Relient K – Forget and Not Slow Down (2009): More backstory, more catharsis

rkmattrkshan

This is part 8 of the Relient K retrospective

(I wrote a review of Forget and Not Slow Down about a week ago. Since then, I’ve been doing some research on the album’s origins, and I believe the results make it much more interesting.)

I generally like to keep my nose out of other people’s business, but because  Forget and Not Slow Down is such an emotional album, I figured it could be valuable to try and figure out what events caused these emotions to better relate to its often abstruse lyrics. My poking around was not in vain. Here’s the story, as I understand it, but feel free to disagree with my speculation and assessment. I’ve linked to all the sources I used in reaching my conclusions.

Back story:

Matt Thiessen is generally known as one of the nicest dudes in music. He takes his Christianity seriously. Everyone was thrilled when he proposed in a most adorable way to radio host Shannon Murphy. She used her blog to keep her friends, and the world, updated on their engagement. But a few months later, she revealed that the two had split after she discovered “a few things about Matt that I just simply could not handle,” though she noted that she still believes he has an “amazingly huge heart.”

The break-up went down pretty quietly until Murphy got a new gig and started talking about an ex-boyfriend who cheated on her. Though she declined to use a name and vocation to identify who she was referring to, people made the connection.

Towards the end of the next year, Relient K’s sixth studio album came out. Thiessen says he wrote it when we went to a cabin in the woods for a couple of months to do nothing but reflect and pray and write. Forget and not Slow Down was the result, and it came out to pretty strong critical acclaim, with few media sources rating it worse than 4 out of 5 or the equivalent.

On the morning of the release on Shannon’s radio show, she directly implicated [edit: this link is dead, I’m looking for another version of it, because this is the crucial piece of the puzzle] him as a cheater, although she noticeably avoids saying anything else negative about him. She also reveals some tidbits that add some serious poignancy to the album: the couple always used to travel to Savannah, GA — and there’s a song on the album called “Savannah.” Perhaps craziest of all, “Baby,” a 40-second outro to Savannah, was the song Thiessen originally wrote for Murphy to play to her at their wedding.

Over the next few weeks in interviews, Thiessen frequently expanded on the album’s meaning, though he declined to delve into specific details regarding his personal situation. Of course, some fangirls refuse to believe Murphy is telling the truth because Matt is, like, so amazing. Others have taken a more reasonable view that neither of them are perfect people, and it’s pretty clear Matt betrayed her trust in some way, and they were not the best match anyways.

I suppose it’s theoretically possible that she’s completely BS’ing and slandering Thiessen, but he’s never really disputed her claims of adultery, and a few passages in the album more or less confirm her claims, so it seems like it’s at least somewhat true.

So how does this information affect the listener?

Re-interpretation

More than anything else, these details of Thiessen and Murphy’s break-up make Forget and Not Slow Down a personal and powerful album. My initial reading of the album was as a broad, over-arching look at the concept of saying goodbye and pressing on. But, after hearing Murphy talk about the album, I think there’s a lot of value in the album as a reflection on their specific relationship, and Matt’s response to his betrayal.

If Thiessen in fact perfidiously caused the end of his relationship, then the words of the album carry much more weight. Think about it: he had a saintly public image before the scandal broke out. Then, this.

I think there’s something poignant and ironic about the leader of the most spiritual and positive of bands committing an act of great betrayal, then having to deal with the consequences. It gives the album very high emotional stakes and some genuine substance.

Other great RK albums have been reflective and regretful, but on smaller levels. Forget and Not Slow Down is paradigm-smashing for the band in its gravity. This was evident to a certain extent when the I interpreted the album broadly, its songs as abstractions. But, with this new back-story, it’s clear that never before has Relient K been so acute, specific, and painful. The album works strongly as a look at Thiessen’s response to his own, very real, shame, regret, and recoverys.

A few of the most telling passages:

A lion on his side, was it the lying or his pride which brought him down?
Once the king of beasts, but now they feast on the thoughts beneath his vacant crown
Trying to decide, was it the lying or the pride which brought it down?
To be alone, to be dethroned, believe me I know all about it now
from “Sahara”

This passage works as a general image of pride and sin (and Jesus), but works especially well considering the scandal and isolation surrounding Thiessen’s life. As the king of Christian rock (in terms of both quality and mainstream success), and one album removed from his biggest and happiest album, he sank to his lowest, and he’s still not sure if it was “lying or his pride which brought him down.”

Baby
It’s all that I can do to
Thank you
Cause every time you wrapped those arms around me
I felt I was home cause
Everything made sense when you were with me
from “Baby (Outro)”

Tossed off as an outro, I dismissed “Baby” as generic post-breakup pining until I learned the song’s origin as the song Thiessen wrote for Murphy to play at their wedding. What a harrowing inversion of the song’s initial concept: a bitter farewell at the abrupt conclusion of their relationship instead of at the beginning of their marriage. Thiessen has said in interviews that recording this album was a positive experience, but I can’t imagine that was true for “Baby.”

