The Human Condition Analysis

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It certainly is not often you hear of a top-ten musical artist still living in their parent's basement, but it seems Jon Bellion exactly the type of person who would do just that. Jon Bellion, a 27-year-old singer and songwriter, is a recently popular artist with an extremely unique sound- a blend of genres and styles not yet explored. Bellion grew up on Long Island, New York, and still lives and produces music in his parents' basement (Dybec). Bellion was a college drop-out, who quit in order to pursue his music career full time; yet, while general music production is a monumental part of his life, it is not his end goal. It has been his aspiration for many years to produce the score for a Pixar film (Ciccone). Additionally, unlike other stereotypical …show more content…

The Human Condition, in this case, refers to the state of human life- the average style that a person lives in today's world. More specifically in The Human Condition, the much too common struggles and everyday issues that so many people go through. Some of Bellion's tracks do peak into a "positive" mode of life, but most on The Human Condition give a perspective of things gone wrong both personally and culturally, but also the struggle to stay pure, and keep your head above water especially in the wake of money and fame. This is its ideology: finding your balance of moral aptitude within a world of fame and …show more content…

This song spans five and a half minutes and acts as the album's opus, even covering various themes from other songs in the album. It also changes in style multiple times in a smooth fashion over the entirety of the track: "Hand of God" starts slow and nostalgic, then slowly picks up speed. Bellion starts in the beginning describing how his life has changed and how he feels like he might suddenly break. In a magnificent transition, the track morphs into a gospel choir proclaiming "nothing has changed, he is the same. Your whole life's in the hand of God". This track hits home the main ideology of the album and summarizes it all cleanly. While life may be falling to pieces around you, it is critical to stay true to who you are. You cannot lose faith in that concept, or you might actually break. Home roots and your core values have to stay above every other event or change in your life; yet above all, faith is the most