Do You Like Rock Music?
|
| List Price: | £13.99 |
| Price: | £6.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
33 new or used available from £5.73
Average customer review:Product Description
'Do You Like Rock Music' is the third album by Brighton-based indie rockers British Sea Power. A thrilling mixture of classic, Pixies-esque indie and the bombast of Arcade Fire, this album will be a big hit with fans of either band. Includes the single 'Waving Flags'.
Track Listing
- All In It
- Lights Out For Darker Skies
- No Lucifer
- Waving Flags
- Canvey Island
- Down On The Ground
- Trip Out
- Great Skua
- Atom
- No Need To Cry
- Open The Door
- We Close Our Eyes
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #355 in Music
- Released on: 2008-01-14
- Number of discs: 1
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Since forming in 2000, Brighton renegades British Sea Power have firmly stomped their own path. Whether dressing up as 1930s Boy Scouts on stage, walking through their audiences beating drums or exploring the peripheries of rock music (as on their first two albums 2003’s The Decline Of British Sea Power and 2005’s Open Season) they have honed a style that’s all their own. Do You Like Rock Music? sees the band continue their uniquely exploratory approach. Enlisting producers Efrim Menuck (Godspeed You! Black Emperor) and Graham Sutton (Jarvis Cocker), the band seem even more determined in their effort to create something adventurous. But despite these veteran helping hands and the towering, oppressive atmospheres that mark the introductory songs on the album–-all pounding drums, bleak rockscapes and chanting choruses–-this is a deceptively accessible record. Tunes like "Atom" and "Down on the Ground"--both heard last on the band's Krankenhaus EP)--are full of edgy BSP bombast; but Arcade Fire-esque opener "All in It," the shoegazery "Canvey Island," "Great Skua,"--and especially "Waving Flags"--are stadium-sized songs to wave your lighter around to. Then again, BSP playing it safe is still a much more convincing--not to mention entertaining--proposition than many of their conformist contemporaries. Rollickin’ stuff. --Danny McKenna
Customer Reviews
Prog Rock comes of Age
This album is another of a growing number of sophisticated, intelligent masterpieces that have all the intelligence and artistry of prog rock but without the pretentions of the first appearance of this genre. Hugh full frontal big soundscapes and in particular the crescendo of "Atom" reminicent of A Day in the Life by the Beatles including an air raid siren no less...... Play loud and just let it all wash over you.... surreal
power plus
B.S.P. Saw at Latitude and no problem best new band of recent times...powerful energetic, intelligent..... on par with Grinderman
Mercury Nominated.... finally
After the travesty of missing out on a Mercury Music Prize nomination for their first album The Decline Of British Sea Power, the band have finally achieved what should have happened 5 years ago with their third album Do You Like Rock Music?
The album itself, whilst perhaps not quite on a par with 'The Decline...' is certainly worthy of the nomination - singles 'Waving Flags' and 'No Lucifer' should have gathered more attention sales-wise than they perhaps did (the former was Zane Lowe's 'hottest record in the world', whilst the latter was restricted to a 1000-only vinyl release), and 'Canvey Island' has been used fairly extensively whenever British Sea Power have had radio/television coverage.
Much has been made of the band's inspiration for their songs, and there is certainly no let-up in the wide ranging inspiration used for DYLRM?. H5N1, immigration, flooding, the apocalypse, Big Daddy (the wrestler) and the band's keen interest in wildlife, in particular birds, are all on display in the 50 minutes of DYLRM? These diverse subjects are handled with a very slight hand, meaning that the songs themselves often come across as cryptic rather than clichéd, and will leave the listener wanting to learn more about the incidents/influences contained within.
The album starts with the thud of bookender 'All In It', a choral blast of an opener that displays that after the relative calm of second album 'Open Season' BSP have turned the amps back up to LOUD. 'Lights Out For Darker Skies', 'No Lucifer' and 'Waving Flags' all continue this - DYLRM really is an album that needs to be played loud to be fully appreciated. After the immediacy and bluster of the opening four tracks comes 'Canvey Island', which breaks the momentum the first four tracks have built up, but it's certainly a grower. After 'Down On The Ground' from the Krankenhaus? EP, and 'A Trip Out', comes possibly the album's highlight 'The Great Skua' - a beautiful and relatively simple instrumental composition that is very effectively arranged - you csn sit back with your Darjeeling and imagine birds sweeping over the cliffs of area Portland. 'Atom', also from the Krankenhaus? EP (and nicking the riff from the Buzzcocks' 'Everybody's Happy Nowadays') roars and sirens into the album's two most sedate tracks 'No Need To Cry' and 'Open The Door' - the latter is touted by some of the fanbase as a third post-Mercury single. Unfortunately 'We Close Our Eyes', partner to the first track, closes the album with a relative whimper.
British Sea Power have forged their own way in the music industry for 7 years now, it's time to welcome them in to your musical perspective. A lot of the rough edges have been sanded and buffed between the first album and this point, and the band pull this off admirably.
It may be pretentious, it may be 'eccentric'. But it's also bloody brilliant, and unique.





