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| Top 100 Yellowcard Songs
...of the Ryan Key era. So, this tragically excludes "Midget Tossing" and "Where We Stand". Criteria for inclusion is that the song must have been officially released in some capacity, and it must be an original YC track (RIP their amazing cover of Coldplay's "Fix You") and also not a reworking of one of their own pieces (RIP the stunning piano version of "One Year, Six Months"). I tallied as accurately as I could and came to 107 songs, so the seven "missed the cut" songs are as follows, in no particular order: Trembling, Drifting, Sureshot, For Pete's Sake, Madrid, Convocation, and Rock Star Land. Yellowcard is my all-time favorite pop-punk band and one of my favorite artists in general, and with their recent reunion to tour (for Ocean Ave's 20th anniversary) I've been spinning their discography a lot lately. So, with all of that now out of the way, let's proceed to my ranked list of Yellowcard's top 100 songs! | 100 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"California" - I was fairly high on Lift a Sail when it was released, but time hasn't been very kind to it. Aside from the two songs off this record that missed the top 100 altogether (the instrumental interlude "Convocation" and the dreadfully boring "Madrid"), this is one of my least favorites. It's the album closer, and it feels like it was AI-generated to be the most sappy, predictable closer possible. It's just a bare-bones piano ballad, and Key's lyrics are painfully generic. There are some pretty inflections in the verses however, which saves the track from total futility. | 99 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Dear Bobbie" - Yellowcard's success has always hinged on their ability to carefully toe the line between sincere and corny. This ode to his grandparents is sweet, but unfortunately it crosses the line into cheese-land. This hits some sentimental notes, but Paper Walls would have been an even better album without this. | 98 | | Yellowcard One for the Kids
"A.W.O.L." - The main attraction on One for the Kids, for me anyway, is the strength of the guitar work (both electric and acoustic). For the former, this is exhibit A. It's got some heavy riffs and almost kind of chugs at points. It's not the most memorable song, but it's pretty fun to listen to in the moment. | 97 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"Transmission Home" - I still remember hearing Yellowcard and their label hyping up Lift a Sail as some kind of massive, anthem-packed "rock" album. That clearly isn't what we got, and "Transmission Home" - for all intents and purposes the album opener on the heels of a brief instrumental - is a constant reminder of that. You can tell that it aims to be huge, but it feels like they wrote this song with the sole purpose of adding something "heavy" (by their standards) to the record. The chorus is semi-memorable, I guess. It's not terrible, but it definitely feels shoehorned. | 96 | | Yellowcard One for the Kids
"Star Struck" - The stabbing riffs here are forever imprinted in my memory, despite the fact that I hardly ever listen to One for the Kids anymore -- so that's gotta be worth something. It suffers from all the same drawbacks as the rest of the songs on One for the Kids, but aside from the raw production/pitchy vocals, it's an otherwise fun and upbeat track with memorable riffs. | 95 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"MSK" - This is a swelling, violin-laden ballad that feels like it should be the emotional epicenter of Lift a Sail. While Yellowcard generally captured the atmosphere that I think they desired (forlorn, longing, lovestruck), the melody falls pretty flat and it's overlong for a track with nothing else going on besides Key's vocals and some strings. It all sounds quite pretty, but it rings slightly hollow. | 94 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"In Time (Lift a Sail b-side)" - Most people probably aren't aware of this track's existence. It's a heavily electronically-influenced song that didn't make the cut for Lift a Sail. I happen to like it better than a few of the pieces that did make the album, however. There's nothing complicated about it, and it's a bit too pop-oriented for my liking, but it's a smooth and (somewhat) catchy song. It easily could have been an improvement over some of Lift a Sail's duds. | 93 | | Yellowcard One for the Kids
"Something of Value" - It's no secret that One for the Kids was something of a warm-up round for Yellowcard under the Ryan Key era, but "Something of Value" is a track that has managed to stick with me a little more than the others. I'm not sure exactly what it is, but Key's vocals sound crisper and the acoustic strumming sounds cleaner. It feels like a precursor to some of the beautiful acoustic work we'd eventually receive on Ocean Avenue. | 92 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Three Flights Up" - I know putting a brief piano interlude ahead of some fully fleshed-out songs might not sit well with everyone, but I believe that this is superbly executed. The pianos are simple but gorgeous, and the subtly swelling violin adds elegance before Lights and Sounds' title track arrives to barge down the doors. The album would lose a key aspect of its atmosphere without this little tune. | 91 | | Yellowcard One for the Kids
"October Nights" - By all measures, this song feels like Yellowcard rounding themselves into form. The violins are gorgeous and prominent, the guitars punchy, and the vocals infectious. The song itself doesn't have that huge trademark hook that you'd end up finding throughout Ocean Avenue and beyond, but it's solid and contains all the blueprints of the band's future success. | 90 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"Make Me So" - One of the bouncier melodies on Lift a Sail, but it never felt like it belonged on this album. Despite its upbeat pace, the song again feels like YC forcing a square peg into a round hole. Lift a Sail was a departure in sound for this band, featuring darker alt-rock and electronics, and "Make Me So" feels like a paint-by-numbers pop-punk tune created strictly to check a box and pacify their old school fans. It's not a bad song, but it feels kind of pointless -- especially in context. | 89 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"Promises (When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes b-side)" - This song missed the cut for the Yellowcard's post-hiatus comeback LP, but it still has a warm and highly energetic atmosphere. LPIII's drumming shines just as it does across WYTTSY, although "Promises" doesn't really boast a chorus/melody worth anchoring it in the band's lore. This is a decent song and I have no qualms with it, but making it a b-side was the right call. | 88 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"My Mountain" - This one falls in the mid-tier of Lift a Sail for me. It's not all that interesting musically (it feels like a 50/50 hybrid of the band's older pop-punk sound and the newer styles explored on this LP), but has some sentimental lyrics that resonate well during the highly melodic chorus. It's a decent song, but it's not one that will make much of an impact on you beyond the confines of its runtime. | 87 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"The Hurt Is Gone" - This six and a half minute acoustic track always fell a bit flat for me. The chorus "change comes for you even when you're hiding out" is fitting for the band's final LP, and I respect that they had the balls to end the song with almost three minutes of random acoustic strumming, but none of it is all the interesting. Perhaps if they integrated more complex picking, or an uptick in urgency at some point, I'd feel differently. Alas, this falls among their more vanilla works and primarily benefits from the sentimentality of being on the band's final (for now!!??) LP. | 86 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Two Weeks From Twenty" - Although I appreciate the anti-war sentiment, and the trumpet solo here is top notch, this song otherwise feels a little too on the nose. To me, it often sounds like their attempt to contribute something to the "rock against Bush" compilation, or perhaps ride the political coattails of American Idiot (right down to the character in the song being named Jimmy). I'm not saying that the song isn't genuine, but I just wish that they got a little more creative with it. | 85 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Hey Mike (Ocean Avenue b-side)" - If you love Ocean Avenue and are looking for more YC from that recording session, then here you go! This song has all the energy, pent-up angst, and summery vibes of that album, so it automatically scores some points in my book. As with a lot of Yellowcard's b-sides, this simply doesn't measure up as a song I'd remember in the vast sea of catchy YC pop-punk. | 84 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Words, Hands, Hearts" - As something of an emotive slow-rocker, "Words, Hands, Hearts" succeeds in painting an image of fear and hopelessness in the wake of 9/11. Outside of the unique "thunderous" drum style they employ, there's not a whole lot going on intrumentally though, and Key's lyrics are just vague enough to detract from the song's message. It's an ambiguously depressing track, but sometimes there's a mood for that. | 83 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"Sing for Me" - A lot of folks swooned over this one during the band's comeback from hiatus, and I get that to an extent: it's the kind of sappy ballad that people who attend shows would want to hold up their cell phones or lighters to as they gently sway from side to side. This song checks all the right boxes for "late album ballad" and the chorus is an earworm. I guess that's my problem with it, though; it feels a bit manufactured. That of course doesn't mean it's not a decent song, because it is, but it evokes very little from me in the way of an emotional response. When a song executed in this style, I'm pretty sure that's supposed to be the point. | 82 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"Leave A Light On" - You definitely have to be in sort of a low place to appreciate "Leave A Light On", which on its face is very depressing and slow-to-unravel. It does eventually do that though, culminating in the reflective and mature line "maybe you just needed me to feel the way you do". The more you dig into the lyrics the more you'll get out of this track, but it does require the listener to meet it more than halfway. In other words, you probably have to be a big fan of this band to get much out of this. | 81 | | Yellowcard Underdog
