๐ŸŽต Monthly Song Challenge ๐ŸŽต

(I'm going to paint from a slightly darker palette on this one... hopefully that's alright.)
There was a time in my life where "getting ready to go out", or 'going out', was an innocuous code for a more dangerous brand of partying. And as I started heading down a substance abusing side street, my friends were not willing to accompany me on that detour... precisely because they actually were good friends. But I remember that I used to play this song while doing whatever it was that I was planning to do, 'before' going to meet my disapproving but largely unaware friends... and I really thought the lyrics took on a gleefully sinister bent, to capably mirror my situation. I can laugh at it all now that I've been able to maintain a healthy lifestyle, and I can just enjoy this classic song as good clean fun again! But it makes me appreciate how we can do almost "anything" with lyrics if we look hard enough, because I don't think that my hard-partying experience was exactly what the songwriter had in mind... but it's all a part of what makes music so endlessly fascinating.
Thank you for another great theme! It made me navel-gaze much more self-indulgently than I was initially anticipating... lol.
(Now could this be a dialogue between a 'substance' and a person? You be the judge.)

"We can dance if we want to/ We can leave your friends behind/
'Cause your friends don't dance/ And if they don't dance/ Well, they're no friends of mine/
Say, we can go where we want to/ A place where they will never find/
And we can act like we come/ From out of this world/ Leave the real one far behind"...

Men Without Hats - The Safety Dance

I think a lot about people who think Born in the USA is a patriotic songs. Amongst many, many, examples of people who donโ€™t pay attention or just badly misinterpret lyrics. ๐Ÿคฃ

Glad youโ€™re clean now. Itโ€™s a rough road.
 
20: song by artist with multiple bands

Tim Timebomb "Ooh La La"

At it's core, Tim Timebomb seems to be a Rancid side project that cycles through other musicians. Blink-182 and Transplants (to name a few, this guy is everywhere) drummer Travis Barker sits in on this one and some other tracks.

Vocalist Tim Armstrong is also part of The Transplants, and shows up on some tracks with The Interrupters.

Lars Fredricksen, lead guitar, is also Rancid's other guitarist and has his own project, Lars Fredricksen and The Bastards.

Rancid Bassist Matt Freeman is also running bass for Timebomb.
 
Day 20: A song by an artist with multiple bands

This one was difficult! I love the evolution of artists & follow the ones I love. i.e. I'd never have found Porno for Pyros if I hadn't first loved Perry Farrell in Jane's Addiction. But my first musical crush was Slash. I could listen to him play on any song, any genre, and enjoy it. The list of bands/musicians Slash has been in or collaborated with is impressive.

Fall to Pieces-Velvet Revolver
 
Day 20
So many ways to go here but I'm going to go with a band that I was certain was going to be the next big thing as I thought they were doing something revolutionary. I predicted they would be bigger than The Clash. (In hindsight, maybe the world wasn't ready for their greatness ๐Ÿ˜)

Got their couple of albums, not many bands bigger than the clash..well at least their first 3-4 albums
 
Day 20: A song by an artist with multiple bands
Monsters of Folk! A collaboration project of incredible musicians.
Starting with my favorite:

-Conor Oberst of Bright Eyes (๐Ÿ˜), Norman Bailer (later The Faint), Commander Venus, Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band, Desaparecidos, and Better Oblivion Community Center (with Phoebe Bridgers)
-Jim James of My Morning Jacket
-Mike Mogis (instrument extraordinaire) of Bright Eyes, and many many other projects
-M. Ward of She & Him
-Will Johnson of Centro-matic

Monsters of Folk - Say Please
 
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