Diagonal Days: The comic strip based on the character of the Diagonal Lane novels
Sunday, June 25, 2023
Diagonal Days - 037
Wednesday, June 21, 2023
Diagonal Days - 036
No French or German versions this week... this episode is simply untranslatable!! The thought of pronouncing the last consonant of ANY word is incomprehensible in French, and the final T is pronounced in the German version of the word, Ballett.
Thursday, June 15, 2023
Tuesday, June 13, 2023
Wet Leg Mania-3: The Wet Party
This is the third and final part of the series of posts on Wet Leg, the band that is about to take over the world. Check out the first two parts: She Loathes You Yeah,Yeah, Yeah and The Wet Boyfriend.
Other than bad
boyfriends, another major concern of Wet Leg seems to be bad parties. Now,
having come of age in the disco era, I am no stranger to party songs. But where
the average disco artist looked on the party as A GOOD THING ™, Rhian and
Hester have the average millennial’s ho-hum attitude to parties and having a
good time. In other words, NOT A GOOD THING ™. This is not surprising. We grew
up in innocent, optimistic times when everything seemed possible if you pulled
your socks up, spat on your hands, and got down to it. Now, with plastic seas
and methane skies and AI Armageddon staring us in the face, it is difficult to
imagine any of this turning out well, no matter how much we spit on the hand or
how high we pull up the socks. In times like these, boogying the night away
does not seem appropriate.
In the Wet
Leg songs, the party seems to be a metaphor for life. The word “party” is
strictly used in just a handful of songs. The rest of what I am calling the
party songs are really about what a bad idea life in general is, and wouldn’t we
all be much better off if we jumped off the nearest cliff.
Of course,
in the usual Wet Leg fashion, the point is made with a good deal of humor and
loads of peppy music. If you could shut your ears to the lyrics; if for
example, Rhian sang these songs in a hoarse, unintelligible growl like Kurt
Cobain, they could almost pass off danceable party numbers. But with Rhian’s
clear, crystal annunciation, the lyrics are hard to ignore, as is their
message.
On with the
song analysis.
Angelica
I’ve said
this before. This is my favorite Wet Leg song. It has everything: great
concept, great jokes, great writing, super tunes (not one, but four) … and a
gloomy message that makes you want to get into bed, cover your head with a
blanket, and never come out. What more could one possibly want?
Rhian said in an interview that Angelica is a dear friend of hers, the one whom she used to stay over with when she was gigging solo in London (or was it Bristol? Sorry, can’t locate the interview to verify.). The song is about Angelica gatecrashing into a lousy party that bores her to tears (based on a true anecdote, one presumes), and then proceeding to solve matters by popping off everyone at the party with a ray gun (not based on a true anecdote, one presumes).
Check out
the full lyrics. Unlike most song lyrics, it’s actually a fun read.
My favorite
verse in the song:
I don't know what I'm even doing here
I was told that there would be free beer
But that is
only because it speaks to me as a beer worshipper. The girls too have stated in
interviews that they are huge beer fans. How could they possibly be more
perfect?
The overall
message is one of disillusionment, a fed-upness with superficiality and the
have-a-good-time-if-it-chokes-you attitude. The song has four great tunes jostling
for supremacy, following the ABCD-ABCD-A/D structure of the other Wet Leg songs
that I discussed in the previous post. The nagging, insistent opening riff is
the signature of the song. But the riff that draws the most attention is the ‘good
times, all the times’ boom-boom-boom marching tune. It sounds like a detachment
of Wehrmacht Stormtroopers goose-stepping off to have an evening of fun and
games, their Oberstleutnants Befehl ringing in their ears: ‘You will haff a good
time, ja?’ Rhian and Hester chant these words in unison with flat
expressionless faces, while the bass and drums thunder in the background.
Oh No
This is a
rare low-key song in the Wet Leg set. It doesn’t have any standout riffs, but
it is based on a whimsical Roald Dahlesque concept: the protagonist gets so
overwhelmed by the stream of messages on her mobile phone that she actually
gets consumed by it.
I went home
All alone
I checked my phone
And now I'm inside it
There are
plenty of other references to the mindlessness of the social media driven
lifestyle and lots of neat lines.
