"OVER MY HEAD (CABLE CAR)" THE FRAY (2005)

Each day in December, I’ll be reflecting back on a song from the 2000’s. The decade saw the return of post-punk and the popularization of folk music, all while some of music’s biggest acts gained their indie footing. Thankfully, it’s a period that I can look back at fondly without cringing. #31DaysOf2000sSongs

As long as I can remember, pop charts in the U.K. and U.S. have told very different stories. The U.K. is the poster child for openness to alternative and experimental approaches in popular culture, while the U.S. is more of a story of vanilla musical expressions. Sure, there are exceptions, but overall there’s a very wide gap in terms of what makes the pop charts in the U.K. compared to the U.S. One of the rare exceptions has been the popular embrace of The Fray, who became universally embraced on both sides of the pond for “How to Save a Life” and the subject of this post, “Over My Head (Cable Car)”.

You might like the song for different reasons than me. But what the track did for me was provide this rare balance of highly accessible and somewhat unpredictable. It starts off easy and catchy, relying on that simple, great melody and lyrics that are equally simple, making it a song you want to sing along to. The unpredictability happens in tempo slowdowns and upticks and gorgeous instrumental interludes, including the breakdown at the 2:45 mark, where the rhythm guitar dances as the bass line nosedives.

“With eight seconds left in overtime, she's on your mind.”