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Machine Gun Kelly – Tickets To My Downfall

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Melody Bot, Oct 5, 2020.

  1. Melody Bot

    Your friendly little forum bot. Staff Member

    This article has been imported from chorus.fm for discussion. All of the forum rules still apply.

    I have to be honest with you. I’m not that familiar with Machine Gun Kelly’s music. Prior to this album, all I knew about the 30-year-old rapper a.k.a. Colson Baker, was that he once had a beef with Eminem, he played Tommy Lee in the Motley Crue biopic “The Dirt” and had a song called “I Think I’m Okay” he made with Yungblud and Travis Barker. When I heard Barker was working with Machine Gun Kelly on a pop-punk project, I raised my eyebrow like The Rock and assumed it was probably something I wouldn’t listen to. Then I heard “Bloody Valentine.”

    “Bloody Valentine” has been stuck in my head, in my head, since the first moment I heard it in May. I’ve long been a fan of pop-punk, and this song was right up my alley, taking me back to a time when the genre was at its highest of highs in the early 2000s. “Bloody Valentine” left me wanting more, and suddenly MGK’s new album, Tickets To My Downfall, was one of my most anticipated albums for the fall. When it finally arrived on Sept. 25 after being delayed in the spring thanks to COVID, it completely exceeded my expectations and left me feeling like I was 12 again, when I would listen to Good Charlotte’s The Young and the Hopeless and Blink-182’s Take Off Your Pants and Jacket on repeat.

    You immediately know what you’re in for when the record kicks off with “Title Track.” The song begins with MGK singing over some light guitar strumming before the energy gets turned all the way up to 10. “Title Track” is a rush of adrenaline thanks to the familiar speedy drumming of Barker and Machine Gun Kelly’s vocals are meant for this kind of music. MGK’s lyrics focus on his struggles with drug abuse and selling tickets to his downfall, hence the title track. He continues to discuss his substance abuse by singing about getting shitfaced on “Kiss Kiss” and taking drugs he thought he quit on “Drunk Face.”

    The aforementioned “Bloody Valentine” continues to be a song I can’t help but listen to over and over again. The simple guitar riff and Barker’s steadily maintaining the beat just hooks you in, as does Kelly’s repetition of “In my head, in my head” before the catchy chorus kicks in. This song is a true earworm and it even has some Blink-182-like “na, na, na’s” in there at the end.

    While I love “Bloody Valentine” “Forget Me Too” is far and away the best track on the album. Halsey absolutely kills her feature and shows yet again just how talented of a singer she is. Her powerful vocals on her verse and on the chorus elevate the song to a level where it could be considered one of the best songs of 2020. While MGK showed he can successfully pull off pop-punk on the album, this song left many wanting Halsey to put out a record of her own in the genre. I mean, she has tweeted in the past that listening to The Story So Far makes her want to start a side project. Good luck not listening to this gem on repeat, and I wouldn’t be surprised if this song is all over the Billboard charts soon.

    With Barker both producing and bringing down the house on drums, it’s no surprise how much of this record sounds like Blink-182. You have the “na, na, na” on “My Bloody Valentine,” “WWIII” is a short burst of pop-punk energy ala Blink’s “Cynical.” On the fun “Concert for Aliens,” MGK even does his own call and response on the bridge, just like what Mark Hoppus and Tom Delonge did once upon a time. The lyrics on “Jawbreaker” give off a real “What’s My Age Again?” vibe. Honestly, you can probably pull Blink-182 comparisons to almost every track on here if you wanted to and I’m sure there are people who don’t like this album that will point to this. However, I feel this influence is an ingredient that makes Tickets To My Downfall work.

    While you can hear shades of Blink-182 and Good Charlotte, there are also some tracks that are unique to who MGK is as an artist. MGK gets to show off his hip-hop background on “All I Know,” which is basically a rap song with subtle guitars, a steady beat you can lose yourself in, and some guest vocals from Trippie Redd. He again successfully meshes genres on “My Ex’s Best Friend,” which has a chorus that follows a pop formula, all while an infectious beat plays underneath it. Blackbear also adds a rap verse that gives this song a little bit of everything.

    Tickets To My Downfall concludes with the 1-2 punch of “Banyan Tree – interlude” and “Play This When I’m Gone.” “Banyan Tree – interlude” is a nice song by itself, but it’s pushed in the middle of a conversation between Megan Fox (his girlfriend) and MGK talking about how much they care about each other. He then wraps up the album with a song for his daughter called “Play This When I’m Gone.” Lyrically, this is probably MGK’s best work on the album (“Lonely” is a close second) as he pours his heart onto this one, letting his daughter know how much he loves her and giving her a memento in the event he passes away.

    It’s unknown whether or not Machine Gun Kelly will go on to release more pop-punk albums in the future, but I really hope he does. There was something fresh about this record, even though the sound of Tickets To My Downfall has roots in the past. The pop-punk influences of yesterday were clear, but MGK was able to put his own spin on it thanks to some help from Barker. It’s a really fun record and one you can just sit back and enjoy. Hate him or love him, MGK put together a solid album and may have put pop-punk back on the map at the same time.

