Misfit Love
Wanna see my past in flames
Don’t waste a drop Baby, I ain’t fussed
Where I was born No escape
There, There ain’t even no good/bad drugsIn the city is it true?
If you don’t, you act like you do
Feast of fools. I can’t wait
Give em a taste of my Misfit LoveComplicate. Encarcerate. Feel my heart wake up
Aint born to lose baby,
I’m born to win
I’m so goddamn sick baby, it’s a Sin
It’s a Sintransforming is becoming
transforming is becoming on me
Do me first. Do your worst
Gimmie what I want some of
One track mind, no time to waste.
Sidewalks, feel me strut so good ?Gutter, Don’t forget this face
Let em taste my Misfit Love
I’ll show you all my Dirty Tricks
Then show em again
I’m so proud of emIt’s cruel to be constantly. Feel my heart play dumb.
Ain’t born to lose baby,
I’m born to win
I’m so sick baby, it’s a Sin
It’s a SinJust a dead man, walking through the dead of night
And if you are going anywhere tonight ?
Just a dead end walking through the dead of night
And if you are going, Can I get a ride ?
Just a dead man walking through the dead of night
Its impossible to wait until the lightCause I’m already gone
If you bet on me, you’ve wonMisfit Love, Era Vulgaris, 2007
Queens of the Stone Age - 3s & 7s
Era Vulgaris is the fifth studio album from Queens of the Stone Age. The lineup for this album was: Joshua Homme, Troy Van Leeuwen, Joey Castillo and Alain Johannes.
There’s always trepidation when your favorite band puts out a new album. All the anticipation you’ve built up makes you almost not want to listen to the album when you finally get it in your hands. Or maybe that’s just me. I just hate being disappointed by bands I love. So when I sat down to listen to Era Vulgaris for the first time, I remembered how I felt upon first hearing the previous album, Lullabies to Paralyze. I hated it. But, I grew to love it eventually. I guess it’s like having an ugly baby. At first you’re horrified, then you learn to find the beauty within it.
At first I was ambivalent about Era. I didn’t know if I liked it, hated it, loved it. I put it away after the first listen and let it soak in. Then I put it in the car and listened to it over and over again while we drove around Long Island one weekend on a photo taking/authentic Mexican food finding spree. There were songs that I kept repeating: “Suture up Your Future”, “3’s & 7’s”,”Into the Hollow”. And I loved the rendition of “Make it Wit Chu”, a song previously heard on Desert Sessions. Most important, there were no songs I skipped.
Each QOTSA album is completely different from the others. I know that sounds like a “no shit” statement, but with a lot of bands, you get the same sound, different lyrics on their albums. With QOTSA, each new effort is like discovering a new genre within one band, or a new band within that band (which sort of holds true as the lineup for this band changes so often, and there are so many guests artists on each album).
Era Vulgaris is deeper musically than any of the previous titles. While lyrically it’s not as tight as some of the earlier work, there’s a lot of introspection here and enough thoughtfulness to keep the words as interesting as the music. The music itself is full, broad and encompasses so many different styles that it’s hard to get sick of this album; even after a hundred repeated plays over a two day period, I was still hearing things in songs I didn’t hear previously.
It’s not my favorite album of theirs, but it is a great album.