Then there is this nice bit about a party, which is what made me lump the song into the party section.
If you're going to the party
I heard there's gonna be some arty
People talking 'bout themselves
Or whatever it is that you always talk about, ah
The nicest
part of this song is actually the video. Rhian and Hester goof around in big,
flapping shaggy bear costumes on a waterfront pier on the Isle of Wight. They
are natural clowns. They can create visual humor out of virtually nothing. Do
watch the video right up to the last frame. The ending credits are a scream.
Like the Monty Python sketches, even the credits are droll.
Too Late Now
With this
song, the girls push their four-in-one concept to the limit. It not only has
four completely different tunes, with their own tempos, riffs, and vocal
delivery, but even the contents are different. It is four sub-songs jostling
for space in one song. It is the Wet Leg brand of audacity carried to an
extreme. They do it, because they know they can get away with it. If you wish
to intellectualize about it, you can think of it as a songwriter’s
steam-of-consciousness. The protagonist is trying to write a song, but her
thoughts keep skipping from idea to idea.
It starts off as a melancholy lament about lost love. Abruptly, the songwriter decides this is not at all what she wants to write about. She starts having bleak thoughts about her unsatisfying life and decides to sound off about the way the social media is manipulating her head. Then she drops back into melancholy and has thoughts of ending it all with her lover by driving her car into the sea. Only, in the usual Wet Leg fashion, this suicide note is sung to a cheerful, swaying, bouncing tune that stands in stark contrast to the bleakness of the words.
This song
has some rather saucy lines, some of them being my favorite Wet Leg lines.
I don't need no dating app
To tell me if I look like crap
To tell me if I'm thin or fat
To tell me should I shave my rat
And
I'm gonna drive my car into the sea
I'm gonna drive downtown while looking pretty
ordinary
The below
line is pretty funny too, but they have used variations of it in a couple of other
songs, so it detracts from the punch.
I just
need a bubble bath
To set me on a higher path
On the
other hand, the reuse of conceits like the above between songs just might be
intentional. It creates recurrent motifs that bind all the songs on the album
into a whole.
Check out the official video. It's hugely funny too, including the credits at the end.
The Wet Concerts
That’s
enough of the song analysis. I leave you to discover the other Wet Leg songs
for yourselves. In any case, the way to get the full Wet Leg effect is not to
view individual song videos, but to watch an entire concert from start to
finish. Rhian and Hester’s goofy dances between songs, their chatting with the
audience, the way the songs flow from one into the other… it is a delightful
experience. And by the way, each concert is just that little bit different. I
must have watched hundreds of their concerts without ever being bored or feeling
that it was repetitive. Heck, I have watched some of their best concerts
multiple times, discovering something new each time.
Actually,
they say that the *real* Wet Leg experience is to see them live, in person. The
YouTube videos don’t even begin to capture the electricity in the air at their
concerts, report actual concert goers. I can well believe it. Unfortunately, I
have not yet been able to experience it for myself. Wet Leg haven’t performed
anywhere reasonably close to me in the past year and a half. Hopefully, I’ll be
able to catch them live one of these days…
@Wet Leg:
PLEEEEZE DO A CONCERT NEAR LYON….
PLEEEEZE PRETTY PLEEZEEEE…
Anyhow,
until then, there are plenty of concerts on YouTube for people like you and me.
For your
convenience, I have shortlisted their best concert videos on YouTube. Not
necessarily their best performances, you understand, just the best ones in
terms of video and sound quality.
The Rockpalast concert in Köln
This is
undoubtedly their best concert on video, one of their tightest performances on
record with excellent audio and camerawork. Actually, if you want to see the
best concert of any of your favorite groups, check out if they have done a
Rockpalast session. Those dudes at Rockpalast do some kind of magic. Not only
is their video and audio recording technique exceptional, full of German high
tech, but by some means they manage to get the artists to perform extra sharp
on that day. Possibly the artists, on being confronted by all that German
precision and efficiency, decide they had better up their game too. This, despite the fact that the German
audiences are probably the least demonstrative in the world. Or perhaps that
has something to do with it. An audience making less racket makes for better audio
recording, and the artists probably feel challenged to make that audience show
some life.