I’d rather forget and not slow down
Than gather regret for the things I can’t change now
If I become what I can’t accept
Resurrect the saint from within the wretch
Pour over me and wash my hands
Pour over me and wash my hands
from “Forget and Not Slow Down”

“Resurrect the saint from within the wretch” is the key line of the album, I think. It best sums up the album’s tone: regretful and defeated, but still looking for the right way to respond. He doesn’t shy away from the fact that he did something wrong, but he considers that the most therapeutic option is to move on rather than linger on his guilt. There’s also some nice imagery of absolution there (“Pour over me and wash my hands”) which reflects a lot of passages in the Bible.

I met the devil and I stared her in the eyes
Her hair had scales like silver serpents
I, a statue, stood there mesmerized
I took the fire escape and made it out alive

Yeah I still burn from time to time
But I’ve a healing hand against my side

Blisters on my feet I crawled back home
Frozen from the sleet, burned sand and stones
Nourished back to life by life alone
With one shake of the mane regain the throne
from “(If You Want It)”

These are the closing lyrics of the album, and they’re most beautiful Thiessen’s ever written, in my opinion.

That first stanza is about as poetic and archetypal as any admission of guilt (though it is curious he places the blame on “the devil” and not himself), and he follows it up not only with a re-affirmation of faith and healing (second stanza) but that dazzling coda.

Those last four lines call back the lion image from “Sahara.” They also present an idea unusual in the modern rock-and-roll landscape, which tends towards angst and longing: That the very act of living, even in misery, is valuable.

That’s how Forget and Not Slow Down is still a distinctly Relient K album, even as it confronts a major transgression by the band’s leader: It stays rooted in optimism and a love for life more unquenchable than ever.

Revised rating: 4 and half stars (out of 5)


Dan and Brian from Earn This now have a film review site and podcast:

The Goods: Film Reviews

The Goods: A Film Podcast

Available on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Stitcher, and more.

16 thoughts on “Relient K – Forget and Not Slow Down (2009): More backstory, more catharsis

  1. I really appreciated your view on this album. Some get upset that it doesn’t talk a lot about God, but I find you can definitely see his faith in these lyrics. And you’re right, it’s good to respect the privacy of the famous, but in this case it does shed a lot of light on the lyrics. Great article!!

  2. Hey, thanks for this great insight on the album! This DEFINETLY is one of my all time favorite albums and a reason is because I can understand almost every songs meaning and I just love Sahara, Candlelight, if you believe me, etc. It’s just so well done and the lyrics keep me coming back! THe meanings of the songs and such haunt me till this day. I can’t think about this album without thinking of a love lost theme like TDWP’s Dead Throne. Thanks for clarifying and for selecting this specific album. Baby, that song will kill me every time. :/

    • Jeser — thanks for the kind words. Forget and Not Slow Down is an album that continually rises in my esteem the more I listen to and think about it.

      I hadn’t heard “Dead Throne” before your comment, so I gave it a listen. While it’s not really my style of music, I did appreciate the compelling lyrics. Thanks for stopping by!

      Be sure to check out the complete Relient K retrospective if you’d like to read more of what I have to say about the band.

  3. Thanks for the insight, I got this album when it first came out, and I quickly learned the backstory, but your take on it is unique. I really appreciate your honest view on the events leading up to the album, and totally agree that the writing on Forget and Not Slow Down is some of their best, and easily some of the best in the industry. However, I might have to pick a bone with your calling them the best Christian-membered band (what about Switchfoot? at least a tie?) haha just kidding, though. I’m really looking forward to their upcoming album!

  4. Thanks for taking the time to write this impressively thorough retrospective. I’m a pretty big fan of the band, and I’ve always been drawn to their music. Your descriptions and critiques of each album really pointed out each reason why I like them so much.

    I learned a lot about Thiessen and the group from the Forget and Not Slow Down reinterpretation. Thiessen is human, too, and that is my ‘personal crusade’ I guess. Being brought up in the church and all, I take Christianity very seriously, but I much of my family doesn’t. I always try to show the members of my church that people can be Chrisitians and still have real problems and do bad things. I try to never judge, and the Forget interpretation is a great testament to the Christian ideal. The bad things that Christians dissociate from are real. Life is not always pretty and peachy.

  5. Great article. I never looked into the story behind the album, but this gives it so much more meaning and weight and makes it that much better. Any chance you’ll be digging deeper into Collapsible Lung?

  6. I JUST READ THIS NOW and this just brings more meaning to the album!!! Thanks for this man! 🙂 Now I’ll go cry every time I listen to that album. Haha!

  7. Pingback: Part Of It | The Davenport

  8. I found this article out of the blue when I was researching the meaning of just the first song on the album. You did such a beautiful job with this article. You approached the subject with such depth and maturity that I was truly surprised. This might have been the most edifying, thought-provoking thing I’ve read all week, and I will probably continue to chew on it for the next few days. Thank you.

  9. I found this article just after I knew that those songs were made after the dissolution of Matt and Murphy. There’s so much coincidence, because this was the album that I heard EVERYDAY when I was divorced. And, like him, I was isolated, and writing about my past with my wife. The difference is that I WAS divorced. 😀
    For me, this is the best album ever made and today I can hear with less pain.
    Thanks for the text!

  10. Hey, thanks for that explanation. I’ve listened to this album for a long time just going back to the words and the music trying to see where he was coming from and from where the pain came from. I really like Relient k’s depth in all of their music. Thanks for the insight. ☺

Leave a Reply to Sketch Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *