I recently was reminded of one of my favorite albums growing up, around 9th and 10th grade plus or minus a few musical phases I was a sucker for pure un scenester emo. To this day friends will find and old album of some sunny day real estate carbon copy band and tell me I'd really like it (which I totally do.) I am no expert, and when most of these bands were around I was like 5, but I would consider myself a connoisseur. I am pretty sure I could attribute the discovery of all these bands and albums (some well know and some not) to one album, it is the gateway drug. Growing up I was lucky enough to have an older brother who had a rad and fairly diverse taste in music, and one day in 1999 I remember being somewhere in my house and my brother came home with a new CD, he bought it the day it was released, I pestered him until he let me sit in his room and listen to it with him for the first time. The guitar parts were melodic backed with awesome almost mathematic drum rythyms, the vocals and lyrics almost make you wish you were heartbroken also (as they were totally emo and about girls). I still get excited when I hear "For Me This Is Heaven" - by Jimmy Eat World, that song puts me in a trance, and "Clarity" is absolutely my gateway drug album. This album introduced me to The Get Up Kids, Sunny Day Real Estate, Texas Is The Reason, Mineral, I could list on and on but I think those first 2 bands are enough to explain how much I discovered, via domino effect, Old and New. I think the most important part of Clarity for me is that I redefined my taste in music, I had never liked anything that slow or melodic. And after appreciating it I started liking tons of stuff I never did before, I discovered old stuff and also started liking a whole new different type of music that was being released, Juliana Theory, Mae, Further Seems Forever, The Anniversary, ect. On top of this new sound, I realized there was a lot of music for me to enjoy and I didn't have to limit myself to like 3 genres and say these are the bands I like and write off everything else. In short because I could talk about this for a while, I would absolutely consider Clarity My favorite album of all time, Lots of people like to give this title to an old classic rock album or a beatles album because of what it did for music, which I agree is substantially important... but... this is MY favorite album of all time, I'm choosing an album that gave me a new view of music, and one that bridges the gap between bands I love. On almost every one of those music maping websites like www.tuneglue.com really diverse bands that I like get linked back to each other through jimmy eat world. But the real reason I put this album at number 1 is because I've been listening to it since 1999, ten years of playback and its still not worn out to me, I have the original copy my brother bought in '99 and I still listen to it, I still start to sing "The first star I see may not be a star" when For Me This is Heaven comes on, and I sometimes still close my eyes when on a long drive listening to Clairty. This sounds super gay... but it could be the only album I'd go gay for. And that is why Clarity is my favorite album... ever.
Let me get to the whole reason I decided to divulge my love for emo and the real reason I wrote this post. I saw this video... (which you may have already seen because it's got 28 million views)
A friend showed me this video of some random talented guy playing guitar. (he is good, check out "Heather's Song" too) It made me real sad that I ever thought Chris Carrabba was good at acoustic guitar. But when I watched this song all I could think about was how much I loved the chorus... and why, I realized how much it sounds like Sky's The Limit, A little known poorly recorded project from VA with the most mesmerizing harmonics ever. Around freshman year of high school me and few friends loved this album. Its always hard for me to describe why I love a particular band or album. But all you need to do is listen to a few songs from Skys The Limit's - The Never Ending Sessions to understand. I love how music can do this to you, I watched a guy hit these really great harmonics during a chorus and it opened up this flood of musical memory, and all I wanted to do was bring up my music collection and listen to years of emo that I lived off in high school. One of my favorite things about this whole post is that while I am typing, my younger brother is in his room and he started listening to Clarity... he has no idea I'm writing about it.
- By Wes