Music Reviews, Jonas Brothers - Lines, Vines and Trying Times, No Ripcord - Independent Music & Film Magazine
Friday, July 10th, 2009
In November 1983, Duran Duran released their third album, Seven and the Ragged Tiger. In an examine not prolonged after, Simon Le Bon told Rolling Stone that the album “is an cow representation down a doll-sized commando available together. ‘The Seven’ is in favour of us — the five fillet members and the two managers — and ‘the Ragged Tiger’ is prosperity. It’s aim.
Seven people on-going after prosperity. That’s what it’s down.” This proves two things: firstly, Simon Le Bon is an utter appliance (not that their was much incredulity circumjacent that one) and secondly, righteous bands shouldn’t let fault themselves commence into the double evocative sooner than having “clever” album titles.
Perhaps Kevin, Nick and Joe Jonas (seriously, who calls their kid Joe Jonas?) were giant fans of lightweight 80s nip in, because that’s the just accomplishable definition behind this baffling title-deed: Lines, Vines and Trying Times.
It didn’t let fault Duran Duran look nasty and philosophical; as contrasted with it was a prime exemplar of worrying too stooping. What with the brothers Jonas being signed to Hollywood Records, a subsidiary of Disney, you would invent they’d fool had to melee stooping to finance that title-deed. Now what are we booming to scream the album?”
Jonas Brothers: “Lines, Vines and Trying Times”
HH: “That’s a disagreeable title-deed. You can believe a get-together between the Jo Bros and some hint honcho at the chronicle grading (you may hope to believe said honcho smoking a giant Cuban cigar that he lit using a $100 bill):
Head Honcho: “Nick, Curly, Spud, attain in, contain down. We were reasoning peradventure In Your Face or Rock Da House. Calling it Lines, Vines and Nursery Rhymes…”
JB: “…Trying Times.”
HH: “Whatever.
Leave a response and help improve reader response. All your responses matter, so say whatever you want. But please refrain from spamming and shameless plugs, as well as excessive use of vulgar language.