If you want to see the BEST versions of all the songs I have featured in this and previous posts, check out this video. The only reason I did not link this video previously was that I wanted to give samples from a variety of concerts.
SD Version, with annotations
HD Version , without annotations
The 3voor12 Radio Session
This is an
amazing live video. I have not heard another like it, for Wet Leg, or any other
act. I wouldn’t recommend it to a Wet Leg newbie. Since it was for a radio
session, there wasn’t a live audience, and Rhian and Hester don’t do any of
their funny dances or uncork those blazing smiles or anything. They are rather
wooden, actually. But the sound…. Oh me god! You can hear each instrument
individually. You can virtually hear the strings on the bass guitar being
plucked. You can hear the drumstick scraping on the high hat. You can make out
exactly how each Wet Leg song is layered and arranged. Zero compression, zero
post-processing (OK, probably not strictly true, but you know what I mean). You have to listen to the video with high quality headphones, preferably on a high def smart TV though, to get all this stuff I am talking about. Otherwise you'll think I'm talking through my high hat. It's a total waste to see this video on the computer or worse, a smartphone.
THIS is the
video to watch if you want to see what drummer Henry Holmes brings to the table.
His contribution is mostly lost in the general din of the other concert videos,
but here you can see him driving the band with a steady beat. The way he copes
with multiple, quicksilver changes in rhythm and tempo in the complex four-part
structure of the Wet Leg songs. The way he puts in clever little fills that
accentuate and stress the lyrics at just the right moments, without
overwhelming them. I keep comparing Wet Leg to the young Beatles, and Henry is
very much a drummer in the Ringo Starr mold: clever but not flashy, rock solid
but not a technical showman, dedicated to making the overall song as good as it
possibly can be. In short: egoless drumming.
The Route Du Rock Concert
at Malo
The
highlight of this video is Rhian attempting to do her usual banter with the
audience in French. The band is clearly having a great time and it shows. Not
one of their sharpest concerts. Unlike the Rockpalast concert, for example, they
goof up multiple times, but they laugh, and they carry on. But that is exactly what
makes this concert so good. This is the essence of Wet Leg….
Isle of Wight Festival 2022
Possibly the cutest Wet Leg concert on YouTube. Here they perform before a home audience, the first time after their worldwide breakthrough. Rhian's mom is in the audience, and the guy taking the video is standing right next to her, and keeps showing how she reacts to the songs. Rhian and Hester look sheepish, with all their families watching them. Rhian keeps giving funny messages to her mom. She looks downright embarrassed singing Piece of Shit with all the foul language, knowing her mom is watching. Is Mike somewhere in the audience too? Now that's a thought.
Live on KEXP
A delightful concert, which includes a delightful and insightful interview. The circuit breaker blows up in the middle of the concert, which adds to the fun. The girls are in great form. The only downside is that they seem to have been instructed by KEXP to bleep over all the rude words to avoid offending the radio audience. Sad.
Sunday, June 04, 2023
Wet Leg Mania-2: The Wet Boyfriend
This is a continuation of my blog post about the phenomenal new rock band, Wet Leg. Check out Wet Leg Mania: She Loathes You Yeah, Yeah, Yeah
Last time,
I analyzed their song Wet Dream. Today I take up four more: Ur Mom,
Supermarket, Being in Love, Piece of Shit.
Like Wet
Dream, all these songs seem to be about Mike. If you remember, Mike was
what we decided to call the mysterious no-hoper ex-boyfriend of Rhian to whom
many of the Wet Leg songs seem to be addressed. Rhian has never actually named
him in public, to my knowledge. Possibly out of decency, but more likely to
avoid a libel suit.
By the way,
before I start the song analysis, I just had this curious thought: Mike must be
the most loathsome boyfriend in the annals of rock. That actually makes me
happy. I have had a wife, an ex-wife, and four ex-girlfriends describe to me in
great detail my various shortcomings as a lover. It is a relief to know that
there is someone out there who is probably worse than I am.
I also had
this other thought: If I am right and Wet Leg prove to be the 21st century’s
answer to The Beatles, which was the thesis I put forward in the previous blog post,
Mike would be the 21st century's male equivalent of Pattie Boyd.
