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Optico-aural Synergy: “Hard Times” by Patrick Wolf

July 22nd, 2009

I have a confession to make: I’ve never been all that into Patrick Wolf. Among my friends, there are die-hard worshipers, those who hold him in general disdain, and plenty who just like it when he pops up on iTunes DJ.

(Total aside: why was that renamed? Party Mix was a perfectly informative title for that function. Is it all that enhanced by pretending iTunes now has agency in selecting the order? Isn’t that was Genius is for?)

For my part, I’ve always been something of a poseur. I liked a couple of his tracks well enough, but I couldn’t make it all the way through many, many tracks. But whenever he came up in conversation with other indiephiles, I was the fawning fanboy. After all, it was a story that I could certainly get behind: Wolf as some gay, self-taught street kid musical prodigy, who did whatever the hell he felt like in service to his art. I wanted to get behind that, I wanted to obsess over his albums. I certainly wore out a few tracks…To The Lighthouse and A Boy Like Me on Lycanthropy and then…well I didn’t really listen to anything else until The Magic Position, which was really the only song I listened to on that whole album.

I think a large part of it is, for all of my teenage angst in high school, I’ve never really been a fan of emo music. It was a wildly underrepresented genre in my mp3 collection and I wasn’t even clued in to Wolf until college. For all the interesting things that he does musically, his genius productions and – adventurous – fashions, I can’t really connect to his themes. “The Magic Position” was very different compared to the rest of his body of work, and I completely wore the track out. But after its fantastic eponymous opening, everything went back to brooding on that album, if I recall correctly (and please correct me if you disagree!).

All this to say: I haven’t listened to Patrick Wolf in a while and I didn’t listen all that closely at the time. But I want to show you a music video that I’m very excited about – it’s for a newer song called “Hard Times”:

It’s directed by Ace Norton who has worked with a number of other indie darlings, and to whom Wolf refers, “[he is] the Michel Gondry of my generation.” I’m definitely going to be keeping my eye out for him, if only because I’m in love with the visuals above.

Because, really, I’m not feeling clued in to the link between song message and video. What is it that ties together working hard through tough economic times and sometimes being a wildly fluorescing drum player (or paint thrower)? Then again, who cares? It looks damn cool.

And, for what it’s worth, I am hopelessly in love with Wolf’s friend and sometime concertmate Owen Pallet, also known as Final Fantasy.

steven Optico-aural Synergy , ,

  1. May 30th, 2010 at 01:26 | #1

    That kinda blew my mind a little. I’ll admit to maybe being one of those ‘die-hard worshipers’…at least when you knew me. Wind In The Wires hit me something fierce when I heard it, as well as a few tracks off Lycanthropy that I still have a hard time forgiving. But even though I knew a lot of the material he was going to put on The Magic Position from live shows and such, I was completely turned off by the way the came out on the album — so much so that I’m not sure if I ever gave the album a solid listen. I did listen to his new album once — and I liked it, but I still haven’t really sat down with it. It blew my mind that Tilda Swinton did voice-overs all through it, but it still hasn’t drawn me back yet. I think it’s just her persona that threw me off the trail, I dunno. That, and living in a situation where music wasn’t really all that welcome.

    Enough rambling comment, it’s 3am.

  2. May 30th, 2010 at 01:27 | #2

    @Oisín Mac Suibhne
    And by “her persona”, I totally meant “his”. I was just still thinking about how awesome Tilda Swinton is.