"Underdog" - The Underdog EP possesses crossover appeal among fans because it has the punk feel of their earliest records but the melodies also start to shine through. It's about equidistant from One for the Kids and Ocean Avenue, and that's a great place to be. The EP's title track features all of those traits but lacks a defining hook, and is thus the least essential of the five songs that this release has to offer. | 80 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Firewater (Ocean Avenue b-side)" - The pristine acoustic guitars make this song, and the chorus of "can I swallow this bottle whole, so this brain in my head can forget your face" is just immature and eternally relatable enough to be a portal to our youth. This is a much better b-side than "Hey Mike", and borders on "should it have been included on Ocean Avenue?" territory. | 79 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Down On My Head" - The steady drum beat here is fairly addicting, and I absolutely adore the way this changes keys and swells across the back half of the song. It saves an otherwise mediocre lyrical outing "I never thought I would wake up in bed / watching the world coming down on my head". | 78 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Twenty Three" - Ah, we've made our way into the territory of classic, prime Yellowcard! "Twenty Three" bursts down the door with soaring violins, LP3's crazy drumming, and Mackin's earnest vocals. As you'll find out throughout much of this list, lyrics matter a lot to me when it comes to this particular band, and here ("we're almost twenty three and you're still mad at me") they falter a bit. It's also one of the least memorable songs on OA, even though it's still pretty damn catchy. | 77 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Grey" - Another song from Yellowcard's most depressing album, "Grey" is a late-tracklist moment that often gets overlooked. It's fairly steady/uneventful from an instrumental standpoint (the drums keep pace, the violins add some poignant melody), but the lyrics occasionally jump off the page in a nice way: "I gave you things I had that I cannot get back again"..."I know every last regret inside of me is my own." It's unlikely to be anyone's favorite YC track, but it is so much more than filler. | 76 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Space Travel" - A lot of the descriptions of "Grey" could also apply here, although "Space Travel" has a bit more nuance to the actual songwriting as it glides between smooth, effortless verses and mild swells that give the song the illusion of moving like beams of light through the universe, not unlike the woman Ryan Key sings about so longingly here. | 75 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"Fragile and Dear" - Perhaps Yellowcard's dreamiest song ever (JesperL, where you at!?), "Fragile and Dear" thrives on its ability to combine slow, drawn out choruses with perfectly executed electronically-washed vocals. It's the perfect song to get lost in, whether it's during a long drive or as you drift off into a daydream. One of Lift a Sail's better tracks. | 74 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Surface Of The Sun" - The fact that it took more than a quarter of this 100-song list to get to a single Southern Air track is a testament to the strength of that album. So is this: although "Surface of the Sun" is my lowest ranked SA song, it still rocks. It's one of the heavier moments on the record, but the fact that it doesn't quite hit the same emotional highs or memorable melodies as other songs on the same release is the only reason this doesn't rank much higher. | 73 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Bombers (Paper Walls b-side)" - If you haven't heard this, then you're missing out. This is a very strong b-side that easily could have taken "Dear Bobbie"'s place on the album's official tracklist. The piercing, towering violins in the intro make me smile ear-to-ear every time, and the entire band is humming here. Key's vocals feel emphatic and driven, which when combined with lyrics like "This is the deepest cut I think I have ever felt" and "Always reflecting what I've learned but was not taught" make for the ideal summer breakup anthem. It's not the catchiest song in the world in terms of its chorus, but the fact that this is a b-side is a travesty. | 72 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"Crash the Gates" - "Crash the Gates" delivers on the "heaviness" that was supposed to (but didn't) comprise most of Lift a Sail. The guitars are dense and fiery, Key's vocals echoing and piercing. Honestly, it sounds like Yellowcard's answer to Thrice's Fire EP, and the fact that they execute this style so well is a pleasant surprise. It's a shame more songs on the album didn't follow this direction and match its intensity, because this is a massive rocker. | 71 | | Yellowcard One for the Kids
"Big Apple Heartbreak" - This is one of those songs that, despite existing on one of Yellowcard's raw/formative records, always stuck with me. The line "this can't be home anymore" is sung with such sincerity and with such a melodic inflection that it's impossible to forget. The way the song evolves from a forlorn ballad to a punchy pop-punk tune with desperate pleas of "Where are you, I need you, you still have my heart", and then transforms yet again into a full-throttle energy burst lend it songwriting maturity that is lacking on a lot of other early songs by this band. | 70 | | Yellowcard Underdog
"Avondale" - Everything about this track echoes with the glory of Yellowcard's peak early punk days, and the transition from long and drawn out (but memorable!) chorus of "mighty king of Avondale" to the dueling, layered choruses make this song way too much fun to sing along to. | 69 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Date Line (I Am Gone)" - Speaking of super memorable, the chorus of "Date Line (I Am Gone)" ranks pretty high up there. The instrumentation is reined in a bit compared to the majority of Paper Walls (which really let LP3 and Mackin loose), but there's a reassuring calmness to it all. At times it might feel a little too YC-by-the-numbers, but that's about the only drawback here. | 68 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"I'm A Wrecking Ball" - This is the song that made me realize just how far Yellowcard's band members had come in their lives: "On these shelves I keep my family / In this bed I watch them fall asleep". The song resonates with me personally as well, because it came out the year after I got married when discussions of starting a family were arising. It was just further proof that this band always seems in-step with me. Key also delivers one of his most beautiful vocal performances here. | 67 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Fighting" - This might be Yellowcard's most balanced song - every single instrument here shines, nothing feels like it's competing, and every band member delivers a noticeably enjoyable moment. That's probably why it was chosen as the lead single for Paper Walls. The primary drawback is that I'm not a big fan of the lyrics in the chorus ("what am I fighting for / there must be something more..."), although the verses are noticeably better which certainly helps. I was pretty disappointed by this when it was released ahead of the album, but in-context it works perfectly and it's also grown on me over the years. | 66 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"Empty Street" - This song partially reaps the benefits of being on the band's farewell LP, because on another album this might cross the line into overly sappy. With that said, it's an emotional farewell to its fans: " I say goodbye to the clearest eyes / I won't be with you, but I won't be far away." There's also a pretty damn underrated guitar solo here, and it was nice to see the band starting to figure out that more stuff like that was the best way to fill the obvious void left by LP3. Maybe more of that to come with the pending new music on the horizon? We can only hope! | 65 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"For You, and Your Denial" - I still recall hearing this as the lead single for When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes. Those violins in the beginning felt like a part of my life that's been missing magically returning, and that's what it was as Yellowcard announced that they were ending their hiatus. As with some of the other songs in this middle-ish tier, I have no complaints about the instrumentation but the lyrics are lacking a spark. In this case, "can you hear the crowd they all go wild, for you and your denial", while alright, never resonated with me on an emotional level. | 64 | | Yellowcard Underdog
"Rocket" - The verses early in this song almost remind me of Clarity-era Jimmy Eat World, which is obviously a huge plus. I love how the acoustic guitars shimmer and shine as the song gradually picks up in intensity until Key is borderline shouting the chorus. This is Yellowcard's lo-fi emo moment, and it's spectacular. | 63 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Martin Sheen or JFK" - This is one of Lights and Sounds' most underrated cuts. The moment at the end when Key sings, both hauntingly and desperately, "I could sleep, but when I wake here, you'd still be gone / And you're my air" absolutely destroys me every time. Absolutely heartbreaking gem of a moment. | 62 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Shrink the World" - Young Sowing was a bit of a hopeless romantic, and "Shrink The World" was tailor-made to trap someone like me. It's an adorable little pop-punk love song with an absolutely irresistible melody that will remain in your head for decades. "If I could then I'd shrink the world tonight / So that I would find you and me inside" is hella cheesy, but I didn't care 16 years ago and apparently I'm only marginally less naive now. | 61 | | Yellowcard Underdog
"Finish Line" - This is such an underrated cut. "Finish Line" has it all: beautiful violins, heavy waves of electric guitar, and super catchy verses/choruses. I could argue that its only "flaw" is that I never really frequented this EP enough to develop a real emotional connection to most of its songs. Sorry "Finish Line"...it's not you, it's me. I could see this being in someone else's top-25. | 60 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Life of a Salesman" - This track is bursting with energy, and I love the vibrant violins. The verses are very punk-y and bring an aggressive tempo that YC generally abandoned after One For The Kids. I've heard people dismiss the lyrics before, but I think they're sort of nice. As someone who's grown up and had kids of his own, I understand now more than ever the appreciation for and desire to emulate what my dad did for me growing up. | 59 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"The Deepest Well" - This is a pretty underrated cut if you ask me. Matty Mullins' (of Memphis May Fire) guest vocals provide a welcome rougher edge that fits in perfectly before that explosively catchy chorus. The messier guitars are also something unique on an album that was often a little too sleepy for its own good. This is one of my favorite Lift a Sail tracks. | 58 | | Yellowcard One for the Kids
"Cigarette" - This is all about the beauty of the violins, and to some extent, Ryan's delivery as well. It's the song that made me realize what separated Yellowcard from other trending pop-punk acts at the time: the emotion behind the songs...that longing sincerity that simply can't be feigned. It's all on full display here, a prime showcase of some of the very best music from the band's Key-era debut. Let the violins wash over you, and you'll feel it too. | 57 | | Yellowcard Underdog
"Powder" - This is another highlight from the band's earlier discography. "Powder" features an addicting beat driven not by drums but rather by repetitive guitar crunches, and there's a gorgeous swell of violins late in the song. To boot, the chorus is an earworm. This is one of the catchiest and most unique songs in the band's repertoire, and sort of like "Finish Line", the only reason I don't have it ranked much higher here is likely because I haven't spent nearly as much time with Underdog/One for the Kids as I have OA and everything that came after. | 56 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"Soundtrack" - This always used to fall within the "nice. but sort of forgettable" midsection of When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes. But in recent years I've really taken a liking to this album's supporting tracks, or whatever you want to call them - because they're definitely not filler. "Soundtrack" is a breezy and melodic jam, perfect for any summer afternoon. The line "But we've got symphonies still / Left inside us" now strikes me almost as something of a career-defining statement; they returned from hiatus in 2011, and now in 2023 they appear to be on the verge of coming back from a full-blown breakup. I love that they can't seem to stay away from their passion. | 55 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"Hide" - Lifted from the exact same section as "Soundtrack", "Hide" checks a lot of the same boxes. Its melody is a cool breeze, with lines like "I know it feels like I let you down / But I'm still around" and "I could be underneath you / And looking up to see you from where we used to hide" serving as some of WYTTSY's most memorable moments. Outside of this album's obvious big hitters, "Hide" is one of my personal favorites. | 54 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"Lift a Sail" - We're now getting into the cream of the crop when it comes to Lift a Sail. One could argue that the album's title track doesn't have enough going on instrumentally, and I'll concede that it's not the most energetic song in their catalog, but that swelling, massively uplifting, 100% memorable chorus more than makes up for anything else that it lacks. The entire thing is just one moment of complete and utter triumph. | 53 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"Life of