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St. Jude (Bonus Tracks Version)

The Courteeners

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Album Review

The long-awaited debut by neo-Brit-pop quartet the Courteeners fits neatly into the continuum of big brash guitar bands from Manchester, with hints of the Smiths (including a typically fine production job by Stephen Street), the Stone Roses (occasional flirtations both with '60s-style jangle pop and psychedelia), and Oasis (frontman Liam Fray's big mouth and apparent lack of internal censor, both of which have already made him a popular interview subject for the U.K. music press) coloring these 12 songs. Now, Fray is not the equal of those bands as either a distinctive frontman or as an instantly memorable songwriter, but the best parts of St. Jude are at least superior to, say, Menswear or Cast. Tracks like the singles "What Took You So Long?" and "Not Nineteen Forever" fairly leap out of the gate, all jangly guitar lines and galloping rhythm sections, topped with Fray's endearingly yobbish vocals and unabashed sentimental lyrical streak, and the more measured material throws enough changeups to keep the album from getting tiring. Time will tell whether the Courteeners have more than one good album in them, but there is always room for this spirited take on British indie rock.

Customer Reviews

just the beginning of a success filled album

not in a long time have i heard such an album that really makes me sit up n listen, there's no filler here.. just a set of solid tracks. If you want a taste.. 'Not Nineteen Forever' represents the album well with 'please don't' coming up strong. dissapointed not to see 'acrylic' on here, in my opinion, its their best. These guys are gonna be a huge and this is just the start. worth the buy.

Sick of these stupid reviews!

OK, let's clear this up. So many of you use the 'trying to be The Libertines' arguement against this band and so many others, but do you actually think about what you're saying before you dish out this overused complaint? Firstly, I like The Libertines, but after about 6 tracks Doherty's voice can really start to grate. He is out of tune, the songs become ridiculously mundane, and it just isn't music! So why then are we comparing this perfectly good, upbeat band (who can actually hit the notes in tune rather than sliding around them in a drunken, cocaine-addled stupour) with a much overhyped, overrated, AVERAGE band? Secondly, you can't expect every single song ever written to be completely unique in its style! A handful of indie bands have attempted new things and been successful, the rest have tried new things that haven't appealed and failed dismally. This album isn't meant to be pushing boundaries! It's not what all music is about! Instead, it builds on a successful format and tries (and succeeds) to improve it - so appreciate it for what it is, not what you want it to be! I'm giving it 4 stars because it isn't a perfect album, there are a couple of slightly more irksome songs naturally. But ferchrissakes, comparing every new band with The Libertines does not equal a good review - so stop with these stupid accusations!

Courteeners

This is a great album, not a bad song here. Old favorites What took you so long and Not nineteen forever slot in very well,new songs Please Dont and Bide your time stand out. New versions of Cavorting and No you didnt... are great improvements from the originals

Biography

Formed: 2006 in Manchester, England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Hailing from Manchester and featuring an outspoken frontman, Liam Fray, with a penchant for both talking up his own positive attributes and getting into verbal scraps with other bands, the Courteeners have received regular comparisons in the U.K. press to the leading lights of three previous waves of Manc Brit-pop: the Smiths, the Stone Roses, and Oasis. The band's alternately jangly and bombastic brand of indie guitar rock bears the influence of all three acts, as well as comparisons to contemporaries...
Full bio
St. Jude (Bonus Tracks Version), The Courteeners
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