Pattie Boyd, wife of George Harrison and Eric Clapton and lover to Ronnie Wood
of The Rolling Stones, inspired an estimated twelve songs from these three
artists, of which three are called the greatest love songs of the 20th
century: Something, Layla and Wonderful Tonight. She is thought to be
the foremost muse in music.
Of course,
in Mike’s case he would be the muse for the greatest hate songs of the 21st
century, but there you have it: that’s how it goes with us men. We’re used to
it.
There is
the minor possibility, although I kind of doubt it, that the Wet Leg songs are
about a whole series of loathsome boyfriends.
This raises three possibilities:
- Rhian is one picky gal.
- The boys on the Isle of Wight seriously need to pull their socks up and get on with it.
- Rhian is not your go-to person for boyfriend selection.
OK, now on with the analysis…
Ur Mom Song Analysis
This song is directly addressed to Mike, basically telling him what a good-for-nothing damp noodle he is. It eviscerates him. Starting right from the first verse, with a nice rhyme of ‘become’ and ‘mum’:
When I think about what you've become
I feel sorry for your mum
Ouch. That
hurts. Not sorry for you, but for your mum, which makes it all the more
cutting. I feel sorry for Mike. If it weren’t for the fact that the music is so
good, and there are so many outstanding lines, this song might have been too
painful for most guys to listen to. One tends to empathize. I have had similar
things told to me by the then love interest at various points in time. Only
without the music and the rhyming couplets.
And the
knife keeps turning in the wound…
And when the radio plays and the static stays,
Yeah, I know it's time to go.
Nice. A
clever line. I would have nodded appreciatively despite myself, had a former
girlfriend told that to me.
And then
some rather simple lines…
I get up, to go now
I give up, on you now
But this is
where the music begins to get interesting. There is a sudden change in tempo,
and a nice little riff from Hester that adds a punch. In live shows, Rhian
makes some rather dramatic hand gestures at this point which would look corny
on any other performer, but she can carry off anything. It adds a sense of
drama to the song. The second time Rhian goes ‘I give up-up-up-up-up’. Again,
this would be plain corny on any other performer, but Rhian makes it funny and cute.
Yeah, I loved you, that was crazy
'Cause you just don't motivate me
And then a
couple of rather ordinary lines, but the rhythm section breaks out into a
rocking groove at this point, making it the one solid base of a song that
shifts constantly. The use of the word ‘motivate’ is rather innovative though. Using
a bland bit of corporate speak here rather than a more colorful word has the unexpected
effect of making the line more dismissive and cutting.
At one
point, there is just the groove going on with Rhian and Hester going Pom-Pom-Pom…
Pom-Pom-Pom, with a kind of hollow, distant echo in the background. It sound
like a gay marching tune fading into the distance. A mental picture is created
of Rhian walking away from poor, broken-down Mike with swaying hips and a skip
in her steps, relieved to have finally broken away from the no-good chump. But
has she? Would she have written ten songs about Mike if she had?
And when you're getting blazed, spooning
mayonnaise
Yeah, I know it's time to go
Then the
enigmatic line. Was Mike in the habit of eating mayonnaise right out of the
bottle (ugh!) with a big spoon? The song video (see below) seems to suggest it.
That alone would have justified Rhian leaving him. Or is it a reference to that
bit of urban slang ‘Mayonnaise spooning’? Check it out in the online urban slang
dictionary if you don’t know what it means. Knowing the pleasure Rhian and
Hester take in hiding dirty double-entendres within their songs, I
suspect the latter.
And then,
of course, the big line of the song…
You're always so full of it
Yeah, why don't you just suck my dick?
A male
punk-rocker singing that would merely sound nasty, but on a girl it’s simply
hilarious, especially the way Rhian spits it out in live concerts with swagger
and elan. Of late, in some concerts, they have started changing it to ‘why
don’t you just suck my clit’, but that just isn’t as funny. @Rhian: go back to
dick, please.
Then there
is the primal scream therapy. Rhian just stops the song midway and invites the
audience to scream as loudly as possible, which they invariably do. Not unless
they are doing a concert in Germany. The Teutons simply look down their noses
suspiciously and mutter ‘Was ist denn das?’ Take a look at the video of their Rockpalast concert
in Köln, if you don’t believe me.