Leaving Home" - Another track that's a virtual tie with "Hide" and "Soundtrack" for the most subtly enjoyable grower on WYTTSY, "Life of Leaving Home" boasts all the same anthemic summery qualities of those tracks yet boasts a little bit more songwriting nuance. I also love the "I am awake and alive" part of the chorus; I can be in any mood and feel uplifted after hearing that. | 52 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"Rest In Peace" - The opener from Yellowcard's eponymous finale, "Rest In Peace" is a song all about tying loose ends and making amends. It glides in on weightless-sounding keys along with some reverb, and crashes like a wave into a sea of electric guitars and drumming. There's also a well-placed and superbly executed guitar solo. Nothing to dislike here, from the sentimentality to the instrumentation...the only thing preventing it from ascending into the top 50 is that the chorus doesn't quite stick with me. | 51 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"What Appears" - I absolutely love the beat and overall pacing of this song, and the chorus is almost impossible to forget. The lyrical content is inspiring, too: "I am not what appears / I am failures and fears / But I am on my way". I still think this would have been a huge hit for the band if they released it around or prior to the Paper Walls era. I wish they didn't use whatever effect they did on the drums though, because it makes them sound muddled rather than giving them the propulsive, dynamic effect that they could have had. | 50 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Sure Thing Falling" - This has always felt like one of Yellowcard's most unique tracks to me. The lyrics seem strange upon initial inspection (mentions of vampires and getting high), but they end up sort of making sense if you pay close attention to the verses. The chorus is enormous, and there's a nice little solo to boot. It's not an album defining track, but it feels very ingrained in what makes Lights and Sounds, at least occasionally, so damn special. | 49 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Shadows and Regrets" - My favorite part of this song is the power of the drum beats and the bells that give the whole thing a sense of uplifting/triumphant liberation. The lyrics, contrastly, are very wistful/reminiscent ("When we were only kids / and we were best of friends") and occasionally full of remorse ("I heard, heard myself / Say things I'd take back"). It's a very poignant track if you're in the right mood, even if the loooong draaawn ooouuuut chorus may eventually wear you out. | 48 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"A Vicious Kind" - You gotta love the driving, aggressive drum beats and bitter lyrics present here. It's a great spite/revenge track ("I want you to know I'm not sorry at all / You can't buy forgiveness or blame me for the fall") but also does a great job of delving into the backstory ("I was on your side before the war began...All I ever wanted was for us to beat the odds"). The only reason this hovers near the middle of the list is because it's a tad narrow sonically, rarely deviating from said beat and overall tone. Still, it's a piece that accomplishes exactly what it sets out to and fits very nicely on Southern Air's overarching theme of moving past trauma. | 47 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Miles Apart" - This is perhaps the most summery/optimistic track on an album full of summery/optimistic tracks. Key sings, in a hopeful yet sad tone, about him and someone he loves being separated by distance. It's very uptempo instrumentally and Mackin's violin joyously toils away in the background. The melody and chorus are very infectious, but my favorite part is actually the bridge when Key belts out "I'd give it up for just one more day with you". This song is ear candy, start to finish. | 46 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"Hang You Up" - This one is all about the beat/rhythm. It's a simple one, yet somehow it feels innovative. "Hang You Up" is virtually impossible not to tap your foot to, and Key's lyrics, while somewhat pedestrian here, are delivered with his usual level of earnestness. The melody itself is a massive hook, which when combined with the infectious beat make for one of, if not the, catchiest slow song in YC's repertoire. They also once again prove themselves masters of the bridge, with the "memories of the light in your eyes" line shining particularly bright. | 45 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Here I Am Alive" - To a lot of people this may seem like one of their poppiest/most basic songs, and I guess it definitely could be seen that way. Aside from the fact that I enjoy this Patrick Stump co-written track (ft. backing vocals from Tay Jardine), it's the lyrics that have made this stick with me for so many years. Around the time this album came out, I was going through a pretty huge transformation in my life, and shedding some not-so-great friends was a part of that process. Lines like "Someone's going to tell you who you should want to be" and "Someone's gonna tell you that you deserve the worst" resonated with me a lot, but not nearly as much as the self-affirming confidence that comes with "And when they give up, cause they always give up / Say, here I am alive." It's a great song for cutting ties with the toxic people in your life...that's what this song means to me, at least, and for that reason it ranks at a much higher level than the music alone might indicate. | 44 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"View From Heaven" - Ah yes, YC's country moment. "View From Heaven" is a very moving song despite its upbeat tempo, with the song clearly paying tribute to someone who passed away: "Sometimes I still just can't believe you're gone" / "I only need one more day / Just one more chance to say / I wish that I had gone up with you too". Ryan's delivery is outstanding and the female backing vocals make it even better. One of Ocean Avenue's more underrated cuts. | 43 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Afraid" - The first descriptor that comes to my mind when I think of "Afraid" is dynamic. Everything just sounds so in-sync, from the perfectly paced drumming to Mendez's guitars that come crashing over Ryan Key's voice when he hits that earworm chorus. The flow is immaculate from the get-go, and it's one of those songs that has always gotten slept on a bit because it's not one of their mega-hits. My favorite lyric is "When there is nothing left to save / Will you be afraid?" A case-in-point of Yellowcard taking something simple and expressing it with an emotional edge that nobody else could. | 42 | | Yellowcard One for the Kids
"Rough Draft" - This is the best song on One for the Kids. In fact, I could argue that it is peak acoustic Yellowcard, with guitars that ring out with pristine clarity. Ryan's vocals are sensitive and emotional, helping to sell heart-on-sleeve lyrics like "May a sickness come and set me free / Kill me while I still believe that you were meant for me" or "Wouldn't want to wake the eyes that make me melt inside". This got me through some tough times as a teen, and even though it doesn't have quite the same impact that it used to, it still holds a special place in my heart. | 41 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Light Up the Sky" - This has grown on me a ton over the years. Aside from being one of the best midtempo Yellowcard songs there is, it's almost impossible for me to walk away from it not feeling optimistic and inspired. I have memories of listening to this song while trying to win the heart of my now-wife as we did this "will they/won't they" type of balancing act for years ("How will we know if we just don't try? We won't ever know") and also of it getting me through some really difficult breakups ("you've come this far with a broken heart"). This song was often a beacon of light when I needed it the most. | 40 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Way Away" - Although I can't recall for certain, I think this was the first Yellowcard song I ever heard (while playing Madden 2004!). If that is indeed the case, then I owe this track a debt of gratitude for introducing me to my all-time favorite pop-punk band. "Way Away" is more intense than your typical YC song, and the lyrics are also more negative than the majority of what you'll hear on Ocean Avenue ("Way away so you can see / How it feels to be alone and not believe anything"). It's an iconic Yellowcard song for a reason: it absolutely, unequivocally rocks the fuck out. I don't have the requisite emotional connection to this song for it to rank in the top 30, but it sure is a nostalgic jam. | 39 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Keeper" - Replete with an absolutely soaring chorus from Key, "Keeper" tells the story of someone who hurt their partner emotionally and is seemingly attempting to make amends ("I wanna know if I could be someone to turn to that could never hurt you / But I know what you think of me / You had a breakthrough and now I'm just bad news for you"). So when he sings, "I wish I could be somebody else", it's because he's destroyed the trust he once had with this person and wishes he could start over again. It's a helpless but beautiful sentiment, and one that resonated with me and I'm sure many other listeners at some point in time. | 38 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Five Becomes Four" - As the title suggests, this track is about the band's rift with former guitarist Ben Harper. It's similar lyrically to "A Viscious Kind", and once again the song isn't merely a blame game - it elevates the songwriting by telling a backstory to provide emotional levity: "Remember the line 'never say die'? / You were the reason I survived"..."Why would you try and hurt me now?". The real attraction here is the strength of the band's performance, though, with Longineu Parsons and Sean Mackin in particular putting on an absolute showcase of drumming/violins respectively. The relentless breakneck pace makes it an ideal driving/hype jam just about any time. | 37 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Rivertown Blues" - Another song where the instrumentals absolutely shine. Mackin's violin is prominent and drives the whole thing, while Mendez's guitar is prevalent throughout culminating in a very satisfying solo. I don't really need to tell you that LPIII's drumming is as off-the-wall and amazing as ever. Lyrically, it's a wistful look back at a relationship that soured over time, which is a running theme not only on Southern Air but really throughout Yellowcard's career: "I'm supposed to say 'this was your loss', and 'I'm fine'"..."Somewhere inside this, you changed / And I could never follow you that way". For me personally, this has more musical appeal than lyrical/emotional, although both components of the track thrive. | 36 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"You and Me and One Spotlight" - I know it sounds corny, but the best songs are the ones that transport me. Every time I listen to "You and Me and One Spotlight", my mind goes to the same place: this slow, final dance at the end of the world. It's a bleak scenario for a Yellowcard song, but as usual, they find a way to romanticize it and turn it into a series of beautiful moments: "When everything dies with one last sunrise / Together, not scared, I'll dry your last tear, and then we're just air"..."Go put on your best tonight / It's you and me and not much time / To watch the world burning bright / We are ready". Combine lyrics like this with a melody as gorgeous as what we get here, and you have a true stunner. | 35 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Rough Landing, Holly" - With references to Hollywood, CA and drug usage, "Rough Landing, Holly" depicts the disorienting feeling of being launched into fame. It's a rock track through-and-through, commencing with an immediate wave of fast-paced drumming and electric guitars that lead to one of Yellowcard's hugest-sounding (minus the obligatory pop-punk sugar) choruses ever. It's in line with Lights and Sounds' darker themes, but loses none of the melodic qualities or instrumental hooks. This is Yellowcard at/near their most energetic, and it's an essential track for fans and non-fans alike. | 34 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Breathing" - A song