An innocent conversational piece like "What you been listening to?" segues into the more forthcoming "I'd like to see you before I leave," and culminates with the implicit motive of many broken-relationship discussions: "Tell me about hurting."īlonde Redhead's members may not be strangers to haunting love songs, but "My Plants Are Dead" evokes a different kind of ache. Songs similar to My Plants Are Dead by Blonde Redhead, such as Drop by Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions, Roses by Blouse, Tell by The Radio Dept. Makino's angle becomes less ambiguous in the following stanzas (spoiler: it's about the intermingling of relationships and distance), but there's understated realism in her words.
"I heard you on radio," she sings (though it's hard to tell for sure), adding, "I said they are my friends / Do you want your keys? / Your plants are dead." It's a loaded statement, not to mention reasonable grounds to fire most house-sitters. The core elements of the tune - the sleepy beat, the aqueous bass tones, the unsettling synth-scapes - converge at once, right alongside Kazu Makino's characteristic half-whisper. There's a seamless, poignant immediacy in the way Blonde Redhead drops listeners into the thick of "My Plants Are Dead" after only a few bars, creating the sense that the music and story start in medias res. I heard you on the radio / I said they are my friends / Do you want your keys / Your plants are dead / How long you in town for / I saw your petit chien.