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another sketchbook doodle of bananaz damon and jamie đ






Everything i did last days... and some old things too...

Gorillaz 20 anos

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Assorted Thoughts on âHallelujah Moneyâ by Gorillaz
Hey guys, Iâve wanted to write this for a few days now and finally got the chance to do it. Sorry for not finishing my next video review, but Iâve had my hands full with homework, essays, and the recording of my first podcast. (Iâll make an announcement about that later!) But anyway, Iâve wanted to make this for a while, so letâs talk about the newest song released by Gorillaz, âHallelujah Money.â
Now let me first give some background. My parents raised me on a lot of older music from the â60s and â70s, but from about 2010-2015, I started discovering a lot of bands and artists from the â80s, â90s, and 2000s that I missed out on, like Muse, Foo Fighters, Depeche Mode, etc. One of those bands was Gorillaz, the collaboration between lead singer/pianist/songwriter Damon Albarn (formerly of Blur) and cartoonist Jamie Hewlett (creator of Tank Girl). I was first drawn to listen to their music due to the not often used concept of a band whose members are all cartoon characters, but when I actually did listen to their songs, I realized that this wasnât just a novelty band. This was the real deal, so I bought all three of their albums, Gorillaz (2001), Demon Days (2005), and Plastic Beach (2010). Everyone should listen to these albums at some point in their lives. Theyâre that good and actually tackle serious topics, like depression, consumerism, gun violence, the War on Terror, and pollution.
However, it seemed that just as I was getting into their music, they broke up. In 2013, Damon announced a hiatus due to creative differences between himself and Jamie, which really depressed me. It didnât help that the story arc shown in the videos of Plastic Beach was left permanently unfinished due to budget cuts from their record company, and their last two offerings before the split were somewhat underwhelming. I consider 2011âs The Fall as less of a cohesive album and more of a weird compilation of unfinished that Damon Albarn recorded on his iPad while on tour, and 2012âs âDoYaThingâ was forgettable and brought little closure to the Plastic Beach arc.
But after two years of waiting, they finally announced in 2015 that they would get back together, and theyâve spent their time since then promoting the hell out of this album. I mean it, too. There have been several pictures of the characters posted to tease the new videos, with each one having had a redesign. A series of videos called âThe Book of Gorillazâ were posted summarizing the Gorillazâ story between the end of the unfinished âRhinestone Eyesâ music video and now, which directly goes against what happened in the âDoYaThingâ video, but it offers much better closure for that arc. The bandâs fictional guitarist Noodle has been super active, too; she got an Instagram account used to further tease the new album, she appeared in a Jaguar Racing commercial, and she even got an OKCupid online dating profile! Are cartoon characters even allowed to get profiles on that site?
The point is, they got me hyped, and I couldnât wait to listen to the first taste of their new music. And just a few days ago, they dropped a new song, âHallelujah Money,â and I rushed to listen to it. How was it?
âŠEh?
This is a weird song for me. I have found so many things wrong with it, yet I still feel a need to defend it from other Gorillaz fans who hate it. It was certainly a strange choice for the first taste of their new sound.
Now I found out a few hours after I listened to âHallelujah Moneyâ that this isnât actually the first single from their new album. Iâm not entirely sure how to interpret that, though. Does it mean that this isnât the first official single from the new album, but it will still be on the album? Or does it mean that it wonât be on the new album and was just a standalone song that they recorded and released separate from the album? Gorillaz have done that before; look at their past songs, âRockitâ and âDoYaThing.â Both of those were recorded and released separate from any album; âRockit,â released in 2004, was not a part of Demon Days, and âDoYaThing,â released in 2012, will, as far as Iâm aware, not be included on the upcoming album. So this is not uncommon to do; however, I was unaware of that when I listened to it. I thought it was a weird first song to tease the album with. I was expecting another âClint Eastwood,â another âFeel Good Inc.,â or another âStylo.â But this?