that depicts the weight and crushing guilt of messing up in a relationship, "Breathing" delivers one of the most poignant lines in Yellowcard's entire discography when, on the heels of a mini guitar/violin breakdown Ryan sings: "I know that I hurt you, things will never be the same / The only love I ever knew, I threw it all away." I dare anyone to listen to this song and not feel those lines, and in some way relate to them, deep down in their soul. The verses throughout the song all build up to this moment, hinting at the fallout to come: "even though you are next to me I still feel so alone" / "Something I've been keeping locked away behind my lips / I can feel it breaking free with each and every kiss". It's a superbly executed song in every way, and one that still cuts deep whenever I hear it. | 33 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Empty Apartment" - For the longest time, Ocean Avenue was my go-to "breakup album", and "Empty Apartment" is a big reason for that. It conveys heartache like few songs can, capturing the hurt of a fresh breakup ("Waking up from this nightmare / How's your life? What's it like there? / Is it all what you want it to be? / Does it hurt when you think about me / And how broken my heart is?") along with the desire to "win her back" ("Take you away / From that empty apartment you stay") and eventually moving on ("Maybe some day I will see you again / And you'll look me in my eyes and call me your friend"). Essentially, it's an entire breakup in a song, and it's a very powerful one at that. | 32 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"Illuminate" - I know I've spent a good portion of this list talking about how much Lift a Sail has grown off me, but there are some tracks that have not only endured, but continue to grow stronger with time. "Illuminate" is a beautiful piece from start to finish, with Key's layered melodic chorus of "Do you picture me? / What do you see? Maybe a future full of unwritten things" serving as one of the most beautiful and hopeful sentiments in the band's entire catalog -- not to mention how they rachet up the tempo for a very satisfying rock finish that poses another silver lining: "Rise like the brightest sun / Our darkest days are done". This song alone will help anchor Lift a Sail as an album I return to in the future. | 31 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Always Summer" - To me, this feels like Yellowcard embodied in one song. Take the title itself for starters, which captures the warmth of their entire career in two words. Then there's the lyrics, which are as earnest and romantic as ever: "I loved you first, I love you still / I always will." The fact that there's an actual violin solo still makes me giddy. Most of all, though, I'm forever attached to this track because it reminds me of the week I began dating my wife. You can dissect songs all you want, but eventually it all boils down to how they make you feel. This one fills me up with joy. | 30 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Sleep In The Snow" - Sorry for the double-dip in "a glimpse at Sowing's love life when no one asked", but "Sleep in the Snow" is, once again, all about the memories. For the longest time, I viewed myself as a loner - someone who felt everything and felt it big, but was trapped in the mind of a shy, awkward introvert. Dating my wife changed that, and "Sleep in the Snow" - aka midtempo pop-punk perfected - still captures those feelings in ways I never could: "I was safe in my fortress alone / Then you came and tore it all down"..."I've always run right through the moments that count / But somehow with you I slow down". Ryan's glowing falsetto in the outro is just the icing on the cake. | 29 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"How I Go" - The penultimate Lights and Sounds track is filled with references to the award-winning 2003 film Big Fish, and it feels like an epic journey in its own right. It's mysterious ("I could tell you the wildest of tales / My friend the giant and traveling sails") romantic ("I froze in the moment and she changed it all"), and possesses an undeniable sense of finality ("I leave you now but you have so much more to do / And every story I have told is part of you"). Natalie Maines' stunning backing vocals elevate the experience even more, with her gorgeous vocals and Ryan's intertwining to form a breathtaking duet. This song could have been the final track of their career and it would have been fitting. | 28 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"Got Yours" - In what is most likely their best uptempo song post-Longineu, "Got Yours" absolutely rips. This is mostly thanks to Ryan Mendez's prominent and highly energetic guitars, as well as Nate Young (of Anberlin) racheting things up a few notches. The song once again deals with the (at the time) breakup of Yellowcard, with references abount to drifting apart and moving in separate directions ("Building towers to watch them come back down"..."Maybe I lose you after all / There is nothing left for us to call home"..."I got mine, you got yours"). Of all the songs on Yellowcard's self-titled finale, this is the one the delivers the highest dose of adrenaline. If/when the band reunites without LPIII, I hope they take a lot of notes from this track. | 27 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"See Me Smiling" - This is quite the moving track, with Key longing for someone who has passed away: "I need you back like I need to air to breathe this out" / "It's not the same without you...You were the rhythm that was bringing us to life" / "Wherever you are, I hope you can see me smiling". Parsons and Mendez of course keep the depressing lyrics from becoming a drab musical affair, delivering one urgent riff after another atop heavy drumming with fantastic and creative fills. There's almost a fury to it, expressing anger where Ryan is only to convey sadness. It's one of the band's best and least talked about post-hiatus moments. | 26 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Inside Out" - The end of any relationship can be messy, and "Inside Out" captures those conflicting emotions about as well as any song I've heard. Harper's riffs and Mackin's violins drive the experience, while Ryan reflects on everything about the relationship from jealousy ("I hope you think of me / Hope you wonder where I sleep at night") to anger ("If you're lucky I will be your last regret, your only friend") and circling right back to love again during the bridge ("The two of us we dream like one...The two of us take breath like one"). That bridge in particular qualifies as one of the most beautiful moments in any Yellowcard track, and it's one I've certainly spent my fair share of time indulging in when I'm feeling particularly vulnerable. One of Ocean Avenue's more unheralded gems. | 25 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"Savior's Robes" - Perhaps the angriest song in Yellowcard's late-career phase. The song is a double-edged sword, with the verses telling the story of a toxic person who "needed cutting away" while the chorus seems to slyly acknowledge that the band has run its natural course: "Play us a song I know / Make it an older one...Don't you get it?" It's befitting as the penultimate track on their self-titled finale, delivering a drive and aggression sorely lacking (aside from "Got Yours") elsewhere while still tying everything about the band's life cycle together in a way that is emotional and slightly acerbic. | 24 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"With You Around" - "Do you remember when I said you were my only one?", Ryan Key inquires on this self-referential homerun of a comeback track. The obvious tie-in is to the band's massive hit single "Only One", and the placement of the track on their 2011 post-hiatus comeback album couldn't have been better. It's more than just fan service, though: "With You Around" is explosively catchy, highly melodic, and oozes with the kind of summer warmth that makes long time fans of the band swoon. Where "Only One" was longing and reminiscent, "With You Around" nods toward the future, with silver linings like "Now I wanna chase forever down / With you around." This is the ideal blend of uptempo fun, emotional appeal, and rewarding their dedicated listeners. | 23 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Lights And Sounds" - The Lights and Sounds title track is ablaze with electric guitar riffs, full-throttle drumming, and explosive energy all around. The melody in the chorus is an enormous and impossible to forget, while the lyrics delve into fame and expectations. "Make it new but stay in the lines...Smile big for everyone" is pretty clearly a reference to fans wanting the sunny, happy Yellowcard, while the band instead wanted to explore their darker and more creative side. Thank goodness they did, because Lights and Sounds (both the song and the whole album) showcase a different but equally brilliant side of the band. | 22 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Waiting Game" - If you ask me, this is "the" lyrical gem from Lights and Sounds. It's Ryan Key's showcase, from his pen to his voice. When he sings "If I lose you I don't know", you can feel his desperation. You can also feel his pain when he sings "What I see when I dream hurts like hell and back". When he belts out the dramatic chorus "More than ever, I need to feel you", you'd never know that the towering voice you're witnessing once fronted a pitchy, raw punk outfit. "Waiting Game" captures the band's maturity - both musically and emotionally - in one epic moment of grandeur. | 21 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Only One" - From the dreamy guitar intro to Key's gradual escalation from quiet, lovestruck verses to declaring - literally at the top of his lungs - his affection for his "only one", this song's place as perhaps Yellowcard's most iconic song is well-earned. It's one of those songs you simply have to hear to understand its impact. Usually pop-punk songs win you over with their energy and lyrics - and that's not to say that "Only One" isn't strong in those departments - but Key is even stronger, demanding your undivided focus with his gripping, powerful delivery. The swelling violins underscore the moment with a sense of elegance and poignancy, making for one of the most emotionally stirring pop-punk songs of all time. | 20 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Ocean Avenue" - Ah, Yellowcard's calling card. Even if you don't know who Yellowcard is, you've likely heard "Ocean Avenue" on the radio or while out shopping. The amount of times this track has been played and overplayed might be the only reason it's not ranked higher inside of my top 20. But that's no fault of Yellowcard's, of course - "Ocean Avenue" is the perfect pop-punk love song, and it will likely never be de-throned. If your heart doesn't skip a beat, or your eyes don't well up even just a little, when Key belts out these incoming lines, then you might want to check your pulse: "I remember the look in your eyes when I told you that this was goodbye / You were beggin' me, not tonight / Not here, not now / We're looking up at the same night sky and keep pretendin' the sun will not rise / We'll be together for one more night / Somewhere, somehow" Utter perfection. | 19 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"A Place We Set Afire" - This is Yellowcard's most honest farewell song to their fans. "We don't have to say goodbye", Ryan admits, before adding "You tell me there must be a little light left flickering burning in a place we set afire / But no one will listen if we just wait here to burn / We gotta swing away, gotta cut the wire." In essence, he's saying that they can't spend their whole careers trying to rekindle a fire that's burnt out - they had their moment of fame back on 2003's Ocean Avenue, and it passed. Of course, this wouldn't be a top-20 Yellowcard track without the memorable riff that defines the song's melody, the huge wistful chorus, Mackin's late violin swell, or even the bells that chime in during the final refrain. It all makes for one of the band's most moving full-circle moments; a perfect bow to tie around a nearly perfect career. | 18 | | Yellowcard Lift a Sail
