
<< #6 | #4 >>
“Bop-baaah… bop-baaah! This is the sound of settling!”
Yes. “The sound of settling”. This was my first of many favourite songs by Bellingham, Washington’s Death Cab for Cutie.
As I wrote back in August in relation to the number 10 song on this list, it was the many promotional posters, wallpaper style, in the windows of a local independent record store, The Record Runner, hundreds of blackbirds tangled in red yarn, that first piqued my interest in the band and their fourth album, “Transatlanticism“. I wasn’t immediately sold on their sound on first listen but there were a couple of tracks that did grab me right away, this one included, and those sustained me, drawing me back for repeat listens. Eventually, I picked up on the melancholic joy that “Transatlanticism” was laying down and the rest was history.
The band originally formed back in 1997, releasing three albums prior to “Transatlanticism” but those I could never really get into. Founding members Ben Gibbard, Chris Walla, and Nick Harmer found structure with their fourth drummer Jason McGerr in 2003 and this lineup remained a constant through their jump to the majors with their fifth album, 2005’s “Plans”, up until lead guitarist Walla departed the group in 2014. Without him, Death Cab has soldiered on, replacing him with a pair of guitarist/keyboardists, releasing three more albums and they remain active.
“Our youth is fleeting
Old age is just around the bend
And I can’t wait to go gray
And I’ll sit and wonder
Of every love that could have been
If I’d only thought of something charming to say”
But back to “The sound of settling”. The album’s second single was famously disliked at first by Gibbard because it was so upbeat but it had a big supporter in Walla, who was also producing the album. I’m so glad he won out*. The song is unbelievably catchy and immediately replayable. It’s got a driving beat that lasts the whole two minutes that is tailor-made for a mid-tempo pogo. It’s got the hand claps, the bopping baseline and Ben Gibbard’s unique voice and take on the dangers of searching for love, the anxiety, the fear that it might not be returned, and on the other side of the coin, the risks of not taking those risks. And yeah, those inescapable “bop-baaahs”!
Pure indie pop goodness.
*And I’m sure Ben and the rest of the band were also glad in the end given how universally loved it is.
For the rest of the Best tunes of 2003 list, click here.