Okay, let me first defend this song by saying that peopleâs reasons for disliking it are kind of stupid. This song is very clearly about Donald Trump becoming the 45th President of the United States. Iâve avoided talking much about this topic, but Iâll sum it up by saying that itâs already taken a toll on my family and Iâm scared for whatâs to come. Anyway, people in the comments of this video are hating the song because itâs political, which I find kind of funny because Demon Days and Plastic Beach were both mostly about political-themed topics and nobody seemed to mind those albums.
But with that said, there are a few things I find weird about this song. Musically, it follows the same avant-garde style that was present in The Fall, which was not what I was expecting. The best description I can give for it is politically-fueled gospel to a trip-hop beat. For a song by Gorillaz, there isnât really a lot of Gorillaz in it, not even in the music video; 2D shows up in puppet form to sing the chorus, and Murdoc appears at the beginning and end of the video as a still image. I was hoping for more cool animation in their videos, but we donât get a lot of that.
The next problem is the featured artist, poet and singer Benjamin Clementine, who is featured more on the song than Damon/2D. He has a nice crooning voice. My only problem is that I have a hard time understanding what heâs singing/saying due to his British accent. The only words I recognize from him are ones about âbuilding walls.â This wouldnât be a problem if the song had a nice tune/hook to sing along to; the problem is that it doesnât have that. Apart from the chorus, which just repeats the title, âHallelujah Money,â and 2Dâs part, I can barely remember how the song goes.
And then there is this weird part at the very end where it shows a clip from SpongeBob SquarePants of the title character running away and bawling. Why did the video cut to that? Iâm not sure if itâs in the actual song or just the video, but it throws me off every time I watch it. Apparently, itâs SpongeBobâs reaction to when Mr. Krabs tells him, âYouâre fired,â the catchphrase that Donald Trump takes credit for popularizing in his TV show The Apprentice, but it seems like sort of a vague reference to make. The only people who would get that are SpongeBob fans, and I doubt that thereâs a very high crossover audience between SpongeBob fans and Gorillaz fans.
I will say this, though: at least with this, Gorillaz fans canât claim that theyâre getting too mainstream. There were some Gorillaz fans who claimed they were getting too mainstream in their last album, Plastic Beach, so now that theyâve released this, one of the least mainstream songs in their entire discography, fans can no longer claim that.
So, final thoughts? Well, despite all the criticisms Iâve made, Iâve listened to it a few times over and, well, it isnât terrible. I at least see what they were trying to do. Whether they did it successfully is up for debate. I guess I like it more in concept than I do as a song. I agree with the political messageâwe live in an era where we could certainly use a Demon Days Part Twoâand donât think that they style theyâre going for is an inherently bad one. For a better attempt at this, listen to track 13 of Demon Days, âFire Coming Out of the Monkeyâs Head,â with Dennis Hopper. I also donât leave this with zero hopes for the new album. Yes, there is a chance that this could be what the entire album sounds like and that it could wind up being a huge disappointment, but theyâve worked on this album for around two years now. Iâm still skeptical, but coming from the same guys who made âEl Mañanaâ? Câmon. They have to have better stuff in store.
~TheHappySpaceman
This came to me when I was attempting to explain Noodle's backstory over dinner

Hey, besides TCM, what other fandoms are you in/ willing to discuss, and is there any that arenât just horror?
Okay this is gonna be quite the list i like to hyper fixate on alot of thing almost all of them connected to horror somehow I love silent hill, resident evil, I'm obsessed with dead by daylight too oh and I love creepypasta at one point I was and would say still am obsessed with slenderverse my main fav was everymanhybrid evan was one of my favs and I like to hyper fixate on my fav bands and music like Hollywood undead, she wants revenge, melanie martinez and a new hyper fixation for me has been tank girl and phoo action both being comics and art that Jamie hewlett didâ(and if you dont know who that is he did the art for the band gorillaz)âââ and that's pretty much all I can think of right now thank you for askingâĄ



tank girl (and some booga) by jamie hewlett

Sanford D. Ingleberry âSnakeâ in Jamie Hewlett style.

Ace (Gangreen globe).

YUUUHHH NOODLE MY QUEEN