"One Bedroom" - You probably overlooked this one, didn't you? The best song by a pretty wide margin on Lift A Sail remains everything I wish that album would have been. It retains Key's penchant for heart-on-sleeve lyrics ("Watch the waves with me / We can love like we are forever...You’re the last stop and I arrive / You’re the one for the rest of time") but also launches into an explosive rock crescendo, replete with a fiery Mendez guitar solo that lasts nearly a quarter of the song. The song was written for Key's then-wife Alyona Alekhina, and you can truly sense that this was written as something of an ode to her. It might be Yellowcard's most powerful love song. | 17 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"The Sound of You and Me" - It's hard to imagine When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes without its frenzied opener. "The Sound of You and Me" is a song all about resolution, and keeping an eye to the future. I can't tell you how much this song meant to me in 2011, when I was on the precipice of some of the biggest changes of my life: moving into my own apartment, starting my first "real" job in the heart of the city, and giving up on an instance of unrequited love that had haunted me for nearly five years. With Longineu Parsons' absolutely beastly drumming performance and Sean Mackin's triumphant violins washing over me like a cool ocean wave, I wouldn't have even needed heartfelt lines like "Someday everything ends...I've never been more ready to move on" to attach myself to this song forever. | 16 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Telescope" - This is one of Yellowcard's all-time growers for me. I must not have paid enough attention back when this song dropped along with Southern Air back in 2012, or I would have noted in my review of the album that "Telescope" just might have the best verses of any YC track. Dedicated to Ryan's late aunt, who encouraged him to become a musician, Key sings, "You were inspiration, when no one else believed...You said every day's a gift and we'll be alright / Something took you from me, I can't understand why / But wherever you're resting, I'm carrying your light", topping it only a few lines later with the picturesque gem "When the fireflies / Lit up our skies / Those were the nights when the world made us smile." It's sentimentally breathtaking, and one of those tracks where once you "feel it", you can't un-feel it. | 15 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Cut Me, Mick" - Few songs can can make me feel as simultaneously amped and utterly vulnerable as "Cut Me Mick". The incredible force and power behind Parsons' drumming and Mendez's riffs are, as they always have been, an amazing source of energy for the band - and this is somewhere near the top of their collective showcases. Combine that infectious tempo and aura with a chorus as memorable as "You bring me down from my cloud / You keep my feet on the ground / Bring me back to life", and you have one incredibly tight song. As if that weren't enough, the lyrics also seem to tell the story of someone who took their partner for granted and lost them: "When I thought that I might be invincible, wasn’t long before I was invisible...And the more you say you don’t care, the more I know you’re there." It's a song I have to admit that I related to like crazy around the time Paper Walls was released, so this ticks just about every box from the songwriting itself to the nostalgia factor. | 14 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Believe" - If you're a true Yellowcard fan, you can already hear the onslaught of violins just from reading the title of this song. In addition to being Yellowcard's most uptempo song, it's also the band's most optimistic, paying tribute to the fallen heroes of 9/11 and using it as fuel to make positive change. "Wanna hold my wife when I get home / Wanna tell the kids they'll never know / How much I love to see them smile" Key sings with heightened emotion. It's a song that's born out of tragedy, but extracts meaning from it. "Wanna live a life like you somehow, wanna make your sacrifice worthwhile"..."Everything is gonna be alright / Be strong, believe." If there was a better message or a better way to musically portray it back in the era of 9/11 and the war on terror, then I'd love to hear it. | 13 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Ten" - This song cuts deeper and closer to home than perhaps any other Yellowcard track. The song is about a child Ryan Key never had due to miscarriage, who would have been ten years old at the time the song was released. It's an acoustic track with some subtle country influence, but the selling point is the incredibly personal lyrics: "I found out in the fall, I've been gone, on the road for a year / She said, 'Honey, I've got real bad news' / And then there were just tears"..."Since then I've often wondered what you might have been like / How it would have felt to hold you / Would you have had my eyes?"..."Now I live in a dream where I am holding your little hands...I never got to meet you, my best friend". I'm not crying, you're crying. The song has only become more important to me since I endured a similar situation in the summer of 2017. | 12 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"Paper Walls" - Had Yellowcard's first hiatus become permanent, I would have been more than okay with this being the band's swan song. It opens with a children's choir, and then launches into Mendez's beefy riffs and Mackin's emotive violins. If you've read through this list then you know I'm a sucker for songs with a sense of absolute finality, as if they were sung for Earth's final hours. In this case, I truly believe that "Paper Walls" was written to potentially be Yellowcard's last message to their fans. "Let's take what hurts, and write it all down / On these paper walls in this empty house / And when our ink runs out, we'll burn it to the ground" takes on special meaning when you realize that it's describing why the houses on the cover art are glowing. The power with which Ryan sings "Hear me now, you will never be alone" feels eternal. These guys are experts at this kind of thing, and "Paper Walls" is one of their best closers in a career full of mindblowing curtain-calls. | 11 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Three Flights Down (Lights and Sounds b-side)" - The dark horse entry has arrived! "Three Flights Down" is Yellowcard's bleakest song, both atmospherically and lyrically. Originally written to be the opposite bookend to the piano intro "Three Flights Up", it ultimately got scrapped to save runtime space or something, but no reason is good enough to omit this heartwrenching lament. I listened to this song on repeat for months as I endured my first true "heartbreak" in high school, and the fact that it resonates with me every bit as strongly in 2023 is a testament to this thing's power. It's chock-full of stinging lyrics, but my favorites would have to be the desolate, depressing "Quiet on the front / The sky dropped the sun" and the self-valuing "Lately I've found, you're bringing me down / And I can't stand to see me this way." This track still haunts me to this day, and I've always proudly proclaimed it as Yellowcard's unheralded masterpiece. | 10 | | Yellowcard Paper Walls
"The Takedown" - Yellowcard's #1 instrumental showcase is right here. I remember shaking, quite literally, with excitement when Paper Walls dropped on my 19th birthday and this was the first song on it. It felt like a true artistic leap for the band, who suddenly seemed capable of writing catchy, complex riffs with drum patterns/fills capable of running circles around anyone else in the scene. I'm getting hyped up just typing this. Then you factor in that Ryan key apparently can't not pen poignant lyrics (as an at-one-time hopeless romantic, "I won't get by, I won't heal in time" felt like a defiant anthem in the face of every well-meaning friend who told me to basically "just hang in there") and you get this frenetic, wildly exciting opener that doesn't lose even an ounce of Yellowcard's core emotional appeal. Easily top-10 all time YC. | 9 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"One Year, Six Months" - The beauty of this song still takes my breath away. It's almost unbelievable that a pop-punk band wrote something as poetic and universal as "Sew this up with threads of reason and regret...All that I've got to pull me through is memories of you", or "Maybe we'll forget...I hope we don't forget", or "So many nights, legs tangled tight / Wrap me up in a dream with you", or "I'm falling into memories of you and things we used to do / Follow me there, a beautiful somewhere...a place that we can share", or...basically any word uttered in this track? And don't get me started on the acoustics here, which are so goddamn pretty that they make me want to paint a sunset...or something like that. Have you ever heard the piano version of this on 2013's Ocean Avenue Acoustic? It's possibly, somehow, even more gorgeous. If I had only one shot at convincing someone to fall in love with Yellowcard, this is probably the song I'd choose. | 8 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Southern Air" - This is very much a near-and-dear track for me. In 2012 I was rounding a lot of important life milestones - I was cutting out some toxic influences in my life (both of the substance and human variety), I had a new job, I was dating my future wife, and I moved back to my hometown all within the same summer. This song feels like it was custom made for me, in that moment: "I thought about the day / When I could truly say I'm better now / And here I am"..."After living through these wild years and coming out alive / I just want to lay my head here / Stop running for a while"..."The sun lays down inside the ocean, I'm right where I belong / Feel the air and salts on my skin, the future's coming on." The song is delivered with equal parts nostalgia and urgency, making for an emphatically inspiring curtain call to my all-time favorite pop-punk album from my all-time favorite pop-punk band. | 7 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"City Of Devils" - Not unlike "Three Flights Down", this is one of Yellowcard's saddest songs ever. It deals with themes of isolation and loneliness in ways that I struggle to convey as strongly as I feel them. All I know is that it's damn near impossible not to scream along at the top of my lungs to the lyrics in the bridge, when Ryan Key wails, "What if I wanted you here right now? / Would you fall in the fire burn me down?" Key's vocal performance here is like "Waiting Game"'s darker half - equally as towering, but less "desperate" and more "despair". Of course, none of this is meaning to undersell just how well the band creates a barren, dejected canvas: Harper's dive-bar strums in the intro paint an image of someone at the end of his rope, stumbling drunk between city bars under the ceaseless neon lights of LA. This song grasps at my soul in the most sand and haunting way, and I don't think I'll ever want or be able to shake it. | 6 | | Yellowcard Southern Air
"Awakening" - When "Awakening" opened up Southern Air, I was just getting out of a long, complicated years-long relationship with someone whom I gave everything to..and then some. When I woke up one morning and she was gone with little explanation other than a private social media message, I was pretty badly burned. If you're starting to sense a pattern of lyrics tying directly into my life, well, that's why YC means this much to me. The opening lines here hit me square in the soul when I first heard them, fresh off of the aforementioned ordeal: "Bottoms up tonight, I drink to you and I / 'Cause with the morning comes the rest of my life / And with this empty glass, I will break the past / 'Cause with the morning I can open my eyes / I want this to be my awakening." I will always associate this song with the final unbearable heartbreak I endured before I started dating my wife, making my connection to the lyrics both bitter and uplifting - just like the song itself. | 5 | | Soundtrack (Film) Spider-Man 2
"Gifts and Curses (Spider Man 2 Soundtrack)" - How could you forget about the Spider Man soundtrack? Yellowcard didn't have to go this hard for a mere soundtrack inclusion, but "Gifts and Curses" brings everything to the table from incredible instrumentation to emotionally all-in lyrics. I get chills every time I hear that mini guitar breakdown at the end of the verse, knowing that Yellowcard is about to launch into what may be their best chorus in a career overflowing with highlight-worthy choruses. I can't say enough about the slow build-up to that absolutely monumental crescendo...absolutely epic stuff that topples basically anything else they've done from an instrumental standpoint. "Gifts and Curses" is top tier pop-punk. | 4 | | Yellowcard Lights and Sounds
