| Description |
Artist: Franz Ferdinand
Title: Tonight: Franz Ferdinand
Label: Domino
Genre: Indie
Bitrate: 202kbit av.
Time: 00:42:38
Size: 66.27 mb
Rip Date: 2009-01-10
Str Date: 2009-01-26
1. Ulysses 3:11
2. Turn It On 2:20
3. No You Girls 3:41
4. Twilight Omens 2:29
5. Send Him Away 2:59
6. Live Alone 3:29
7. Bite Hard 3:26
8. What She Came For 3:52
9. Can't Stop Feeling 3:02
10. Lucid Dreams 7:56
11. Dream Again 3:18
12. Katherine Kiss Me 2:55
Release Notes:
Naming themselves after the archduke whose assassination
sparked the First World War, the band mix grandeur and
pretension with a shrewd pop touch. Their self-titled debut
album didn't so much light up the charts as turn the sales
book into an inferno, while follow-up 'You Could Have It So
Much Better' came equipped with a stunning arsenal of singles.
But then the trail goes cold. The band retreat to Glasgow,
with the Franz Ferdinand citadel surrounded by the cloud of
rumour as a thousand lesser acts go screaming up the charts
only to fall back in a blaze of mediocrity.
Sitting idle since 2005, 'Tonight: Franz Ferdinand' is an
album long-delayed. Sessions with the slick pop machine
Xenomania ended badly, forcing the group to spend longer on
the album than they anticipated. During the prolonged
downtime, the band began exploring new influences, adding
electro, Afrobeat and 60s garage sounds to the studio
jukebox.
Opening track and comeback single 'Ulysses' encapsulates the
drama of the band's return. Franz Ferdinand emerge from their
hiatus with a bass-heavy intro, before Alex Kaprano's familiar
voice hisses and seethes from the speakers. As dancefloor
friendly as a handshake with Erol Alkan, it name-checks James
Joyce's groundbreaking novel amid the refrain, 'I found a new
way'. At times gloriously over the top, it never loses its
shrewd pop vision ending in a maelstrom of antique synths
being pushed into the 21st Century.
This confusing blend of past and present runs through the
throbbing veins of 'Tonight: Franz Ferdinand'. The gentle
African skank of 'Send Him Away' rumbles along nicely, almost
staining the coffee table with its polite Afrobeat mannerisms.
But suddenly the band erupts into a frenetic Fela Kuti-style
breakdown - like a circuit pushed to overloading, 'Send Him
Away' sparks and spasms into life.
Shimmering disco scenery dominates the landscape of this
album. Producer Dan Carey recalls the adventurous spirit of
the Moroder era, as the band battle creaking antique synths to
find their true voice. 'Twilight Omens' opens with an almost
Daft Punk-inspired riff, before leaping headlong into groovy
Roxy Music-style rhythm. This is an album that right from its
title down to the last notes is bathed in moonlight, its skin
bleached with the glitter of the disco ball.
The album's centrepiece is 'Lucid Dreams', possibly the most
stunning and ambitious recording the band have put their names
to. The vocals are hidden in the mix, allowing the runaway
momentum of the song to gallop ahead of Kapranos. A triumph of
Darey's production skills, 'Lucid Dreams' threatens to spin
off in almost a dozen different directions, held together by
the rhythmic gravity of Paul Thomson's insistent drum beats.
It runs for an epic seven minutes, shattering Franz
Ferdinand's pop framework into a thousand electronic
fragments.
Refining and transcending their familiar pop formula,
'Tonight: Franz Ferdinand' is the band's most complete work to
date. Worth the wait, and in all honesty better than we could
ever have hoped for.
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