Fred Thomas has a lot of feelings (and he really wants to talk about them). He may fear transformation in the same way he might fear another perturbed thought of how he could have prevented a previous love affair from going to pieces. He may relish in the scratching of the many surfaces that camouflage and protect his tender, gooey existential crisis-inflamed interiors. But what is made clear by Fred Thomas' latest beautifully neurotic mind-mapping narration "Voiceover" (the first taste from his forthcoming record Changer due out later next month) is that he doesn't quite have it all figured out and if he did, well, he might not know what to do.
"Voiceover" is a sleepless, chorus-deprived and worrisome dashboard "check engine" light. Self-deprecatingly confrontational, this pared back rock jam feels like a tightly woven string of doubts that overcame by means of emotional overload. The video is a life on loop. Repetitive thoughts are mirrored with commonly overlooked/performed imagery. From lipstick application (and lipstick removal) to uncorking wine, and to book to bookshelf placement to the subtle beauty of gently falling hemlines against the back of kneecaps, what is captured visually here is the same crisp mundanity expressed in Thomas' artfully composed run-on sentences.
View Fred Thomas' latest GIF-like emotional exploit below:

playing detroit: fred thomas "voiceover"
Jerilyn Jordan
new music • Detroit • Rock • Jerilyn Jordan • Indie Rock • Video Review • new video • lo-fi • Fred Thomas • Sonic Youth • new record • Ann Arbor • noah elliott morrison
Jerilyn Jordan
Jerilyn Jordan is an untamed writer with an insatiable affinity for vivid descriptive detail and pushing the boundaries of traditional music journalism. In addition to her music coverage, Jerilyn also writes heartbreaking and comedic autobiographical essays that likely originated as sporadic sentences written on bar napkins.