"Holly Wood Died" - The Lights and Sounds closer is a track filled with substance abuse ("So give me one more line"), depression ("She just wants a good life, so someone remembers her too"), and questions of mortality ("Somewhere she heard there was some place to go / When you die when you live like we do"). There are metaphors abound, from the band's disillusionment with LA and the Hollywood scene to the repeated drug references. In many ways, it feels like Ryan speaking to a close friend who he's trying to save: "I'll be there when you come down / I'll be waiting for you". While I'm not exactly certain of the meaning behind every lyric, the track definitely paints a broader image of the sort of fast life they led on the heels of Ocean Avenue, which launched them into immediate fame. The orchestral violin-laden outro reprises "Three Flights Up", bringing the entire album full-circle in one of the most epic and satisfying moments of Yellowcard's entire discography. | 3 | | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue
"Back Home" - For quite some time, this was my #1 Yellowcard song - and on some days, I think it still might be. It's a beautifully depressing track that takes us oceanside for an anthem of unrequited love. While the chorus ("Another sunny day in Californ-I-A") plays the role of irresistible melody, the real magic is in the verses and the way they express dissatisfaction with the shallowness of society when it comes to approaching relationships. It's the curse that people who feel things so strongly must bear; this sensation of always caring and loving too much. It's hard not to relate when Key belts out, "They don't know that what you love is ripped away / before you get a chance to feel it." This song is the main reason that I took to Ocean Avenue as my go-to breakup album, and while I'm years beyond the casual dating scene, it still stings a little to revisit this track and the memories it brings with it. Twenty whole years later, that's the sign of a damn good song. | 2 | | Yellowcard When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes
"Be the Young" - This moment feels like a navigation guide through my entire 2011/2012 life-altering crossroads. If you've read this far, you know that my attachment to Yellowcard is more personal than anything even remotely approaching objective, and "Be The Young" somehow took the swirling heartache/joy of my young adult life and expressed it all in one simple, hopeful line: "This is endless and I know / Growing up has just begun". The good, the bad, and the ugly are all contained in that brilliant lyric, one that accurately depicts us all as flawed individuals who will never stop making mistakes and (hopefully) learning from them. Yellowcard's portrayal of growth makes even the worst of times feel less daunting; if it's a means to an end, then it's worth enduring. Atop a sea of crashing guitars and cathartic violins, the sincerity of that line and equally as fervent pleas ("I need this to be real...please let it be real") ring out like universal truths - and they are. | 1 | | Yellowcard Yellowcard
"Fields and Fences" - Yellowcard's albums have always coincided with critical junctures in my life - they're like chapters in a story that parallels that of my own. Just as "Back Home" guided me through the uncertain steps of adolescent dating and "Be The Young" saw me transform into a young adult making impactful life decisions, "Fields and Fences" has become the song that I now relate to most. There's a sense of having passed one's prime ("I've seen the lights come and go"), as well as a desire for safety and stability. However, that doesn't mean the passion is gone, because it shines through in moments of fervent clarity like the career-concluding mantra "I don't have much that I can give to you / But I know I love the way you make me feel like I'm at home / And I am not alone." It's the same feeling I get every time I look into my wife's eyes, or hold my son in my arms. Yellowcard has long accompanied me on my journey, and I'm looking forward to whatever memories may come next. | |
Sowing
05.15.23 | Apologies in advance for the lengthy rollout (I know some people despise this format), but this is the only method my free time will allow for a list this long. I've been needing something musically-related to do as a positive distraction, so ranking the songs of one of my all-time favorite bands should do the trick. Hope you enjoy, and maybe even find a few songs you didn't know about! If you're a YC fan, please be sure to voice your agreement and/or displeasure ;-) | mkmusic1995
05.15.23 | oooo, this will be fun to see unravel. | anode
05.15.23 | Where will fighting land?? (The only Yellowcard song I know) | deathschool
05.15.23 | Yellowcard has 100 songs? | Kompys2000
05.15.23 | Aw justice for Where We Stand I remember kinda liking that one during my pissant reverbnation skate punk phase
Really want to do one of these myself one day (probably flaming lips or Beatles), always so fun to read a writer go this granular on a band even when I don't really know the band | bellovddd
05.15.23 | is it just me or is half the list frogstomp???? lol | bellovddd
05.15.23 | empty apartment is one of my personal favs by these legends anyway. | Kompys2000
05.15.23 | Personally I am expecting BIG THINGS for the lights and sounds t/t | Sowing
05.16.23 | I'm quite confident that I'll disappoint plenty of people! | bellovddd
05.16.23 | I can only see the first 10 then its all Frogstomp from there. I think its just me though lol. | Atari
05.16.23 | The accuracy of this list will surely be determined by how many tracks from Paper Walls and Southern Air make an appearance in the top 25 | Sowing
05.16.23 | @bellovddd: they're just placeholders. I'll be filling the list in as time permits | bellovddd
05.16.23 | ooooooooo! Now I'm excited! | lilliline
05.16.23 | Number 1 will be "Tomorrow" off of Yellowcard's seminal 1995 album, Frogstomp. Calling it now. | AsleepInTheBack
05.16.23 | oh loooord he coming | Crawl
05.16.23 | I like most of Lift a Sail, even the sappy ballads, but the fact that he broke up with the person like a year after that is the funniest shit. | MoM
05.16.23 | “ Yellowcard has 100 songs?”
[2]
Didn’t even know they had half this worth rating 🤷 | Sowing
05.16.23 | They have 107 in the Ryan Key era, two entire albums prior to that, tons of covers, and two full acoustic reworking LPs. They've had an extremely productive career. | tectactoe
05.16.23 | October Nights too low | Sowing
05.16.23 | Rankings 89-80 are now up! | mkmusic1995
05.16.23 | Sing For Me is such an underrated cut from them. Love that song! | JesperL
05.16.23 | "The accuracy of this list will surely be determined by how many tracks from Paper Walls and Southern Air make an appearance in the top 25"
this but wytt and southern air for me lol. excited to see the rest of this, the hurt is gone is already underrated!! that outro is pure magic!! | Sowing
05.16.23 | @mkmusic: Glad you like it. I do too, despite the fact that it always felt like a paint-by-numbers ballad to me lol
@Jesper: wyttsy and SA are definitely up there for me. I always thought the outro to The Hurt is Gone was super basic haha. Never got much out of it, but I respect the band for doing their thing and not giving a damn what people like me think about it! | tectactoe
05.16.23 | Fun fact: OCEAN AVENUE is the first (of two) albums that I purchased with my own money. I think I was maybe fourteen? I bought both that and Hot Hot Heat's MAKE UP THE BRAKEDOWN at Best Buy.
(First album I ever *owned* but did not purchase myself was MELLON COLLIE AND THE INFINITE SADNESS - a gift from my father after returning from a business trip when I was eleven.) | Sowing
05.16.23 | Ocean Avenue was the first album I ever downloaded, but I had maybe 5-6 CDs before that. | JesperL
05.16.23 | "I always thought the outro to The Hurt is Gone was super basic haha." fair, it's nothing too special at face value but i just love how it slowly disintegrates the song before 'empty street' comes crashing in.. also it might be one of the dreamiest yc songs out there so i am contractually obliged to love it lol | Sowing
05.16.23 | You need to listen to "Fragile & Dear", like, yesterday. Honestly, as much as Lift a Sail was a letdown, it's probably their dreamiest record as a whole. | Koris
05.16.23 | It might sound crazy, but I haven't heard a single thing from these guys before. I've always heard their name being tossed around, but never got around to jamming them. What would be a good place to start? | Sowing
05.16.23 | Ocean Avenue is widely recognized as their best album and is a pop-punk scene classic. | JesperL
05.16.23 | "You need to listen to "Fragile & Dear", like, yesterday. Honestly, as much as Lift a Sail was a letdown, it's probably their dreamiest record as a whole."
oh yeah fragile & dear is probably one of my fav songs by them haha! i adore lift a sail, never considered it a letdown (even if it isn't on the level of wytt/sa) | Sowing
05.16.23 | Ah, I had no idea you were a big fan of the album. It's probably my 4th least favorite (ahead of One for the Kids, Where We Stand, and Midget Tossing), but I still really like it. | Sowing
05.16.23 | ...and also, #79-60 are now up. | mynameischan
05.16.23 | Words hands hearts underrated | bellovddd
05.16.23 | i love this list so much. | Atari
05.17.23 | Ok this is starting to hurt a bit now | Sowing
05.17.23 | @Chan: No doubt a lot of these will seem or actually be underrated. They're a pretty consistent band, so ranking all their songs is going to definitely be a challenge. WHH is pretty enjoyable, but not what I'd consiser essential. Best part for me is the bridge ("So do we dare now / Raise our voices loud") onward.
@bellovddd: Glad to hear it! Like I mentioned above, I'm sure at least some incoming disappointment is inevitable though, ha.
@Atari: Paper Walls had to eventually be on the list! ;-) | Koris
05.17.23 | "Ocean Avenue is widely recognized as their best album and is a pop-punk scene classic."
Ok sounds good, I'll check it in a bit. I've heard a lot of good things about that one | Crawl
05.17.23 | Pretty sure it's Sean who sings on Twenty Three | mynameischan
05.17.23 | I’m also really fond of Space Travel | Atari
05.17.23 | For You, and Your Denial is an eternal jam. the violin playing is pretty insane on that one but that's a fair assessment about it lacking lyrics that hit you on a personal level | Sowing
05.17.23 | I knew Twenty Three was Mackin but I constantly forget that it's him. Thanks for that. | Snake.
05.17.23 | top 100 juice wrld songs | BigBoofZone
05.17.23 | Brotha I love you and Dear Bobbie is their worst song by far but | Sowing
05.17.23 | First half of the list is done! | lilliline
05.17.23 | That blurb for Life of Leaving Home is absolutely spot-on. Song has grown on me massively over the years and that chorus is impeccable.
Looking forward to seeing where Be the Young, Five Becomes Four, Telescope, and Ten will land :)
I've been revisiting their entire discog to prep myself for the reunion tours so this list couldn't be more timely. | bellovddd
05.18.23 | glorious. | JesperL
05.18.23 | i know this is a weird take but hide is one of my fav yc songs lol
love seeing lift a sail rank so high (comparatively), that song somehow ended up being one of the most emotional moments during their final show here | Sowing
05.18.23 | I love Hide too, and having it come in at #55 has less to do with it being "middling" (because it absolutely the fuck isn't) and way more to do with how much I love this band in general and how consistently they churned out incredible tunes during their career. Agreed also re: Lift a Sail t/t.
Working on this gradually again. Have some IRL work to do but will hopefully get us into the 30's-rankings by the end of the day! | mynameischan
05.18.23 | Man sure thing falling is so good. It’s definitely time to go on a yellowcard binge | Sowing
05.18.23 | Yeah, Sure Thing Falling is amazing and has really grown on me in recent years. I don't think I appreciated it nearly enough back when L&S was released.
