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A Strange Education

The Cinematics

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Album Review

In the explosion of Smiths- and Joy Division-influenced bands to emerge at the beginning of the 21st century was, besides the Editors and the Interpols of the world, a four-piece group from Glasgow, the Cinematics. Following the same repeating-riff heavy path as their peers, the band, with their Morrissey-voiced lead singer Scott Rinning, write clean, well-structured songs that build up and then break down around the eighth-note basslines and driving electric guitars. The formula is fairly consistent throughout the entirety of their debut full-length, A Strange Education, but when it comes together well, like in the dancey "Break" or "Maybe Someday," it's as good as anything else out there. Unfortunately, this can't be said about the entire album. While it starts out well enough, the first four tracks dark and catchy and fun, the band soon slips into more standard rock arrangements, with churning, reverby chords instead of syncopated, edgy riffs and rhythms. Their cover of Beck's "Sunday Sun," while not bad, does nothing to really make it their own, and "Alright" can never quite figure itself out, how it wants to fit the instrumentation in with the vocals, and ends up being more disconcerting than anything else. That, the issue of resolution, is actually one that seems to constantly plague the Cinematics, even in their more successful pieces. They're clearly, as a band, concerned with phrasing and musicality, but sometimes their songs seem to consist of separate-but-linked parts instead of being fully developed, whole pieces. "Human," for example, has a fantastic, pulsating hook that keeps wanting to grow into something else but always backs down before it's ever completed, posing questions but never quite answering them, urging the audience forward without giving them enough to actually move anywhere. It's frustrating, more than anything else, because the Cinematics' potential is palpable; there are still some great cuts here, and a lot of energy, but the missteps and the hesitancy and the faltering are enough to make A Strange Education an unfulfilling affair.

Customer Reviews

The Cinematics are the REAL DEAL!!

The songs in this album have a way of getting under your skin...but in a GOOD way!!! The music is infectious. The lyrics have depth and are emotionally reckoning. Nothing superficial here. Each song is it's own personal journey. "Human", an achingly beautiful heartwrenching plea of regret, is a favorite along with "A Strange Education", "Break" and "Keep Forgetting". Warning: they're very addictive! Don't be surprised if the songs get stuck on replay in your mind.

5 STAR ALBUM!!!

This album is TERRIFIC! Every single song is unique! This band is definitely underrated, they are AMAZING! Never gets old! I actually bought the album because they have my respect! INCREDIBLE BAND! MUST HAVE!!!!

Buy it.

I've seen them live twice so far, and they always throw a good show. This album, as stated multiple times before, is inspirational and moving to every extent possible. Every song has the stance of emotion, and is as bitterly original as it is desirable. Many great memories will be written to these tracks for years to come. The Cinematics are, in fact, a HUGE phenomenon, and I will cherish my signed LP cover for many years.

Thank you for the music, guys. I cant wait to hear what else will be released by you.

Biography

Formed: 2003 in Glasgow, Scotland

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '00s

Following the success of several gloomy post-punk revival bands, the Cinematics formed in 2003 and hail from Glasgow, Scotland, after originally meeting in Dingwall. Inspired by the likes of the Cure and Echo & the Bunnymen, the band includes guitarist Ramsay Miller, bassist Adam Goemans, drummer Ross Bonney, and vocalist/guitarist Scott Rinning. By 2005, the Cinematics were touring the U.K. with Ambulance LTD, the Editors, and Brendan Benson, also signing with TVT Records. Their first...
Full Bio
A Strange Education, The Cinematics
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