Friday, October 9, 2015

Twenty One Pilots: lyrical geniuses

I am not sure if this is true, but my opinion.
& this opinion is coming from someone who loves the music industry, I don't know much about it but I do know a little. I do know what back stages are like, I know what tour is like, I know what unloading and reloading a trailer is like. I know what working a merch table is like. I wanted to to be a band manager- I honestly have always wanted to do  it since I was 15, I'm still intrigued by bands and the family that they form on the road. I am fascinated by the fans and by the shows, but mostly I'm taken back by their passion.

In the past week I have been to two different shows, completely different. One was folky and one was punk music. One was for me and the other was for my little sister. I saw Brandi Carlile (maybe I will write about her some other time) --The other was TwentyOne Pilots.

before I start this, know that I am just stating my opinion. If you get upset, please do not be passive or  rude. Ask me questions.

TwentyOne Pilots is the most interesting band I have ever in my entire life encountered. Wednesday about lunchtime, my sister was ready to sit outside of the venue in Atlanta and wait in line for 6 hours because the show was general admission. With that being said, we brought blankets and sat on the ground while we made friends with the other fans who showed up or had been there for 12 hours. Before this show the only time I'd ever listened to this band was on the way to Atlanta the night before, she was excited so we listened to them the entire drive. As I tried to figure out what their lyrics mean or even say, I asked her questions about the band. Camaryn told me all about them and one thing that stood out was that she said they were christians. As I quietly listened to her sing the songs in the car, I wondered if it was true. They hadn't come out to say it in any interviews or lyrics, necessarily. They just talked a lot about dark things battling the light. So I pushed it aside and promised myself that I wouldn't try to figure anything out until after watching them perform.

Back to Wednesday: As we waited in line, I noticed their fans. All very punk rocky fans, they had tall socks, tall converse, colored hair, gauges, tattoos, dark eyeliner and a few even colored their neck and hands black to copy the lead singer, Tyler. I felt out of place, of course I was wearing camouflage vans, a grey t shirt, a flannel and jeans. We got to know the people around us and of course it was a competition to see who knew the band better. Who had taken the most pictures with them or who had seen them the most times. A guy asked me if I had ever seen them live and I shook my head, only for next question to be "what's your favorite song by them?"  --Camaryn then stood up and said, "she brought me here, she doesn't really know their stuff." It was as if I had just told the kid that I hated puppies, he seemed so bothered and when he asked me what I listened to I think my answer was, "shows with seats, folky, acoustic type stuff- Johns my favorite." Needless to say, he didn't know who that was.

I digress, the doors opened and we had our place on the floor. Camaryn seemed to be good with where we were before 'the push'--I'd warned Camaryn about it, I told her that when the opening band plays that there is a push from the back and that I will have her. The first push happened and it was alright, we just couldn't move our hands. The second push happened and I could feel every part of the girls body behind me. Then Twenty One Pilots were about to come on-- we had maybe ten minutes before they took the stage and this push was so bad that my arm was wrapped around Camaryn's waist and I told her not fall, she was able to pick her feet up completely while the crowd took us wherever we ended. It was like being stuck in a rip current. I explained that when the band comes on that it gets worse and being that this is her first ever general admission concert, she wanted to get out of the pit. As I grabbed her hand and was wished luck from the stranger next to me, I promised her that I would get us out of the pit. 45 seconds later I had pushed at least 25 kids who literally said no to me and got my baby sister out of the pit. She ran upstairs and got a seat. We didn't get to sit together, which was a bummer but still okay.

My seat ended up practically backstage,  I could see the crowd as they saw the crowd and I wouldn't have wanted it any other way.

here's when my opinion comes in.

as I watched this band perform their weird set, I watched the crowd repeat and know every single word to his fast, fast lyrics. I watched them mimic every single move he made and I watched some of the cry as they listened to him play the ukulele and sing loudly. I was perplexed by this-- is that what I look like at shows? A fan looking up at a person that I have glorified on my own? That thought rushed through quickly and I sat down in my seat and leaned over the balcony to watch him walk off and on stage, I watched him as put on a persona before walking back on. Now, I am not saying that this man, these two men, are two different people. I simply saying that Elton John isn't as colorful off stage as he is on -- same with this band. They are real people with real lives and good families. This person that they put on is different than what they are with their families.