Also, #49-40 are complete! | mkmusic1995
05.18.23 | I would have put 'A Vicious Kind' a bit higher personally but I like where this list is heading. | Sowing
05.18.23 | Right. It's all about the songs you haven't seen yet ;-)
I do really enjoy A Viscious Kind but I don't think it goes quite as many places instrumentally or has the lyrical impact of some other Southern Air tracks. It's still a solid 4/5 song in my book, though. | bellovddd
05.18.23 | its getting serious now. | bellovddd
05.18.23 | no empty apartment yet.... excellent. | Sowing
05.19.23 | #39-30 are posted! | Sowing
05.19.23 | #29-20 are posted. | mkmusic1995
05.19.23 | Oh man oh man, Only One and Ocean Avenue not cracking the top ten is crazy! But big respect; I'm hoping to see "Ten" up pretty high. I feel like that's probably my favorite of theirs! | Sowing
05.19.23 | Yeah, those are big name songs that I've played hundreds if not thousands of times. I love them and they are off the charts in terms of nostalgia, but there are some (I guess 19) that just hit me harder now for whatever reason. | Atari
05.19.23 | I'll have to revisit Illuminate as I barely remember anything from Lift a Sail.
also Five Becomes Four is such a jam! that one's grown on me recently and the drumming is insanely good
looking forward to the rest of the list :] | Sowing
05.19.23 | It's got a great message and is very pretty. If you're all about Longineu then it won't match that pace - especially compared to most of PW - but it's definitely worth revisiting. | Pheromone
05.19.23 | only one number 1
but ive never really actually ever listened to a yellowcard album | Sowing
05.19.23 | If you like Only One you should probably at least check out Ocean Avenue. I don't know what your feelings on pop-punk are but it's essential pop-punk | unclereich
05.19.23 | knew this was a sowing list m/ | Sowing
05.19.23 | What gave it away ;-) | Pikazilla
05.19.23 | why isn't 20 in the top 10
also have you ever checked out their bonus tracks | Sowing
05.19.23 | 20 isn't in the top 10 most likely because I've worn it out like crazy lol
And yes, I have -- there are a handful on this list already! | lilliline
05.20.23 | This list is already goated based on which songs have not appeared yet. Looking forward to the final leg. | sneakers
05.20.23 | How much free time does this guy have | Sowing
05.20.23 | Very little these days, to be honest
I just use what little free time I do have on music | Kompys2000
05.20.23 | STOP! TURN, TAKE A LOOK AROUUUND
AT ALL THE LIGHTS AND SOUUUNDS | Kompys2000
05.20.23 | Cannot hum ocean avenue off the top of my head, listening now to see if it rings any bells and umm I definitely thought that chorus was from a New Found Glory and/or Say Anything song before today | Kompys2000
05.20.23 | Btw have you listened to any Marianas Trench? Prob my personal favorites out of the whole 00s emo-pop crowd, lots of fun cheesy 80s pop and rock influences and their singer is legit incredible | Sowing
05.20.23 | Ha, I guess you're not TOO far off the map with New Found Glory.
I don't believe I've heard any Marianas Trench, although I could be wrong. The first thing that came to mind when I read that was the Bright Eyes song Mariana Trench. | Sowing
05.20.23 | But your description makes it sound like it'd be right up my alley so I'll check them out. Might be one of those situations where I don't recognize the name but then realize I've heard several of their songs before. | Kompys2000
05.20.23 | Masterpiece Theater is for sure the album to start with, there's a chance you might have heard Cross My Heart or Celebrity Status from that one but afaik they've never had an ocean avenue-level hit, showed up a day late for that gravy train sadly. | Sowing
05.20.23 | Few pop punk bands had a hit on the level of Ocean Avenue, but that's not a measure of their ability anyway so I'm not too worried there. I'll check Masterpiece Theater soon, thanks for the rec! | GmemberKills
05.20.23 | never really dug deep into this band, but Rough Landing Holly has always been a absolute classic to me so i'm glad to see it so high.
always seemed like most of their other material leaned much further into pop-punk which typically isn't my thing, but maybe I'll take a dive one day | Sowing
05.20.23 | If you like Yellowcard's less pop-punk stuff be sure to check out Lights and Sounds in its entirety | Pikazilla
05.20.23 | sowing when's the rest coming
I been listening to yellowcard all day | Sowing
05.20.23 | Depends on when I put the kids to bed ;-) and if I still have any energy after haha | Sowing
05.21.23 | The deed is done. | lilliline
05.21.23 | Phenomenal list, your love for this band really shines through your words. 2 is my 1 - you actually highlighted my favorite moment ("I need this to be real... Oh please let it be real" - cue chorus) that Yellowcard have ever penned, so I was very happy to see that.
The blurbs aligning the songs with critical junctures in your life were well-written and quite earnest. I enjoyed reading through your thoughts! I think the biggest surprises for me here are Fighting at 67 (I thought it'd sit way higher as a fan-favorite), One Bedroom at 18 (tbh I forgot this song existed, might have to check it out again), and Three Flights Down almost cracking the top 10 (did not know this song existed, and wouldn't have expected a b-side to rank so high even if I did). The best part of the list for me was seeing Telescope up among your favorites. That song runs a freight train through my emotions every time and is an earnest, lyrical gem.
I've always thought Yellowcard albums have absolutely the most amazing bookends, and am very happy to see them dominate atop your list. Here's to hoping that Yellowcard's reunion amounts to new material, even if it's one or a few new songs. Thanks for sharing. | lilliline
05.21.23 | Reading through the list has convinced me to revisit the self-titled again. I've maybe listened through the entire thing twice and dismissed it after it didn't immediately click for me. I remember thinking it didn't really have any standout tracks and felt disappointed that it was Yellowcard's swansong. 7 years later it's bout time to sit down and give it another chance. | mynameischan
05.21.23 | Man they are so good at bridges | Sowing
05.21.23 | Thanks for that amazing feedback, means a lot.
The "I need this to be real" is also my favorite part of Be The Young, and among their best delivered lines in general. So much emotion in the vocals.
Fighting is nice but never really struck me as instrumentally amazing (aside from the tremendous balance between every band member getting a chance to shine), and for whatever reason I never really latched onto the lyrics which are good but not all that poignant by their standards.
One Bedroom is such a jam. The transition from mellow and groovy to an all out rocker gets me every time.
Three Flights Down is haunting. Give it a chance if you haven't already.
Telescope is absolutely gorgeous and I'm so glad someone else sees that too.
Definitely revisit their self-titled. It was never going to sound as lively as Paper Walls, WYTTSY, or Southern air without Parsons, but they do a pretty damn good job without him and the emotional factor is through the roof. | Sowing
05.21.23 | @Chan: Agreed. It felt like every time I found myself praising a highlight or singling out my favorite part of the song, it was the bridge. | Pikazilla
05.21.23 | placing the spiderman song so high up is very based | Sowing
05.21.23 | Dude, such a crazy good song. Removing lyrics and nostalgia entirely, it's my #1. Either that or The Takedown. | lilliline
05.21.23 | The most personal choice on here is probably Fields and Fences sitting all the way at number 1 - I guarantee if you poll a hundred Yellowcard fans not a single one is naming that song as their all-time favorite.
If there's one opinion here I hard disagree with, it's Down On My Head barely cracking top 80. That song absolutely slaps and I quite enjoy the lyrics in this one. The chorus is a huge earworm imo and I find myself humming along to it very often.
Also does anyone know where to stream Gifts and Curses in good quality? I can't find that song anywhere (except YouTube) and it's driving me nuts. | Pikazilla
05.21.23 | Not sure about streaming, but you can find it in good quality on soulseek.
I generally think this is a great ranking, mine wouldn't be THAT much different, except for Paper Walls songs being lower. | lilliline
05.21.23 | The instrumental interlude before the final chorus in Gifts and Curses is so insanely good and really makes me wonder why Yellowcard hasn't employed it in many other songs. I can't name another Yellowcard song off the top of my head that uses a similar interlude where the violins really shine. | mynameischan
05.21.23 | I think the first half of fields and fences is undoubtedly one of their best songs. I’ve never been as crazy about the second half but it has grown on me over the years | lilliline
05.21.23 | @Pikazilla Wow I've never heard of Soulseek before. Looks like it's a p2p file sharing network. Have you had any issues with downloading music from there before or is everything pretty straightforward (and virus-free)? If the app is cool, I'm gonna grab some of Yellowcard's deep cuts to jam to. | Pikazilla
05.21.23 | Soulseek is ancient lol
It's virus free because you're literally downloading files off other people's storage spaces. You can choose who you wanna download music from. | Sowing
05.21.23 | @lilliline: Fields and Fences floored me from the get go. Perfect swan song. It definitely was top 10 right off the bat, but I wouldn't say it was my #1 until pretty recently. For the longest time, it was Be The Young. Down on My Head in a fine song, I don't dislike it. For whatever reason I hate when bands rhyme bed with head. It's the same reason I don't think Brand New's "Bed" is all that special either haha. I own Gifts and Curses from an old iTunes download, but outside of buying it or streaming it on YouTube I'm not sure if any major streaming services carry it.
@Pikazilla: Thanks. Paper Walls has a few brilliant songs and others that are just decent, but the great ones are some of my favorites. Yellowcard is a very consistent band, so I think everyone's version of this list would differ. Atari is all about Paper Walls for example. I'm a Southern Air guy. Chan (I think) is team Lights and Sounds.
@Chan: I'm the opposite. The second half won me over immediately, and it took longer for the first half. Now I love the entire thing (obviously). There's something so heartfelt about it that reflects the maturity of being 30-something but also the youthful passion that has defined their entire career. That closing refrain fills me up with so much joy; such a humble series of admissions clearly driven by love. | Pikazilla
05.21.23 | I'm a Southern Air guy too. S/t as well. | Atari
05.21.23 | Really enjoyed watching this list unfold! One of my biggest takeaways is I need to spend more time with the self titled and lift a sail.
I also have that Spider Man 2 CD tucked away somewhere ;)
Despite being a Paper Walls guy like you said, I think Southern Air is a close second and a borderline 5. It’s actually the 4th album I reviewed for the site and it took me years after that to grow such an appreciation for PW | Sowing
05.21.23 | Thanks! And yeah, that Spiderman 2 soundtrack was awesome for fans of pop-punk. Whatever song The Ataris had on there was also amazing. | JesperL
05.21.23 | okay imma pick out some things and give TAKES
- "One Bedroom ... The best song by a pretty wide margin on Lift A Sail" damn yeah this is bottom tier lift a sail for me haha
- ""The Takedown" - Yellowcard's #1 instrumental showcase is right here" that might actually be why i don't love this song all that much, there's too much going on that isn't all that pleasant even if it is good
- ""Back Home" - For quite some time, this was my #1 Yellowcard song - and on some days, I think it still might be" same lol cried hard when i saw ryan playing this solo in 2017
- fields & fences is a wild but respectable no 1 pick
anyway, great list, love yellowcard, this sure did send me into another yc binge lol | mynameischan
05.21.23 | After revisiting both ocean avenue and ocean avenue acoustic in full, I think twenty three and view from heaven really keep it from being a 5. Such a great album though, just hit after hit | Sowing
05.21.23 | Agreed about Twenty Three but I think View From Heaven is right there with the other songs | mynameischan
05.21.23 | I appreciate the sound of view from heaven, especially the fiddle, but I can’t jive with the lyrics | Sowing
05.21.23 | Haha fair enough. The lyrics are indeed pretty pedestrian, but I've always felt that the backing vocals made up for it, along with Ryan's delivery of certain lines. If you read certain Facebook and Reddit posts though, there are some fans who are downright overzealous about that song and call it life changing for some reason and I don't entirely agree with that either. It's good but not top YC. | mynameischan
05.21.23 | Okay after finishing my first full listen of lights and sounds in a while, I pretty much agree with your rankings of that album. I’ve never liked two weeks from twenty and I like it even less now. Keys vocals just grate on me. And I’d still rate words hands hearts highly mostly for the music and melody. The opening couplet of every verse is really bad lyrically lol. Especially the “ill repair” rhyme | Sowing
05.21.23 | That include Three Flights Down? Always loved that song and I still wish it would have followed Holly Wood Died, even if just as a hidden track. | mynameischan
05.21.23 | I haven’t heard it actually. It’s not on Spotify but I see it’s on Apple Music. I will get back to you | bellovddd
05.21.23 | ye Back Home is something else. | bellovddd
05.21.23 | this is an amazing list. Well done Sowing! | Sowing
05.21.23 | I can't actually tell if Three Flights Down is as good as I make it out to be or if I just give it too much credit for getting me through awkward teen breakups lol
Back Home indeed makes me feel things, even 20 years later. Thank you for reading! | mynameischan
05.22.23 | Okay having now heard Three Flights Down, I think it’s a pretty wild choice for 11 lol. It didn’t do much for me but I appreciate your connection to it and I always like when a b-side is high on someone’s list.
