Brown Eyed Girls ~ Basic
Brown Eyed Girls is
back with a new album (their first in 2 years!), and they prove they're
anything but 'Basic.' Known for hits like "Abracadabra" and "Sixth Sense," not to mention their
cutting-edge concepts, they've unleashed their talents on their sixth. The album released on November 5th 2015.
The album
launches into the guitar-driven dance track "Ice Cream Time."
It's an attractive, slick production, punctuated by Ga In's vocals and Miryo's raps. The refrain "if I had to die tonight/in your lips" gives you an idea of what it's about. There's some innuendo
there, but I'm not sure what this has to do with the album concept.
"Warm Hole" starts with sassy
horns and the chant "fire in the hole." It's a catchy, bold song that grabs you by the ears and won't let
go. Lyrics like "touch me down there" might give you an
idea of what the song's about, but not quite. While some of it is purely sexual (and
boldly so), there are other snippets that suggest transportation and the girls
being in a tunnel -- the purpose of a wormhole (which is what the Korean title
actually is).
"Waves" tames the semi-frantic nature of the first two tracks and is smooth like the tides rolling in and out. The insistent beat and seductive vocals complete the aural picture. Partly about love and loss, partly scientific, they're not singing about waves on the beach: "the waves came and changed things."
"Brave New World" has a backing track that
reminds me a lot of "Sixth Sense," but the similarities stop
there. There's some staccato effects, a marching beat, and some space age
sounds on top of the girls' amazing voices. The title itself was lifted from
the dystopian novel by Aldous
Huxley, but the song is about the
universe changing.
"Obsession," like "Ice Cream Time," is probably one of the most down to earth songs on the album. It's got a jazzy, pseudo Spanish groove going on here. It's smooth and seductive, but in an entirely different way than "Waves." But even this song tends to have its head in the clouds:
"Obsession," like "Ice Cream Time," is probably one of the most down to earth songs on the album. It's got a jazzy, pseudo Spanish groove going on here. It's smooth and seductive, but in an entirely different way than "Waves." But even this song tends to have its head in the clouds:
"Every night before going to bed
I see the lights,
I see a lot of visions
I got a feeling
it's not real but illusions."
"God Particle" is an
exciting, danceable tune with blasting horns and the brassy attitude that we've
come to expect from BEG. The God Particle
is also known as the Higgs boson, a particle
important to the building blocks of all matter, which could have destroyed the
universe shortly after it was born. While there's some innuendo here, there are
also hints about the dangerous nature of the thing.
"Light" has a hip-hop vibe running through it with
probably the largest part Miryo has on this album. It's got a pretty chorus and some bratty
rapping as well. There's a nice time-change near the end, and it all combines
to make an awesome tune. It's a song of hope, striving to capture the dream in
a ray of light.
"Atomic"
changes things up bit; it has a sweeping, epic feel to it, with some
interesting layering effects for the hook "atomic
bomb". The tune relates the excitement in a relationship to an
atom bomb:
"Trillions of cells in my body are
Having a party
we have fission
(atomic bomb)"
"Dice Play" has a ton of Spanish groove influences here with the guitar and honking horns, the maracas, and all of that. It's a pretty, stripped-down song, absent of most K-pop influences with a frantic rhythm. As to how this relates to their concept, their Facebook page confirms what I first thought: Einstein, denouncing quantum theory, proclaimed that "God does not play dice."
"Fractal" is the closest we have to a ballad, more of
a mid tempo tune than anything. It's a pretty song, sung to an acoustic guitar.
There's an English fail in the chorus, "Stop don't breaking my
heart," but it doesn't detract
from the overall beauty of the tune. The lyrics seem to describe a breakup
while inside a fractal. Want to know what a fractal is? It's an infinitely
repeating complex pattern, like a snowflake or broccoli floret.
This is an absolutely original concept album. The LP is primarily concerned with science and physics, wrapped up in plenty of more terrestrial concepts like love and breakups. It's a unique fusion, something I really haven't seen in K-pop, and certainly not on this scale. If I had to draw a comparison, it might be to Voivod in their prog-rock phase or the space rock of early David Bowie. It's something unique here, and I applaud it. Highly listenable, driven by the unique charm of these four talented women, this album is probably the most fun you'll have with science.
Track Listing :
Ice Cream Time Click Here
Warm Hole (Wormhole) Click Here
Waves Click Here
Brave New World Click Here
Obsession Click Here
God Particle Click Here
Light Click Here
Atomic Click Here
Dice Play Click Here
Fractal Click Here
Warm Hole (Wormhole) Click Here
Waves Click Here
Brave New World Click Here
Obsession Click Here
God Particle Click Here
Light Click Here
Atomic Click Here
Dice Play Click Here
Fractal Click Here
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