Thursday, October 27, 2011

Song of the Week: La Dispute – King Park

I have been kicking around the idea of starting a “Song of the Week” segment for this blog for a little while now. The simple idea behind it being that I re-examine what I listened to each week and come up with a single song that stood out the most and present it here.


This week’s song is by a post-hardcore band from Michigan called La Dispute. I had not been familiar with the band until I saw them open for Thrice last week. I was a little uncertain of what I thought about them at the time, but was encouraged by urgency the band injected into each of their songs. The main thing that left me undecided about them, however, was the singer’s vocal delivery. He alternated back and forth between spoken word and screaming, immediately bring to mind Rage Against The Machine (a band that I could never get into mainly because of the hip-hop inspired vocals).

After the show, I wanted to see how well the band’s intensity translated to their recorded material. While listening to some of their songs on youtube, I came across the song King Park from their latest album, Wildlife. It is a lengthy and lyrically dense song about a drive-by shooting which made a distinct emotional impression on me.

The vocals might be off-putting at first, but I urge you to listen to the song and read the lyrics (listed below). I would be surprised if you didn’t leave emotionally affected.


Another shooting on the southeast side. This a drive-by, mid-day,
Outside of the bus stop, by Fuller and Franklin. Or near there.
Not far from the park. About a block from where the other shooting was last month.
Or was it last week?

Shots were fired from an SUV heading northbound, Eastown,
The target a rival but they didn't hit the target this time.
They hit a kid we think had nothing to do with it.

And I travel backwards through time and space and I disintegrate, become invisible.
I want to see it where I couldn't when it happened.
I want to see it all first hand this time.
I want to know what it felt like.

So I float behind police lines, reconstruct the scene in fragments of memories.
I want to know what his mother looked like up close, I want to see her leaning over his body.
So I float there, transcend time. I want to capture it accurately.
I want to know what the color of the blood was spilling out from the tarp onto the concrete.
I want to write it all down so I can always remember.
If you could see it up close how could you ever forget how senseless death, how precious life.
I want to be there when the bullet hit.

And the crowd poured out as the shots drowned into siren sounds, out of there houses now
And over front yards, all the way up to the place where the police tape ran to mark the crime
Scene. Everybody trying to catch a glimpse of what was happening,
Of what was going on between the ambulance and all the cop cars.
Everybody gossiping, "Whose kid got hit? Where'd it hit him? And who could've fired it?"
Everybody wondering, "How did it happen again? And is he dead? These children. Our kids."
Everybody wondering how far they were from where the victims lived.

And I visit them, their houses. Inside my dream I visit them. 
My spirit, soaring high and high up over King Park, leaves the crime scene, travels further back
Till far before the shooting, through their windows, to their living rooms.
I see them younger this time, playing games and doing homework.
All these marks of youth soon transformed coldly into stone for fights and stupid feuds.
For ruins wrapped in gold. And cruelly I recall why I have come: To find a reason. But
There cannot be a reason, not for death, not like this. Not like this.

Three days later they made funeral plans. The family.
Three days later a mother had to bury her son.

Not far away the shooter holed up in a hotel near to the highway with a friend and the gun.
That same gun. He'd fled immediately but was identified by witnesses, his picture on TV. 
Only 20 years old, they called him "Grandpa." He was older than the others by a year,
Maybe two.

And he was safe for awhile until somebody saw him there and notified the authorities
Who surrounded the hotel, first arresting an accomplice while attempting to flee,
Then chasing him up the staircase to the floor where he'd stayed. He closed the door hard
Behind him, locked himself in the room.

They could've kicked in the door but knew the gun was still with him,
One he'd already used and so they feared what he'd do.
I floated up through the window of a room to the West. 
I hovered out to the hallway, tried to listen in.
I heard them trying to reason, get him to open the door.
His uncle begging and pleading, half-collapsed to the floor.
He preached of hope and forgiveness,
said, "There is always a chance to rectify what you've taken, make your peace in the world."
I thought to slip through the door, I could've entered the room,
I felt the burden of murder, it shook the earth to the core.
Felt like the world was collapsing. Then we heard him speak,
"Can I still get into heaven if I kill myself?
Can I still get into heaven if I kill myself?
Can I ever be forgiven cuz I killed that kid?
It was an accident I swear it wasn't meant for him!
And if I turn it on me, if I even it out, can I still get in or will they send me to hell?
Can I still get into heaven if I kill myself?"
I left the hotel behind, don't want to know how it ends.

4 comments:

  1. It is a pretty neat song that it goes full circle. I think the spoken word stuff fit well with the rest of the song, emphasizing the parts that were sung. There is a nice raw quality to it, akin to early Against Me!

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  2. Thanks for the comments. "Set the dial to your doom" he he. I could have easily chosen a song from Black Tusk's new album for song of the week.

    The song certainly does have a raw quality to it. I must say that I was pretty surprised how much energy is in the recording. After seeing them live, I was pretty certain that that intensity would not be largely absent in their recorded output. Glad to see that I was wrong.

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  3. I really like the idea of a Song of the Week. I hope you continue it even though you might of missed this week. I don't mind the spoken word aspect but the lyrics seem a little dense or clunky if that makes sense. I still liked the song, good pick!

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