As a 24 year old Deadhead.. I'm loving it that theres finally a new jam band emerging, this is the millenial jam band! Let's hope they gain a cult following the same way The Dead and to a lesser extent Phish did, they're such fantastic musicians.
@Jonathan Skinner you must not be that big of a fan if you can’t see that the VW of today is far different from the VW of 2006-2014. It’s a lot more than just losing Rostam, they have a completely different and more collaborative (but still really great) vibe now and the focus is a lot more on the live performances. At their live shows, they extend a lot of their songs, and create variations on their recorded music which is characteristic of jam bands. That’s a recent development for VW which is what OP was referring to. This has expanded VW’s fan base to include a different type of listener beyond the indie rock/pop sphere. There was a whole NYT article explaining this that I encourage you to read
Meh. I don't really care for the attitude that they bring to the "cheating on me, cheating on you" part. Too much hostile energy makes it less enjoyable to listen to.
I get what you're saying, the lyrics come across as bitter. but if you listen to the album this song comes early and the singer journeys towards moral/spiritual redemption
@@mongolianqwerty123 No, it's not the lyrics. It's the energy that the Haim sisters are bringing to it in this particular version. Ezra's original doesn't have that.