FireBug “Change”
There’s immense love and spirituality in FireBug’s music. They are within the arrangement, every note from the electric guitar and in front woman Juliette Tworsey’s unique voice. FireBug taps into a kind of surreality that is connected to our collective memory. The immediate retro 70s feel reminds you of liberation and celebration, where folk and rock joins hand in a meaningful way.
It seems like a really good way to describe FireBug’s music. “Change” is a tune that contemplate on the very subject of change — the shock and disassociation, the lingering nostalgia, the loss and grief that naturally emerge in the process, and the embrace and acceptance. Despite the storming, shocking nature of change that shakes up everything, the way “change” is echoed and chanted throughout the piece has an almost symbolic underlying meaning.
In “Change,” FireBug brings back a classic, nostalgic backdrop: piano and electric guitars echos and responses to each other, bass and drum complete the warm, wholesome feeling. Juliette Tworsey’s voice is full of personality and rebellion but not without the classic rock and blues twangs. The love for nature and spirituality naturally comes in strong through the music in a lighthearted Waltz rhythm. It takes you to a dive bar, where the light is dim and the atmosphere is rich.
“Change“ is mesmerizing and thought provoking. The piece also embraces the ideation of change within its arrangement. The bridge and the built up shakes up the ground and rebuilt. This chaos might seems a little disoriented and messy at first, but there’s beauty and new order that naturally emerges again. arrangement also embraces the ideation of change. Then the lingering nostalgia seems to find a new meaning in appreciation.