Well, here you are an interview with Isaac Slade from 2007. You'll find out information about "Over My Head (Cable Car)", "How To Save A Life", and lots of interesting things about him.
This blog is entirely dedicated to the pop rock/piano rock/alternative rock band from Denver, CO, The Fray. I post here songs' meanings, interviews, interesting facts, news & more!
Sunday, June 30, 2013
The story of You Found Me
The Fray – You Found Me
This
song was released in 2008, but the songwriting started about more than one year
before. It is a song written by Isaac Slade and Joe King, but has more Isaac’s
stories, it could have said. Isaac wrote on their official page about it: “You
found me is a tough song for me. It’s about the disappointment, the heartache;
the let down that comes with life. It’s about the feelings and the hope I still
have, buried deep inside my chest”. Also he has talked about it in lots of
interviews; he said that there was a moment, when they were on the road, that
it was like phone call after phone call, tragedy after tragedy, of people close
to him. He said: “Undeserving, good people”. His songwriting of this song has
got a progress: at the first time, it was like: “I’m angry for something that
happened to me, to my family and to my friends”; but at the end, it was like:
“I’m angry but I still believe, help me hold both in my hands. And if I’m going
to call myself Christian, if I’m going to be a believer without being sarcastic
I need to have some answers: why the good people instead of the bad one? You
know, help me make sense of it” He said that if he dies or something, it is
what he’d said to God. Also he said that if he had that meeting with God, it
wouldn’t be a totally nice one. Here you are an awesome version of the song played in a stairwell:
Saturday, June 29, 2013
The Fray working in the studio!
Hi fans of The Fray. I think you'd like to see The Fray working in the studio. I hope you're looking forward to the album as excited as me! Something tells me the album is going to be great...
Photos of The Fray
Here you are some photos of The Fray. And
remember, they're on the studio, and we'll have new songs to love soon :)
The story of Enough For Now
The Fray –
Enough For Now
This song, according to “The Fair Fight Documentary”
is Isaac Slade’s mother story. Isaac said in a concert that her life was “perfect”
to pull it together in a song. Well, the band hasn’t added more about the song.
Either way, if we stop at the lyrics, what we can see is this: Isaac’s
grandfather wanted a son, for taking his surname, and had a daughter. And that
was hard for her daughter (Isaac’s mother). The song seems have a comforting
message from Isaac to her after his death. Here you can listen to this awesome version of the song:
The story of How To Save A Life
The
Fray – How To Save A Life
This song
is about the experience of the lead Singer of the band (Isaac Slade) as a
mentor in a camp of troubled teens in Denver, called Shelterwood. One of his
friends was the head teacher there, and he spent there a week.
There, he
was the mentor of a 17-years-old, who told him his story. He was addicted to a
lot of different drugs and alcohol, in recovery. His story was shocking,
according to Isaac. He told him that there were a lot of people who tried to
help him, save him. According to the guy, as enemies; saying: “if you don’t
stop taking drugs I stop talking to you”; when all he needed was a friend,
someone who was in his team.
That story
made him think, who admits know lots of people with the same attitude: “I’m
doing something wrong, that I know is going to hurt me, o hurt the people I
love. And they try to help me and I just ignore them”. He says that,
sometimes, is difficult to know what to say, when to say, and how much to push
somebody until this person stops taking your phone calls. Isaac Slade says that
“if I don’t know you, and I tell you not to do something because you’re going
to hurt yourself; we don’t know each other, you don’t care about me, and I
don’t care about you. But if your best friend tells you to stop, because you’re
going to hurt yourself, you should trust that person. Those are the people
you’re going to hold on the rest of your life”.
According
to him, that’s a frustrating situation of being a parent: they love their kid
so much, and they want him to be happy and healthy; and they were watching him
killing himself slowly or all at once. But this story didn’t end up that bad as
it might be thought, the guy got help, he was in the place to. And he started
reaching again those people. This was told by Slade in an interview from 2007,
where he also said that he still talks to him.
That story
also made him think about all the relationships he has lost because of the
decision he has made, and how he’d like people to talk to him if he’s doing
something wrong.
In the
other hand, an interviewer asked Slade if he saw a lot of this in his
neighborhood. He told him that he grew up in a protected air. But his response
was: “I had friends in who tried to commit suicide, forget about live… whether
it was throw alcohol or any of that stuff” He says he’s not like some “savior”
or something similar, that they wrote the song because he thought unable to
reach those people.
The Singer
admits have cried with the song live. Even, Joe King, guitarist of the band,
said in a documentary of the album with the same name; that Isaac Slade started
crying while they were playing the song in the studio one time. Either way,
they didn’t stop, they carried on playing and then, Joe came to Isaac, like
“what’s wrong?”
There’s a
happy ending, or not? That’s what they asked Isaac in the same interview. It
has been told that the guy survived, but it doesn’t mean every history related
to it ends up the same.
Is there a
happy ending, or not? That ¡s what they asked the singer in the same interview,
mentioned before. It is already told that the guy survived, but it doesn’t mean
that every single story related to the song ends up like this. The song is open
to interpretation, and the singer meets people every concert. “There are people
that tell me their own stories, and for them it’s about kill themselves, or
they got someone who committed suicide… it’s not a happy ending, it’s not like
a story book conclusion for a lot of people’s, a lot of people’s life”, recalls
Slade.
And, in the
end, Slade talks about How To Save A Life as the most relevant personal
confession he has ever written in a song, that, told by Isaac Slade, is a lot.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Welcome The Fray Fans
Hi! If you're a fan of The Fray, here, you'll find everything you want to. I'll post here interviews, songs, the meanings of some songs, quotes, everyhting of the band The Fray. I hope you'll like it :)
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