that this is a fair break from her previous tracks, I can’t shake the idea that someone thought “hey, 80s nostalgia really is massive right now, isn’t it? I’m having A LOT of that”.

Tom: Right. But 80s nostalgia has always been massive. We’ve had so many resurgences of it.

Tim: True. But specifically in this instance: there’s a line on her website, that says “Bonus points if you can tell me what inspired the song.” I’d say the answer is blindingly obvious, and perhaps someone else thought “hang on, we’re gonna get flak for this? Let’s call it inspiration rather than ‘bandwagon we totally jumped on’.”

It’s good, mind. Just very, very derivative.

Fallulah – Perfect Tense

“It’s as if someone with a kazoo was hiding out in the corner of the recording studio.”

Tim: Nice song, lovely lyric video. Interested?

Tom: It’d be terrible for our format if I said no.

Tim: Fair point. Here it is.

Tim: I say lovely lyric video, and it’s certainly one of the most interesting ones I’ve seen, but, damn, the way that there are five spoken “oh”s and only four pictured really, really irritates me. And it gets annoyingly repetitive towards the end. But still, interesting.

Tom: Ha! I’m not the only one that spotted that.

Tim: And nice music as well.

Tom: I’m now going to ruin it for you.

Tim: Oh, do you have to?

Tom: There’s a bizarre “uh” sample just before the third beat in the bar, almost all the way through the song. And now I’ve pointed it out to you, it’s all you’ll hear. “We mess UHH all the time. Tonight we’ll UHH it right.”

Tim: OH GOD YOU’RE RIGHT. It’s as if someone with a kazoo was hiding out in the corner of the recording studio. OH I HATE YOU YOU KNOB. But anyway, it’s not a track that’ll go down in history as one of the greats, but listening to it in comparison to yesterday’s fairly awful number, and even with that repeated noise, it sounds absolutely divine.

Tom: See, this is where we disagree. This has some good parts: that timpani hits are great. But honestly? I prefer the lipstick, and the lack of groaning samples.

Tim: Ugh.

Fallulah – Social Club

“There’s a good contrast between that aggression, and the slightly ethereal quality in the middle eight.”

Tim: Here’s a song with lyrics we can all identify with: the constant worry that you’re not cool enough for your group of friends.

Tim: How willing are you to bend your personality to fit in? How confident are you? Can you ever be relaxed when you worry like that? Or are you always, indeed, scared of fucking up?

Tom: Hell of a line, that, but I can’t deny that it rhymes, it’s an appropriate word, and the shock value is justified.

Tim: Well, quite – those are all questions posed by this song, and reassuringly answered for those of us like Fallulah herself. Musically we’re in a good spot as well, with plenty of decent beats and a strong aggressive vocal.

Tom: Agreed: there’s a good contrast between that aggression, and the slightly ethereal quality to some of the “spin around” lyrics in the middle eight. I don’t think it’s going to end up on my playlist any time soon, but it’s certainly not bad.

Tim: What I really want from this now is a video in the style of Mean Girls, focussing on one particularly insecure one of them, as I think there could be potential there. Hurry up please.