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about the author... ![]() Drew Goodmanson lives in San Diego and is a Pastor at Kaleo Church. He also writes a weekly column for the San Diego Reader. He currently spends his time as a church planter, a tent-maker, a husband and father. You can view additional writings on culture, community and the church at his blog goodmanson.com.
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The Hubris of Modest Mouse by Drew Goodmanson
With the release of their new album, Good News for People Who Love Bad News, Modest Mouse has achieved a new level of mainstream success. The album includes critical praise, for example, Rolling Stone (review) rated the album four out of four stars. The review commented on what sets the band apart, “They make a peculiar brand of existential folk poetry, one that combines singer-guitarist Isaac Brock's desperately uneasy vocals with off-kilter arrangements, creating something strangely catchy.” Even Mary-Kate and Ashley voted the album their ‘fave' in the hip picks section of their website. What struck me first from this album was the song, Float On . The song breathes a light floating, rhythmic background with moments of eerie psychedelic sounds that throw you off. This contrasting style sticks the song in your mind; it is like you are trying to unravel a puzzle that has no solution. Modest Mouse kept my attention as I listened to their philosophical ideas that they were preaching to the masses.
The album title, Good News for People Who Love Bad News, corresponds with the songs aim to see positive in the world. The lyrics illustrate the good news in the bad news. For example, Isaac sings:
In the midst of life's pain, mishaps and suffering, we are told by Modest Mouse that we can float on. I have a hard time excepting this as good news. In a world of chaos, war, death, famine, murder, rape, abuse and genocide how can we just float on? Isaac Brock gives us some insight from an interview:
Rather than stand up against what is bad and wrong, Brock writes a song to try to ‘feel good for a day'. Yet this manufactured feeling only occurs reciting a contradicting mantra. Is backing your car into a cop car a good thing? Or when you ‘run (your) mouth off a bit too much' at a friend? I know I wouldn't call it good to have ‘every last dime' stolen from me. Isaac Brock is being accurate to present meaninglessness in good news. He explores this lack of meaning more in another song:
Isaac Brock sings his belief that there is no meaning to life. We are evolved from animals. Humans have come to exist through time and chance. He cannot claim any action is ‘good' or ‘bad' but only that we float through life accepting both as equals. This belief is reinforced with the song, Ocean Breathes Salty :
The more we move ahead the more we are stuck in rewind. Life is meaninglessness. This is the philosophy de jour. We have seen a wave of existential thought in pop culture this year. The last two movies I've watched, Garden State (read Kaleo's review) and I Heart Huckabees, were specifically designed to promote these existential ideals. The last music review, Bjork (read Kaleo's review), expressed similar views. These ideas sound very modern, but it's been around a long, long time. In fact, Paul said it was a philosophy that might make sense if there was no hope of a resurrection for us.
This is the hubris of Modest Mouse. They are assuming there is no heaven or hell. They are hoping that God has not created them and upon dying they will face judgment. Brock agrees with Apostle Paul's conclusion in a world without Jesus Christ's resurrection from the dead. Brock has a reputation of showing up to shows too drunk to sing. He writes in the song Bukowski:
Charles "Hank" Bukowski (1920-1994) is a poet, convinced, from the outset of the hopelessness of humanity and lasting friendship, he largely rejected the goals after which most strive. Instead, he found solace in alcohol. One critic described Bukowski's fiction as a "detailed depiction of a certain taboo male fantasy: the uninhibited bachelor, slobby, anti-social, and utterly free." If I were living with the worldview of Isaac Brock, I would pour another drink too. Actually, let's make it a double. Modest Mouse are the accumilation of every new idea and social contradiction that started with the Beat Generation and has been passed down through time to a grimey pulse-driven overcrowded millenia of middle class drones. They are the outlash against linear symmetry. A reason without a cause. An answer without a question. They have driven a fine-toothed comb through the human condition and existence, making melodies and lyrical poignance of the selfish and unsure nature of the human race. They know where we have been and can only wonder at where we will arrive next, just like all of us. They have turned off everything in their head that tells them no and not to go there, and they just flat out go. They fear nothing but themselves and their current mainstream status proves that even if you water it down, everyone needs water to live. So please bury me with it.
plus your article is rife with spelling errors
i believe that brock's is someone who isn't necessarily worried about judgement at all. It would be quite contradictory to say that he does not believe in god, and still express worry about judgement. His whole purpose in being a non-believer is escaping any worry about judgement, and living moment by moment, impulse by impulse. I think this article is misdirected in that sense.
I don't know if I agree with you on this one... I think that Modest Mouse might have an agenda with their religiously themed songs but it makes me feel like it's mostly made to make you think... and not to indocrtinate you. In fact, I don't even think the band is saying there is actually "no heaven or hell" but if you trully are living your life for the sake of only religion you should try to take a step back to see if you're maybe just wasting a large amount of your time in this short life. Print-friendly version of this page Mail this article
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