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Garbage songs
Garbage songs





garbage songs

“A hammering in my head don’t stop in the bullet train from Tokyo to Los Angeles.”īy far the most blood-pumping track on Bleed Like Me, “Metal Heart” has become a crowd favorite at Garbage shows, but I still find it to be underrated somehow. I just wish they paid homage to their predecessors. Not many bands were doing what they were doing in 1998, and now, with the rise of EDM, we are seeing more artists with the beat bug come out of the woodwork more than ever. Garbage had a way of making music that was before their time. I remember playing this song for friends back in 2003 and the looks of terror and confusion on their faces is forever implanted in my mind, which I look back on with amusement. So you’re not gonna crack, no you’re never gonna crack.”įrom 1998’s Version 2.0, “Hammering In My Head” takes on a role of its own. “You can keep it pure on the inside, and you know what you believe to be right. But sometimes, no matter how you feel about it, you just need to run and find a safe place to hide, even for a little while. Luckily, I’ve seen both sides and I found out who I was in the process. Living in a big, dirty city can either make or break you. This album came out when I was 16, and this track mirrored exactly how I was feeling at the time, and even now. Taken from 2005’s Bleed Like Me, “Run Baby Run” is a reminder that who we are on the inside outshines what they want us to be on the outside. “It took a cup of coffee to prove that you don’t love me.” Manson wasn’t kidding in this one, describing every distraught emotion so impeccably that you can’t help but imagine yourself as a train wreck after a breakup. It’s like she was preparing me for what was to come, without sugarcoating it. After listening to this song at 13, I remember being so terrified of falling in love and having it end in shambles that even to this day, I crumble at the thought of it.

garbage songs

Taken from 2001’s highly underrated, Beautifulgarbage, the raw honesty in “Cup of Coffee” is gut wrenchingly painful to listen to – which makes it one of Garbage’s best. “Nobody gives a damn about me or anybody else.” Being 13 at the time, in a school I felt was like a penitentiary, along with teenage angst, the chorus of this song was pretty much written on the back of every notebook I owned. Version 2.0 was the first Garbage album I bought and this song caught my attention during the first listen. If you don’t get a cold chill running down your spine while listening, then maybe you need to dig deeper.įrom their 1998 sophomore effort, Version 2.0, “Medication” has always been a favorite. Either way, this song does not get the recognition it deserves, especially live.įairly new, from their most recent 2012 release, Not Your Kind of People, “Sugar” kind of takes on the vibe of “A Stroke of Luck” in a sense. As I’ve gotten older, I understand it more than I did when I was 13 and just starting to dive in to Garbage’s catalog. Taken from their 1995 self-titled debut, “A Stroke of Luck” has always resonated with me but I’m not entirely sure why maybe it’s the haunting aesthetic or Shirley Manson’s vocals.







Garbage songs