
These Two Windows is a Pop album by Alec Benjamin, originally released in 2020. On Gatefold: 9 pressings tracked.
About
The path to singer-songwriter Alec Benjamin’s proper debut album, <i>These Two Windows</i>, is a Hollywood cautionary tale—an unusual industry veterancy for someone still at the beginning of an impressive career. Benjamin’s precocious pop songwriting, prone to virality, got him signed to Columbia Records while he was still attending USC. Then he was dropped by the label and spent his time garnering an organic following, eventually catching the attention of Atlantic Record. There, he released 2018’s <i>Narrated for You</i>, a folk-pop mixtape stuffed with heart-on-your-sleeve Ed Sheeran-esque songs recorded throughout his misadventure. <i>These Two Windows</i> is much more of a cohesive statement, from the addictive descending harmonies on opener “Mind Is a Prison” to the surprising vocal vocoder of “Oh My God” and the John Mayer-approved “Jesus in LA.” “In music and storytelling, everybody explores the same theme, recycled over and over again, because there’s not that many things [worth] talking about,” Benjamin tells Apple Music. “What differentiates one story from another is the perspective. <i>These Two Windows</i> is a metaphor for my eyes—my take on what’s been recycled throughout history. That’s what makes my retelling of these stories unique.” Below, he breaks down those musical narrative, song by song. <b>Mind Is a Prison</b> “I feel trapped sometime. I go over and over things in my head that I can't change. Sometimes I feel like I'm not really in control of my own thought, and that's what the song's about. It’s about me exploring free will and how I feel like sometimes I don't have any. I worked with my friend Alex Hope. She's a producer/songwriter; I wrote a lot of these songs with her, and most of this album was produced by her. It's important that I have somebody who's willing to go to those [dark] places with me, because these are the topics that I choose to write about. It’s not typical that a song like that would be on like a pop album.” <b>Demons</b> “[Khalid] and I had been trying to write a song together and didn't really come up with anything. After he left the studio, I wrote 'Demon,' so I used it. It's not my favorite song on the album, if I'm going to be honest with you; the song itself is one of the demons I sing about. It frequently bothers me that I don’t know how I feel about it.” <b>Oh My God</b> “I used to watch <i>Lost in Space</i> with my dad when I was a kid. He used to quote it, so I put [a Will Robinson reference] in the song. I wrote this at a time when I was feeling kind of lost. I was sitting down to finish the record, and I told someone, ‘Man, how did I end up in this position where I'm not even excited about making songs anymore?' because of all the annoying stuff that happens behind the scenes when you’re making music—the busine, and politic, and things like that—and I guess the saddest part about it is I don't know how to do anything else. So the only thing I could do to express that frustration was to write a song about it.” <b>The Book of You & I</b> “I like the song because it’s a nice story. The words are really simple. I wrote the song with Alex Hope as well, and we did it really quickly—in like 40 minute. We were playing around with a bunch of ideas that day, but we couldn't finish anything. I remember I was on the plane the night before, and I had written some lyrics down for the song. And I sang it over a little guitar piece. And then the song just came out. People say, 'How long did it take you to write that song?' And I feel like [the answer is] your whole life. Your whole life culminated in those 40 minute.” <b>Match in the Rain</b> “I was thinking, ‘What's a good metaphor for trying to make a relationship work that's just not working?' Well, trying to light a match in the rain would be probably pretty difficult. I actually don’t smoke, but I came up with those lyrics to the song when I was in Munich. It was five minutes before I was going to perform. I told my manager, 'Yo, hold my phone. I'm just going to sing this into my phone, because it's a cool lyric.' And then I wrote the song two months later when I was in the studio.” <b>Jesus in LA</b> “When I was younger and I wanted to make music, I was always like, ‘Oh, man, it would be tight to go to LA. That's where everything happen.’ Then I got out there and I got dropped by my label. It didn’t work out for me. And so I had to face the reality that my perception of what LA was wasn’t what it actually turned out to be. It is not a religious song, but in Western culture, Jesus is synonymous with salvation, so it’s the idea that you won’t find what you’re looking for in Los Angele. Oh, and that’s a song I chose to put out because I played it for John Mayer and he liked it.” <b>I’m Not a Cynic</b> “I definitely get negative sometime. If you step in shit on the side of the road, it doesn't matter how you look at it, there's still poop on your shoe. It's okay to acknowledge it. I don't think it necessarily makes you cynical. It just makes you realistic. I wanted to say that [in a song]. It’s not always helpful to be like, 'Well, just change your perspective.' If it's raining outside, it's still raining outside, doesn't matter how I look at it.” <b>Alamo</b> “I wouldn't dig too deeply into the historical context of the song, because I'm not necessarily proud of what the United States did during that time. I just felt like when we were kid, it was taught to us like, 'Hey, this was the last stand,' minus everything about the Mexican-American War. It was a group of soldiers who were like, 'If we got to die for this shit, then we're going to die for this shit.' I haven't necessarily found something I'm passionate enough about to die for it, but there are times where I have an opinion that’s unpopular and I’m willing to lose some friends to stand up for the thing I believe in.” <b>Must Have Been the Wind</b> “It’s about [domestic abuse]. I knew somebody who was in a situation like that and I wanted to help them out, but they weren’t ready to talk about it. That’s a tough situation to be in as a friend, because you don’t want to go in there and make the situation worse than it i. And sometime, as hard as it i, the only thing that you can do is to let the person know that you're there for them. So that's what song is meant to do.” <b>Just Like You</b> .
via Apple Music
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
- 1Mind Is a Prison2:41
- 2Demons2:43
- 3Oh My God3:07
- 4The Book of You & I3:27
- 5Match in the Rain2:39
- 6Jesus in LA2:51
- 7I'm Not a Cynic2:16
- 8Alamo2:24
- 9Must Have Been the Wind2:57
- 10Just Like You2:47
Sound DNA
- Pop
Credits
The people behind it.
Performers
- Nathan FertigPIANO BASS
- Johan LenoxWRITTEN-BY ARRANGED BY
- Omer FediELECTRIC GUITAR
Rare pressing on Gatefold · 9 pressings tracked on Gatefold
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