Paramore – Brand New Eyes

And as good as Brand New Eyes can be, just wait until Hayley Williams begins to venture beyond her insular personal realm, and starts to see the wider world around her.

Paramore - Brand New Eyes

If the precocious Hayley Williams spends a lot of Brand New Eyes correcting bad behavior in others (“You treat me just like another stranger”), she enlightens with “Ignorance,” and then points out, “Next time you point a finger / I’ll point you to a mirror” on “Playing God.” All of this anger seems to be directed at some immature boy in Williams’ life; at least until we get to “Looking Up,” the eighth track. This pivotal song describes the near break-up of Paramore, an event that obviously still troubles Williams. “I can’t believe we almost hung it up,” she confesses. “Confessional,” however, is not a word that describes Williams much of the time. Yet confessional is the only word that fits “The Only Exception,” with its lyrical ode to rare love in a mostly loveless world. Exceptional love, the kind she never saw her parents share with each other, has suddenly and surprisingly found its way into Williams’ world. “Spiritual” is another word that rarely applies to songs on Brand New Eyes. In fact, “Careful,” oddly paraphrases Jesus with these words: “The truth never set me free/So I’ll do it myself.” The one clear place where the Christian life is alluded to is “Turn It Off.” The lyric, “I’m better off when I hit the bottom,” relays one of those end-of-her-rope moments, where only God can ease the pain. Musically, producer Rob Cavallo (who’s worked with Green Day, among others) gives Brand New Eyes a crisp, clear sound. For some reason, tracks like “Ignorance” bring to mind ’80s era Billy Idol. But the more I think about it, the more that analogy makes sense, because Idol made a similar transition from angry punker to angry mainstream rocker during that timeframe. And as good as Brand New Eyes can be, just wait until Hayley Williams begins to venture beyond her insular personal realm, and starts to see the wider world around her. That’ll be the true eye-opener. [Fueled By Ramen] Dan MacIntosh

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3 Comments

  1. Caitlyn had this to say on October 19, 2009 | Permalink

    Hmmm… I have to disagree and say “brand new eyes” is their best album yet, both instrumentally and lyrically, and I’ve been a fan for 4 years. They are and have expericed/ing new things, what other people in the world have been through, are going through, and will go through, so they know that there is a “wider world around” them.

    When Hayley wrote her share of the album, she was angry, confused, and upset. But fast forward to now, she claims she is enjoying her life more than before now that she has everything off her chest, so the “angry” claim is almost invalid.

    I do love your work though, as a writer.

  2. Thanasis had this to say on October 23, 2009 | Permalink

    Caitlyn I agree with you

  3. brxce had this to say on July 11, 2010 | Permalink

    @caitlyn yes i agree BUT their old album has alot of songs that would beat some of their songs on their new album.

    and to bad paramore might break up:( thanks to hayley posting a shirtless pic on twitter claiming it was an “accident”

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