Fever Fields’ debut EP, Love, Life, and Tragic Comedy, is a 6-song, nearly 30-minute, deeply emotional and beautifully crafted exploration of grief, discomfort, love, resilience, and the search for meaning through all of life’s emotions. This concept album follows the lives of two loving parents, grappling with the heartbreaking loss of their child and the grief that follows. The record chronicles all seasons of their journey, from sorrow to healing to a newfound feeling of hope. Each song on the EP gives the listener an inside perspective on a moment of the two lover’s experience with grief and healing. It is important to listen to the record in order, from start to finish, to really feel the emotion and power of the recordings fully. This EP is proof that love survives through grief. Love creates new beginnings. Love holds sorrow and despair and turns it into hope and light. Listeners will find meaning throughout the music and lyrics. If you are looking for an EP that explores the meaning of life, look no further. Rock the Pigeon is delighted to unpack Fever Fields’ concept EP, Love, Life, and Tragic Comedy for you here.
“The tragedy at the center is based on a true story of a couple I knew briefly in passing. A friend and I bumped into them and hung out a little bit after what happened. A moment of acknowledgement between them, which lasted a couple of seconds, carried deafening subtext and weight. That stuck with me, which led to me writing “Light Years Away”. And that, through a whole bunch of randomly drawn out scenarios, led to this record and the crafting of the story and music around that song. It was initially meant to be a live record, but it evolved into what you hear now. I injected my own personal experience and perspective into it through the lens of me and my wife’s perspective. And yeah, that’s what it is.” – Fever Fields
The title track kicks off the record strongly. Listeners will hear the tape hiss and fade before an acoustic guitar, a fiddle, and a horn come in, setting the tone. A soft vocal comes in, filling the speakers with emotion and warmth. This song is a prologue to the story that Fever Fields’ unpacks throughout the rest of the EP. We hear the origins of the two parents, totally in love, exploring a city, walking around, taking a boat ride, and feeling blissfully in love. The lead singer does a great job at expressing the feeling of deep bliss that the couple feels. This song also clues listeners in that a tragedy will soon occur in their worlds, even though they cannot even picture something like that happening yet. They are totally in the moment, loving every second of it.
“Sorrows Won’t Drown Themselves” is the next song to play. It’s noticeably more upbeat than the opening track. The record seems to shift from singer-songwriter folk ballad style to an upbeat Americana song that leans toward rock n’ roll. Even though the drum beat, chord progression, and vocal tone, bring an uplifting feel to the listener, the lyrics tell a very different story. This stark contrast is perhaps done to highlight how bad the problem has gotten over the years, without the songs’ protagonist even understanding that. This song is about alcoholism. The protagonist has found himself so depressed that he cannot keep his head above the water. He drinks his pain away with whiskey and other spirits, hoping to drown it for another day. This song has a catchy chorus, complete with a horn solo. He sings: “Stop thinking, start drinking, sorrows will drown themselves.” The lyrics also tell some of the backstory behind his alcoholism, including his normal childhood, and eventual loss of his seemingly healthy daughter. We could really feel the pain come through on this song.
The chord progression changes from major to minor, the pacing of the music slows down drastically from the last, the feelings of grief consume the recording on “Light Years Away.” The protagonists find themselves looking toward the sky, reflecting on the loss of their child, feeling overwhelmed by grief and memories. Although it’s hard to hear many of the lyrics, the emotion is portrayed very clearly. This song feels like grief and sadness. Fever Fields’ explain the lyrics and meaning behind the song:
“The lyrics reflect on life’s fragility and the enduring love that remains after loss. At one unspecified moment, while sitting on the lawn and looking up at the night sky, memories echo across time and space, as if viewed from a different vantage point where his child still exists – a random thought that offers a strangely beautiful and irrational sense of hope amid unutterable grief, even if just for a fleeting moment. The cosmic imagery highlights the cycle of life and death, emphasizing the vastness of what we will likely never know; how even as atoms in the cosmos, we feel it all. But, it’s all relative. What do I know.” – Fever Fields
A warm acoustic guitar starts off, “I Know.” This song is about the search for life’s meaning through extreme turmoil. It may be hard to see any type of light during this period of intense grief. The couple feels like they are drowning in the sadness, unable to see out of it, often to the point of suicidal thoughts. This song captures their turning point. Together, they get through it, becoming each other’s guiding force and light. They tackle the grief together, they make space for each other. No one understands what they are going through the way that they understand it for each other. Their love and bond keep them going even in the darkest moments of grief.
The most popular song on the record is the next one, “Seasons Change.” This song is much more upbeat, starting off with a rock n’ roll inspired chorus that serves as an instant earworm. The mood is lifted. Balance has been restored. The couple has found meaning and purpose because of their love. The song brings a true feeling of hope within its performance. This feeling is especially strong after hearing the trails that led the couple to where they are now. It gives the listener the feeling that change is within reach. “[The song] emphasizes the significance of finding meaning through love and purpose, suggesting that, despite pain and loss, our connections ultimately define the essence of our lives.” One of the major musical highlights on this song is the electric guitar solo!
A dreamy ballad concludes the record. “Tulip Fever Fields” was written with jazz chords, whimsical lead guitar parts, a soulful horn section, and a raw vocal. This song is proof of the couple’s unshaken love. They have been through the worst imaginable tragedy as parents. Yet, they still have their love. They are still walking side by side, now on the other side of massive grief. They have hope.
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Written by Ryan Cassata
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