Julian Casablancas - Phrazes For The Young -200... đ Full HD
It also directly led to The Voidzâs glorious chaos and, indirectly, to The Strokesâ eventual comeback ( The New Abnormal ) by reminding everyone: Julian doesnât owe you a second Room on Fire . He owes you his strange, unfiltered id.
Casablancas drops the cryptic cool for something weirder: moral confusion, self-help jargon, and dad-joke puns delivered with deadpan intensity. He sings about âthe outfield of infinityâ and âfour Chomolungmasâ (Mt. Everest). He warns against being a âcoconutâ (hard exterior, empty inside). Itâs less Is This It âs bedroom voyeurism and more a late-night Wikipedia binge on philosophy and conspiracy theories.
By 2009, The Strokes were in a critical coma. First Impressions of Earth (2006) had splintered their cool-kid consensus, and the band was mired in label drama, infighting, and silence. The world expected Julian Casablancasâthe aloof leather-clad oracle of Lower East Side rock revivalâto either save guitar music or crash dramatically. Julian Casablancas - Phrazes for the Young -200...
The albumâs title itselfâ Phrazes for the Young âis a winking twist on Oscar Wildeâs Phrases and Philosophies for the Use of the Young , replacing wisdom with misspelled, fragmented slogans for a generation that doesnât trust complete sentences.
Hereâs an interesting, slightly off-kilter write-up for Julian Casablancasâ Phrazes for the Young (2009), framed for a blog, liner notes, or social media deep-dive. Phrazes for the Young : The Strange, Synth-Punk Solo Album Where Julian Casablancas Got Weird Before Getting Right It also directly led to The Voidzâs glorious
Phrazes was a commercial shrug (peaked at #35 on Billboard) and a critical head-scratcher. But time has been absurdly kind. You can hear its DNA in every indie artist who later smeared synth-pop over broken hearts (Tame Impalaâs Currents , The Voidzâs entire career). Itâs the album where Julian stopped being âthe Strokes guyâ and started being Julianâmessy, melodic, unpredictable, and deeply funny.
Lead single â11th Dimensionâ is a paradox: a euphoric, handclap-driven dance track about nihilism (âDonât be a coconut / God is trying to talk to youâ). The chorus is so joyously absurd it borders on performance art. Meanwhile, âLeft & Right in the Darkâ sounds like a haunted yacht rock ballad, and âRiver of Brakelightsâ is a panic attack set to a drum machine. He sings about âthe outfield of infinityâ and
Phrazes for the Young isnât a masterpiece. Itâs better: itâs a fascinating failure of ambition that accidentally predicted the next decade of rockâs synth-soaked loneliness. Listen to it as a solo album, but better yetâlisten to it as a manifesto: âDonât be a coconut.â Be the weird guy with the vocoder and the Nietzsche complex.