“Carlo Rossi” (Love in the Face of Great Danger) by Tyson Motsenbocker, Thursday, December 1, 2022
With the turning of the calendar to the last month of the year comes goodies from Spotify and Apple Music. This morning I checked my Spotify Wrapped and my Apple Music Replay '22 and how different they were! First of all, I noticed that there was no Anberlin in my Apple Music statistics. I wonder if tracks that I imported from before I subscribed to Apple Music count? This year I listened to Apple Music for my personal listening and Spotify for my blog. I listened to Spotify considerably less than Apple Music, though last year I jealously watched as my friends displayed their Wraps on Facebook and Instagram. But my top song only had eight plays so I don't know if that counts. What was that top song? "Carlo Rossi" by Tyson Motsenbocker.
THEY BURNED A CAR IN THE PARKING LOT. Both on the Labeled Podcast and The Black Sheep Podcast, Motsenbocker talks about the themes of his latest record, Milk Teeth. The title of the record refers to growing up; baby teeth are the soft teeth that we lose in early childhood and sometimes referred to as milk teeth because they are the teeth that grow while a baby is still nursing. He describes the record as the one where he is putting the past to bed, dealing with becoming an adult. He also discusses how the moving goalposts for his generation has created a generation of nostalgia. He says, "As millennials, not only were we not sold that our future was going to be this Blade Runner dystopian hellscape that it's turning out to be, but we were sold that it was going to be so much better than anything that had ever come before us, that you could be anything you wanted to be; you could be the president; you can be an astronaut . . . and everything you do is amazing." Motsenbocker talks about living moment by moment in the present, which becomes a collection of moments that feel right that lead to another moment that feels right. On Labeled, Motsenbocker explains that the song deals with his success at a time when the world seems to be on fire. For Motsenbocker those moments that feel right led him into a relationship and into a marriage. It's a song about coming of age at what seems like the end of the world, and living the best you can with those circumstances. I'll drink to that!
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