I currently have so many thoughts rushing through and trying to grab them and type this is nearly impossible. This band is incredible. It's two dudes, with normal lives and normal dreams. However, their lyrics have saved so many people lives. Before the show ended, they did this really huge number where they get the crowd to sing back at them-- so the house lights come on and you can see everyone in the crowd. I looked at almost every face and thanked Jesus that they were there. But, while I was confused as to why I was thanking Him in that moment-- He answered my question before I could even ask it. This was how He has to keep these kids on this earth-- no it may not be the way we want it to look, it may not be a youth groups or a church retreat, but its two guys who have struggled with depression and they overcame it and their lyrics are beyond anything I've ever heard.

These guys wear masks on stage, weird mask, nonetheless, and they do weird body ticks and they wear certain things, but its how they gained who they are. It's how they got people to listen to them. I'd like to think that the masks mean more than I can even put into words. I think they are hiding behind their insecurities, but a lot hiding to let their fans know that it isn't about them. Before they took their final exit off the stage, their last words are -- "we are twenty-one pilots and so are you."

Here is the mind blowing part of it all.
Most of their lyrics are about Jesus.
And every kid that stands in that crowd and screams them at the top of their lungs, may not know it at the time, but they are screaming a man's journal to his Father. They are screaming thoughts that a guy struggles with daily. But they can relate. People turn their noses up this band because they wear masks and paint their neck and emo kids love them-- but today I did my research.

And I have come to the conclusion that this band is just two men, trying to figure it out and being honest about every single struggle they have. These two guys have helped keep multiple teens in this world, there is not doubt in my mind. Sure, it may be that those teens are glorifying the band-- but I think as they get older and wiser that they will realize that it wasn't the band that kept them from offing themselves, it was two men who weren't scared to be transparent 



Kitchen Sink
Are you searching for purpose?
Then write something, yeah it might be worthless
Then paint something then, it might be wordless
Pointless curses, nonsense verses
You'll see purpose start to surface
No one else is dealing with your demons
Meaning maybe defeating them
Could be the beginning of your meaning, friend.


Doubt 
Don't forget about me,
Don't forget about me,
Even when I doubt you,
I'm no good without you, no, no, no, no, no


Gnawing on the bishops, claw our way up their system,
Repeating simple phrases, someone holy insisted,
I want the markings made on my skin,
To mean something to me again,
Hope you haven't left without me.
Hope you haven't left without me, please.

Johnny Boy 
We all need you now

I will carry all your names and I will carry all your shame
And I will carry all your names and I will carry all your shame
And I will carry all your names and I will carry all your shame

Get up Johnny boy, get up Johnny boy
Get up 'cause the world has left you lying on the ground.
You're my pride and joy, you're my pride and joy.
Get up Johnny boy because we all need you now.


March to the Sea
And hear a voice inside my head:
Follow me instead
Follow me instead
Follow me

Then the wages of war will start
Inside my head with my counterpart
And the emotionless marchers will chant the phrase:
This line's the only way

And then I start down the sand
My eyes are focused on the end of land
But again the voice inside my head says,
Follow me instead
Follow me instead


Addict With a Pen

In fact,
I'm only at it again
As an addict with a pen
Who's addicted to the wind
As it blows me back and forth
Mindless, spineless, and pretend
Of course I'll be here again
See you tomorrow
But it's the end of today
End of my ways
As a walking denial
My trial was filed as a crazy
Suicidal head case
But you specialize in dying
You hear me screaming
Father
And I'm lying here just crying
So wash me with your water

Water
Hello

We haven't talked in quite some time
I know
I haven't been the best
Of sons
Hello
I've been traveling in
The desert of my mind
And I
I haven't found a drop
Of life



No comments:

Post a Comment