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      • Though each Destroyer album has its own, distinct sonic identity, from the MIDI-heavy Your Blues to the lounge jazz-pop of Kaputt, all feature dense lyrics entrenched in metaphors and labyrinths of references, intricate arrangements, and Bejar’s distinct voice.
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  2. Jul 10, 2021 · These 30 songs convey a myriad of inspirations and styles but always has a sophisticated jubilee that is found so rarely outside of this discography. No matter how wordy the songs get, there’s a melody around the corner to sing along with. Each song listed will have a notable lyric underneath it and a playlist of all songs is at the bottom.

    • Steven Hyden
    • “The Sublimation Hour” (2001) Dan Bejar’s relationship to rock history has always seemed equal parts authoritative and ironic — he can weave references to the AOR canon throughout his songs with ease, and yet he’s sure to maintain a quasi-comic distance from power chords and messianic posing.
    • “Hey, Snow White” (2002) The typical Destroyer song packs about 800 words in the space of five or six minutes. Among the things that sets “Hey, Snow White” apart is that it has about 25 words that Bejar manages to make feel like 800 words.
    • “European Oils” (2006) This song is No. 3 on my list, but the part where Bejar rasps “you f*cking maniac!” is No. 1 in my heart.
    • “Suicide Demo For Kara Walker” (2011) Bejar claimed that the real Kara Walker, a renowned conceptual artist, wrote the bulk of this centerpiece stunner from Kaputt.
  3. Destroyer is a Canadian rock band from Vancouver, British Columbia fronted by singer-songwriter Dan Bejar and formed in 1995. The band's discography draws on a variety of musical influences, resulting in albums that can sound markedly distinct from one another; in Bejar's words, "That's kind of my goal: to start from scratch every time."

  4. Aug 20, 2015 · Bottom line: when critics say Destroyer sounds like David Bowie, what they really mean is that mid-career Destroyer sounds like early David Bowie — all nasally drawl, pumped-up strumming, evocatively cryptic lyrics, and verbal acrobatics.

  5. Destroyer is a Canadian indie rock band from Vancouver, formed in 1995. The band is fronted by founding member Dan Bejar, [3] with a collective of regular band members and collaborators joining him in the studio and during live performances.

  6. Destroyer Songs Ranked. Destroyer is the fourth studio album by American hard rock band Kiss, released on March 15, 1976, by Casablanca Records in the US. It was the third successive Kiss album to reach the top 40 in the US, as well as the first to chart in Germany and New Zealand.

  7. There's been Destroyer songs that are bigger, tighter or more ambitious. Dream Lover doesn't need to be thoes things. The band can barely hold themselves together for this song, and it is all the better for it.