Having started a Paper Walls re-listen, I totally agree with you about the music of Takedown. They were firing on all cylinders as musicians on that one. | Sowing
05.22.23 | Haha, good to know. Let's just say the list has personality ;-)
Yeah, Paper Walls is their instrumental peak IMO. I think it's a bit "loud" as a record, which I guess is more of a mixing/production issue, but there's no denying their musicianship. | mynameischan
05.22.23 | I was expecting more from it since it was so high here and because of the connection to three flights up which I think is such a great intro. So my expectations weren’t met but it’s not a bad song | mynameischan
05.23.23 | Totally addicted to Paper Walls right now. Loving Light Up the Sky a lot, I think Key’s vocals are so good in that song | Sowing
05.23.23 | I always viewed Paper Walls as upper mid-tier Yellowcard until Atari's constant hype got me to revisit it. It's definitely one of their best, probably has a slight edge on When You're Through Thinking, Say Yes. Southern Air is still #1 for me though. | bellovddd
05.23.23 | Ocean Ave will always be my number one. But the Self titled is really growing on me and I'm not so sure anymore | Kompys2000
05.23.23 | Finally reading through more of these, soundtrack tune in top 10 is unfailingly based | Sowing
05.23.23 | Ocean Avenue was my favorite song for a while when I first got into the band, but then it got bludgeoned to death by the radio and my own constant spinning so now it's relegated to "classic by default" status but it also doesn't hit as hard anymore
Self-titled LP is very underrated indeed. Their only outing sans Longineu that still has respectable energy IMO | mynameischan
05.23.23 | You know, I actually really like Dear Bobbie. I could do without the recorded voice throughout but it’s a sweet song. I think it would be better if the voice was just at the beginning | Sowing
05.23.23 | I sort of agree because I love the sentiment behind it and the fact that he gave the guy a spot on the song. But for some reason I still can't help but cringe a little when I hear it. Honestly it makes me feel like kind of a bad person. | mynameischan
05.23.23 | Yeah I do see what you mean. Honestly though I prefer it to the children’s choir on the title track lol. I’m glad that’s only in the intro. | Sowing
05.23.23 | Yeah they got away with it there. I don't think it adds anything to the song really (could have just started with the riff). | Kompys2000
05.23.23 | Damn the takedown really does have a nice kick to it, almost a bit Strung Out-ish | Sunnyvale
05.23.23 | Ocean Avenue and Southern Air are the only Yellowcard albums I've heard, but great list and great discussion-some classic Sput right here. I'm going to check the self-titled soon and will probably listen to the new one as well. | mynameischan
05.23.23 | The snare hits in the second pre chorus on Takedown are so hype | Atari
05.23.23 | more Paper Walls hype oh fuck yes
Chan, you should check my recent "review" of that album if you missed it ;) | Middle18
05.24.23 | Thanks for a great list sowing....I enjoyed every word of it.
It's so great that there is someone out there who appreciates this band as much as I do and each of their albums is like a milestone in my life.
If it wasn't for Yellowcard and equally JEW and Brand new...I don't think I'd still be here.
And it has been a pleasure to read all of your reviews over the years so thanks dude. | Sowing
05.24.23 | Thanks! The fact that people read and enjoy and sometimes even get something meaningful out of my writing means a lot to me! | mynameischan
05.25.23 | Maybe this is old news but the chorus of “Sing for Me” sounds so much like “Endlessly” by Journey | Sowing
05.25.23 | It's been a long time since I've listened to any Journey so I'd have to revisit that song to corroborate
However I feel like it's probably true because that melody is super basic | mynameischan
05.26.23 | God bless them for having albums under 40 minutes long. All killer no filler | Sowing
05.26.23 | The more I listen to Lights and Sounds the more I think it's one of the best things they did | mynameischan
05.26.23 | I really think that album would be a 5 if not for two weeks from twenty | Sowing
05.26.23 | I had to comb through the tracklist because I was sure there were more subpar tracks than just that one, but I think you're right. There's a small handful that I'd tag as merely "good", but I think every YC album is like that especially if you remove the nostalgia goggles. Will probably end up bumping that album to a 4.5 and maybe lowering Lift a Sail to a 3.5.
Interested in hearing the new EP. Ryan said on Chorus.fm that fans of Paper Walls should be excited, but I'm not sure how they'll justify that claim considering how huge of a role Parsons had in the energy of that album. | mynameischan
05.26.23 | I still am working my way to Lift a Sail but I’m not super excited. I’m still addicted to Paper Walls and have now added When and Southern Air to the mix | Sowing
05.26.23 | I don't know why but I just assumed you've heard their entire discography already. Let me know what you think. I'm especially interested in your opinion of Southern Air, as that's my personal favorite YC album and I have so many pleasant memories associated with it. | mynameischan
05.26.23 | I’ve listened to everything but lift a sail at least once but I’ve mostly just spun the same songs for years, mostly from ocean avenue and lights and sounds. But now I am definitely addicted thanks to this list | Sowing
05.26.23 | They're my favorite pop-punk band by a wide margin (although The Wonder Years have managed to closed the gap a little in recent years).
It helps that they were one of the first bands I ever got into. I mostly listened to oldies and classic rock that my parents had on the radio, then Ocean Avenue and American Idiot came out in pretty close succession and rocked my world. | Middle18
05.27.23 | The highs on lights and sounds are probably some of yellowcards best highs but even tho I personally love it, I would say it has the most filler in fact it's probably there only album apart from lift a sail that has any filler at all.
Anyway Yellowcard filler would be considered top tier if any other band released it. | Sowing
05.27.23 | I agreed with that until recently. Most of the tracks I deemed filler on L&S now sound great to me.
Lift a Sail definitely has filler though. I enjoy it anyway because I'm a huge fan, but I can easily concede that at least 1/4 of it could have been scrapped with no real negative impact. | mynameischan
05.28.23 | Okay now that I have spent some time with Southern Air, I think it is close to a 5, but I don’t really like Here I Am Alive. I think the lyrics are pretty good but the sound is just too generic pop rock. They are definitely capable of way more than that musically and that song grates on me because of it. Also Ten is just really hard to listen to every time I run the album, even though it’s a beautiful song. | mynameischan
05.28.23 | The lyrics to Sleep in the Snow seem kind of like Taylor Swift lyrics (in a good way) | Sowing
05.28.23 | Sleep in the Snow was initially my favorite SA track until some others grew and overtook it. I never considered that the lyrics are Swifty but now that you say it I mostly agree. Your synopsis of Here I Am Alive is accurate. It's definitely generic pop-rock (was co-written by Patrick Stump, so part of me has always imagined it as being a better FOB song), but as you said the lyrics save it. Ten is the love it or hate it song on the album. The older I've gotten the more I love it though.
Very glad to hear how much it has grown on you. It's very close to, if not, my favorite pop-punk album. Not sure how much of it has to do with it coming out the summer I started dating my wife, and I'm not going to pretend to be able to separate it from the nostalgia lol. | mynameischan
05.28.23 | When you’re through thinking is probably a 3.5. The good songs are really good but there are a few duds. I’m not crazy about soundtrack, sing for me, life of leaving home, and the opener. You are wild for putting you and your denial below most of those | Sowing
05.28.23 | I think you're wild for not enjoying the opener. That's my 2nd favorite on that album, the energy is huge and the lyrics really resonated with me back in '11.
I also like Soundtrack and Life of Leaving Home; I thought they were filler for a few years but they grew on me over time.
I agree about Sing for Me though. To this day it still feels so corny. | Sowing
05.28.23 | And ftr I really like the music on For You and Your Denial, but I could never get into the lyrics which, in terms of my relationship with this band, is huge. | mynameischan
05.28.23 | I like half the opener. I don’t like the slower part | mynameischan
05.28.23 | Mostly I really don’t like the lines “bring walls down, hear all my sound” | Sowing
05.28.23 | Yeah that's not exactly poetry and was always my least favorite part too. I just learned to overlook it because I love the rest so much. I probably overvalue the "I've never been more ready to move on" part, but I guess it just hit home at the time (and then graduated into nostalgia). | Sowing
05.31.23 | I'm quite happy with how the new EP sounds. | Shamus248
06.12.23 | I want to make *love* to this list
"Fields and Fences" hits me because in just one line, it summarizes my relationship with the band's music, particularly as someone who didn't give them the time of day until after they broke up
"I don't have much that I can give to you, but I know I love the way you make me feel like I'm at home and I am not alone."
I was too young to have them in my line of sight when Ocean Avenue crashed down on the mainstream, and I almost actively passed them up in their last few years of existence, but when I finally did cross paths with Yellowcard, their music still welcomed me in and guided me along all the more eagerly. Thanks to Yellowcard, I truly feel at home and not alone. And I am forever grateful to them.
Other faves of mine are The Takedown, You and Me and One Spotlight, Ocean Ave (it's just a timeless classic, I requested it at my friends' wedding the other day lol), Shrink the World, Surface of the Sun, Rivertown Blues, Southern Air, Gifts and Curses (Sowing I have to show you my Spider-Man tribute i did with that song), and of course, Be the Young. |
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