Along with that, frontman Britt Daniel is one of the few artists who I'll still take 5 minutes to read about in the music press—particularly if it's an interview where he's discussing the creative process behind his songs. Great thing is, I never get that "I'm an artist, dammit!" pretentiousness from him. But I do sense that he truly works at his craft. He also has a brain and isn't afraid to use it.
I definitely got that sense the first time I heard "You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb" from Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga (2007). I still love that entire album, but "Cherry Bomb" stuck out to me from moment one. It was immediately poppy and catchy, yet it also hinted at its layers of deeper meaning beneath that accessible groove. It reminded me of something that Elvis Costello would have put out, circa 1977—the tinges of punk and Motown/Spector give it that feel. (Daniel told Salon.com in 2014 that the song was Spoon's attempt to sound like The Supremes.)
The intelligent lyrics also feel like My Aim Is True-era Costello. Daniel doesn't beat you over the head with the fact that this is a breakup song. Instead, he drops hints through fractured, metaphoric poetry. (What better symbol than a smoldering cherry bomb could one use to describe love that's well past its sell-by date?)
As he told eMusic back in 2007, "That central image of the 'cherry bomb' came naturally. Sometimes lines just come to you while you're singing, and you're not sure where they came from. I came up with the cherry bomb being representative of a need to blow out this romantic flame."
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