Most
commentators call this the fun element of Wet Leg. They do it because they can,
and they know they will get away with it. Possibly there is an element of
cheekiness here, but to me it fits in perfectly with the song, like the
pom-pom-pom march. It is as if she is doing a primal scream to get that
noodle-head out of her hair. But has it worked? After several hundred primal
screams distributed over several hundred concerts over a year and a half, I
have my doubts. We will have to see if Mike still features in the second Wet
Leg album.
And then
BOOM. Right after the scream, they dive right back into the heavy Pom-pom-pom
groove as if had never gone away, until the music stops abruptly again, and the
song ends for good this time.
Quiz: what
is the Ur Mom tune? Please hum it.
Can’t? Give
up?
That is
because there isn’t one. To be precise, there isn’t ONE. There are SEVERAL.
That is the essence of the Wet Leg style. Where most bands are happy to
discover one good tune, one good groove, or one good hook, and flog it to death
in a song, Wet Leg pile on tunes and hooks and grooves into a song with gay
abandon, as if daddy has a groove mine in the backyard. Where most pop songs
follow the ABAB or AABBAA verse-chorus song structure, Wet Leg have this unusual
ABCD-ABCD-A/D song structure. Each verse has its own tune, its own grove, its
own tempo and one or more hooks. It shouldn’t work, but it does. It creates a
swaying, constantly moving, shape shifting effect, where you can’t pin them
down on anything. No sooner than the audience adjusts to one groove, they move
on to another. That is why you don’t find audiences dancing at Wet Leg
concerts. They do these curious ape-like lurches. That is the only way to dance
to Wet Leg songs.
As a
one-time songwriter, I find this unbelievable. It is so difficult to find one
good tune or one good groove, that most songwriters guard them jealously and
use them judiciously. I can only put it down to the fact that they are so young
and are so bursting with creative ideas that they can afford to splurge. I am
curious to know if they can carry on like this into their second and third
albums.
As for
hooks, that is easier to understand. Rhian has this remarkable ability to pull
hooks out of thin air, simply by the way she modulates her voice. In a way, for
her, hooks come cheap. Recall the pom-pom-pom or the up-up-up-up and the
countless other vocal artifacts in this song and others. Any one of them is
good enough to latch the song into the listener’s head, which is what hooks are
all about.
Here is the
official video of the song. It is a nice little mini movie with a story and
everything. Unlike the other videos, this one appears to have been made by an
external production house. But you can see the Wet Leg humor on full display,
so they clearly had a lot to do with it. Mike is represented here as a lost,
Harry Potterish figure, more to be pitied than censured. You can see Mike
spooning mayonnaise somewhere in the middle of the video at 2:50.
Supermarket Song Analysis
With Supermarket we are back to the comic short story format of most Wet Leg songs. Where Ur Mom did not have much of a story, being one long painful tongue lashing delivered by Rhian to Mike, here we have a proper Mike story. It can also be seen as a commentary on our love-hate relationship with supermarkets and on the consumerist culture in general.
Rhian
apparently got the idea for this song after the COVID lockdown, when the simple
act of being able to visit your local supermarket became thrilling. This song
is based is based on the whimsical premise that Rhian takes Mike along to the
supermarket and they become so giddy at the experience that they actually
get high. So high, in fact, that they get thrown out of the supermarket by
the security.
In this
high state, Rhian is wondering dreamily what to do, and she decides to take
Mike to see her parents.
I want to take you back to meet my parents
I wanna tell them 'bout that job that you do
And I think you'll like it when you meet my
parents
And I think there is a good chance of them
liking you
Seemingly
ordinary lines, but nice rhymes and a neat structure. What makes these lines
funny is that they are clearly meant in irony. This is obvious from the gently
mocking tone in which Rhian sings this verse. It is clear that Mike doesn’t
have much of a job, and Rhian’s parents are probably not going to be thrilled
to see him. Add to that the fact that they are both out of their minds on a supermarket high, one
can only guess the upshot.