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    snaps and blink180ryan like this.
  2. AMC

    Regular

    Love this album.
     
    Raku and blink180ryan like this.
  3. killahcam

    @killahcam Supporter

    Haven’t been this obsessed with an entire album since Black Parade. 10/10
     
  4. tyler_pifer

    Newbie

    I just wish he had a better voice. It's probably a 6/10 for me.
     
    swboyd likes this.
  5. CMilliken

    Trusted

    Great album. Catchy AF.
     
    Raku likes this.
  6. Phil507

    Resident NYC snob Supporter

    My thoughts as well. When Halsey pops up I was like “ahhhh some actual MELODY”.
     
  7. tyler_pifer Oct 5, 2020
    (Last edited: Oct 5, 2020)
    tyler_pifer

    Newbie

    I was being kind. Just listened to it for a second time and his vocals make this borderline unlistenable. The drums stand out, unsurprisingly. There's a lot of great ideas on the album and with a better singer I think I'd really dig it. He's like a worse version of Mark Hoppus who was never a great singer to begin with.
     
    All Systems Goku likes this.
  8. 333 GANG

    Trusted

    Genuinely cannot understand how anyone can think his vocals make this “borderline unlistenable.”
     
  9. pbueddi

    Trusted

    Enjoyed the review!
     
    333 GANG likes this.
  10. killahcam

    @killahcam Supporter

    right?? the fact that he's NOT trying to adopt the typical Delonge/Gaskarth/P Stump whiny voice and affectations is what makes this feel so fresh and so clean clean.
     
  11. koryoreo

    Trusted Supporter

    Yeah, his vocals are fine. Not every pop punk vocalist has to have whiny super clean vocals.
     
  12. Phil507

    Resident NYC snob Supporter

    That’s not really my issue. His lack of range and nearly monotone delivery seem to undercut any melodic hook he might have come up with.
     
  13. Brent

    Trusted Prestigious

    [​IMG]
     
  14. jeff.dart

    Regular

    This is it. He has extremely limited range. It makes it difficult to distinguish the songs from each other given the hooks are put on the vocals. I listened to this a few days ago and really nothing stuck. Other than the drums, there really isn’t any other dimension to this due to the limited vocal range.
     
    All Systems Goku likes this.
  15. AlwaysEvolving21

    Trusted Supporter

    The tone and delivery of his vocals make up for his lack of vocal range. It just works and gives it a fresh sound.

    Very fun album and I appreciate how short the songs are. It helps keep everything lean. I also love the Tim Armstrong vibe he has going on in the title track, which is cool because he said he was influenced by him/rancid.
     
  16. johnnyferris Oct 5, 2020
    (Last edited: Oct 6, 2020)
    johnnyferris

    Sic Parvis Magna Prestigious

    Whatever I feel about this aside, i can’t say I’m surprised it took an “outsider” to make guitar music relevant enough for a #1 album again. I unabashedly love guitar music; it’s what I grew up on and still seek out more than other forms of music, but you can’t deny it’s gotten stale within the last fifteen years. I’d like to see where everything goes from here and what artist can capitalize on this interest MGK’s generated off this album.
     
  17. caakle

    Regular

    I was surprised how much I liked this. All I know about MGK was that Catfish episode. I thought he was one of those random white rappers like G Eazy or whatever.
     
  18. Rawrz

    Regular

    I agree with this, as well as the lyrics most times being god awful.
     
  19. surgerone

    Regular Supporter

    I was just thinking the same thing while listening this morning - I'm excited/hopeful to see the ripple effect of this type of album being #1. Fingers crossed it means good news for all the current pop punk bands I listen to
     
  20. The vocals, with that almost drawl diction, I think plays a large role in the success. That's a very modern radio sort of thing I've heard in a lot of popular artists lately, I think that combination with the throwback pop-punk sound is why this hits better in the mainstream than any of the better, or more traditionalist, pop-punk vocalist albums have. It's what the kids like.
     
    Raku, JamesMichael, pbueddi and 4 others like this.
  21. RileyWitiw

    more like absolutepop.net Supporter

    His limited vocal range is a blessing in disguise. His hooks rely more on being rhythmically interesting and having an actual flow which makes this 1000x more palatable to gen zs and really anyone in touch with music in 2020. That's not a rip on anyone--like what you like--it's just objectively true.
     
    killahcam, Raku, slimfenix182 and 6 others like this.
  22. MacbethSin

    Regular

    Yep exactly, these melodies consider flow in a way that seats it right in 2020 despite the overall throwback energy. It's a cool combination of influences
     
  23. aniafc

    Trusted

    "Forget Me Too" is a great song, but I don't know what they did to her vocals. Her voice is good enough as is, but it seems like they sped it up and sounds almost chipmunk-esuqe lol
     
  24. Ben182TX

    @TheBenThomas

    The bonus tracks from the Deluxe edition are awesome too. What did you think of those @Jason Tate ?
     
  25. The “Dance Dance” ripoff is great. I think that’s my favorite of the b-sides.
     
    JamesMichael and surgerone like this.