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Today in 1752 Benjamin Franklin flew a kite with a key attached to it in a thunderstorm in Philadelphia.
Ferocious Designs submits âNobodyâs Coming to Save the Dayâ for 24-hour song contest
Ferocious Designs, the mostly DIY music project of Central New Jersey-based songwriter Brian Kelley, wrote and recorded âNobodyâs Coming to Save the Dayâ June 6-7 for this yearâs WXPN 24-Hour Song Challenge, based on the prompt of âfreedom.â
WXPN, the non-commercial, member-supported radio station based out of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, launched the 24-hour song challenge in 2024, and Kelley has submitted a song for each of the three contests. This yearâs challenge was dubbed the âPhilly Anthems Editionâ as it coincides with the stationâs celebration of Americaâs birthplace as the nation turns 250.
âWhen this yearâs song challenge was announced as the âPhilly Anthems Edition,â I kind of suspected something like âfreedomâ would be the prompt,â said Kelley. âBut I tried to put that out of my head because I didnât want to get too attached to that theme just to be blindsided by a different prompt.â
But at noon EDT on Saturday, June 6, âfreedomâ was indeed the prompt announced on WXPN and songwriters within the stationâs terrestrial broadcast range had until 11:59 a.m. EDT the following morning to submit a performance video of a song based on that prompt.
âIâve been working on a new album that is leaning more toward prog and art rock, and I really wanted to go that direction with my entry,â said Kelley. âBut the âPhilly Anthemsâ concept won out and I went with something more upbeat with a more anthemic chorus.
âAnd while I hadnât gotten around to writing a song about it before that weekend, I had been thinking a lot about how even the politicians that say they are fighting back against the current fascist regime have come out against some of the very marginalized communities they are supposed to be fighting for,â added Kelley. âAnd I keep thinking that end of the day, we are on our own and no political party is really coming to save us from our current hellscape.â
And thatâs how Kelley came up with âNobodyâs Coming to Save the Day.â
âItâs a pretty simple song and it came together relatively quickly, but I spent a lot of time on some guitar parts that I couldnât quite get right since Iâm not really a guitarist so I ditched them,â said Kelley. âBut again the âPhilly Anthemsâ concept got me thinking of ways I could infuse some sounds of the city into the song so I found a free-to-use bell sound to evoke the Liberty Bell and played a little riff on a cheap melodica I bought late last year.
âAnd, of course, the melodica was made popular in pop music circles by Phillyâs The Hooters in the 1980s,â added Kelley.
https://youtu.be/zB1Q-PfUvN0?si=sZtSSoiQxshM5Z3o
Kelley, who lives near Trenton, N.J., wanted to also include a nod to that cityâs role in the American Revolution so he wore a âTrenton Makes the World Takesâ shirt for the video.
âI definitely plan on including âNobodyâs Coming to Save the Dayâ on my next album, but its final form may be a bit different than this one I cooked up in less than 24 hours,â said Kelley.
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