As I said,
a nice bit of humorous slice-of-life storytelling which leaves a lot to the
imagination. Sadly, no music video for this song. It would have made for a very
funny video with the usual Wet Leg touches.
Being in Love Song
Analysis
This is the best-sounding version of Being in Love on YouTube, but it is a bowdlerized version: Rhian bleeps over all the rude words as this show was for a US radio show. The below version sounds a bit muddy, but it has all the rude words intact.
This has to be the most original love song ever in the annals of pop. It doesn’t talk about loving someone, or feeling blue after a break up or any of that crap. Rather, it is a cynical look at the *process* of falling in love…
I feel like someone has
Punched me in the guts
But I kinda like it
'Cause it feels like being in love
The closest
song I can think of is the 1991 Eurhythmics song Love is a Stranger,
that was about the dangers of loving someone obsessively. But that was a rather
dark and over-the-top song, nothing like this one.
As someone
who had once fallen in love, got dumped, spent years in a black funk, and then
woken up one day, several years later, wondering bemusedly what the whole fuss
had been about, this song speaks to me. But I came to this enlightened state
rather late in life. I’m rather surprised Rhian has arrived here at such a
young age. On the other hand, millennials seem to live life in fast forward,
unlike us innocent boomers. And I had been rather slow in matters of the heart
compared even to my peers.
Another
nice verse in the song…
I tried to meditate
But I just medicate
Pour me another drink
Don't wanna have to think
The best
part of the song for me is where Rhian yodels ‘being in luh-uh-uh-uh-ove,
luh-uh-uh-uh-ove’ in a sarcastic tone, making clear what she thinks of love.
This song
isn’t strictly about Mike, but one presumes Rhian got to this enlightened state
as a corollary to her break up with Mike, so I have bunched it with the Mike
songs.
Piece of Shit Song
Analysis
This version of Piece of Shit is convenient in that it shows all the lyrics. The below one is a better performance, though:
It uses a
lot of strong language, but it sounds perfectly natural in the context. This is
how people converse in private, when deeply moved. It isn’t like a punk group
using foul language to shock.
I’ll leave
you to discover the song for yourself, without blathering on about it. But I
would like point out a couple of highlights. The first one…
You're like a piece of shit, you either sink or
float
So you take her for a ride on your daddy's boat
And you are not in love, but it's close enough
You say you think about me when you're fucking
her.
I love the
rhyming and the mental association of shit sinking or floating with daddy’s boat.
And the following verse is precise and cuts like a knife.
The second
highlight of the song is of course the ‘sting in the tail’:
Yeah, technically, I know that I agreed
But it was unenthusiastically
The whole
song is turned upside down in the last verse. It seems they had an agreement to
some kind of an open relationship, but she is now regretting it, although she
defends herself weakly by saying she had just gone along with it under
pressure. It puts a different angle on the whole grouse that precedes it.
I swear,
this is probably the only pop song ever that has words like ‘technically’ and
‘unenthusiastically’ in it. Even if there are others, I doubt these words have
been used to more devastating effect.
I like to categorize
this as a Mike song, as it neatly rounds off the Mike song cycle. In all the
other songs, Rhian punches and pummels Mike, and lays out his inner hideousness
for the world to see. But it is not at all clear what it is exactly that Mike
is supposed to have done to incur Rhian’s wrath. This song seems to provide the
reason.
On the
other hand, in all the other songs, the picture created of Mike is that of a
wishy-washy, no-good lay about. In this song, we are presented with a smooth-taking,
two-timing twister. The two don’t jell. So there is the possibility that this song is about some
other seedy boyfriend of Rhian’s. Or it might be a work of pure fiction. Only
Rhian can tell.
I haven’t
mentioned humor so far. This isn’t as obviously funny as the other songs when you listen to it. It sounds like a long, furious rant. But the humor is obvious when you read the lyrics (see the link above). This is one of those rare songs where the lyrics can be enjoyed independently of the music. It reads like the screenplay for Elaine's thread in a typical episode of Seinfeld. You can visualize the scenes that lead up to this, and the song itself passes for Elain's lines in the final confrontation scene between Elain and her horrible boyfriend-for-that-episode.
Part III:
The Wet Party
(Featuring My favorite Wet Leg song, Angelica)