Bells And Whistles

Album: Five Dice, All Threes (2024)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Bells And Whistles" is Bright Eyes' reminder that life is made up of a series of seemingly small moments, each quietly conspiring to shape one's path.

    "This is a song about the many little details in life that can seem insignificant or frivolous or temporary at the time but eventually end up forming your destiny," said frontman Conor Oberst. "And it's also kind of a whistle while you work scenario."
  • Speaking of bells and whistles, this phrase has some history. You might think it's just a modern way to describe flashy add-ons, and you'd be mostly right. But originally, it referred to actual bells and whistles on 19th-century trains, streetcars, and steamships - the kind that warned you that something much larger and more dangerous than you was rumbling down the tracks. Practical stuff, really.

    Fast forward a century or so, and we find the term popping up in all sorts of unlikely places. One of its earliest figurative uses was in a 1956 Automation Conference report where someone from an out-of-town company was lamenting about having to wait for an IBM 650 with, yes, "all the bells and whistles."

    Nowadays, it's become computing jargon for attractive but unnecessary features, like those extra functions on your phone that no one really asked for but are there anyway.
  • "Bells and Whistles" is the lead single from Five Dice, All Threes, Bright Eyes' 11th album. Regarding the album's dice-themed framing device, Oberst stated: "Life is a game of chance and a metaphorical street brawl, so that is what we are putting out there."
  • Oberst didn't go it alone on "Bells and Whistles." He teamed up with Alex Orange Drink, frontman of the New York punk band The So So Glos. The two started collaborating after Oberst invited Orange Drink to stay with him in Los Angeles in the winter of 2023. They ended up co-writing seven Five Dice, All Threes tracks.
  • The song is a playful cacophony with whistling (courtesy of Alex Orange Drink and Amy Carey) along with Vikram Devasthali's trombone and Josh Johnson's saxophone. It's an upbeat, almost raucous track that feels like it's always on the edge of spilling over, much like the small moments in life it celebrates.

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