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Do You Like Rock Music
 
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Do You Like Rock Music

British Sea Power Audio CD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Audio CD (12 Feb 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Rough Trade
  • ASIN: B00111COHO
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 485,714 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. All In It 2:11£0.79
Listen  2. Lights Out For Darker Skies 6:36£0.79
Listen  3. No Lucifer 3:27£0.79
Listen  4. Waving Flags 4:07£0.79
Listen  5. Canvey Island 3:41£0.79
Listen  6. Down On The Ground 4:23£0.79
Listen  7. A Trip Out 3:16£0.79
Listen  8. The Great Skua 4:35£0.79
Listen  9. Atom 5:38£0.79
Listen10. No Need To Cry 3:43£0.79
Listen11. Open The Door 4:56£0.79
Listen12. We Close Our Eyes 8:04£0.79


Product Description

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

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
BSP are unbelievable.

New single Waving Flags is outrageously majestic. Atom was a great straight down the line garage rock effort. Canvey Island is thought provokingly marvellous.

I have seen Sea Power perform the new tracks at Exeter Cavern and Yeovil Orange Box and they have hit new heights.

GIVE ME THE ALBUM NOW!!

"The Third Battalion"
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
obaflemi martins 15 Jan 2008
Format:Audio CD
A massive album in every way.It never justifies just one playing,as much as I really like Open Season this is the album which hopefully will see them elevated to premier status which should've been the case after The Decline Of(fantastic first album for those who've never heard it or of it).12 tracks of which almost every one leaves a slight shiver down the spine.Give it a whirl you won't be disappointed.
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28 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I think im safe in saying that in the past, some people have been of the opinion that British Sea Power were a band to be seen live rather than heard on record (although The Decline is, in my opinion, a masterpiece, and Open Season, whilst not quite in the same league as The Decline, does have some magnificent moments), and I know how on a first listen the albums can be hard to grasp for some. However, on the first listen of Do You Like Rock Music? I was left with a thirst, an incredible thirst that in the past I have mainly encountered on seeing them play live. The desire that it created, meant I had to play Do You Like Rock Music? again immediately, in multiples, and have done countless times since. The songs work exquisitely on record. It is a very complete album, an album that takes you though different emotions and really does convey an energy and potency that leaves the listener both drained and energised simultaneously as the songs ebb and flow. It's a bit like `Lately' in that sense. A life, in itself.

Listeners to Do You Like Rock Music? should prepare to constantly fight with themselves over which is their favourite track, such is the strength and depth of the album. The album scoops you up, and carries you above its head like a Hero from start to finish. The more immediate Atom and Open The Door, though greatly diverse, show how the band can turn from base energy to classy 60's tinged pop (prepares for backlash). There are no real fillers on this album, and I find myself changing my mind daily, hourly even, over my current favourite. Canvey Island will educate some and remind all, that we are but a flicker away from the deep and dark consequences of frivolous irresponsible actions. The Great Skua and No Need To Cry will have you reaching for your wills and scratching a thick black line through the song that stands as your current curtain closer. The production is crisp, immense and mindblowing. British Sea Power have found their sound, its both powerful and ethereal, lulling and shattering. It hurts, but it hurts good. The only wish I have is that technology would allow the first and last tracks to loop so that it would be allowed to roll on into infinity.

Do You Like Rock Music is undoubtedly destined to be one of `The' albums of 2008. It is an album that will not only give you good people already singing from the hillsides, a multiple orgasmic quenching, but it will also, like Sirens, draw new and unsuspecting beings to the fore, shipwrecking their safe musical vessels, as they surrender themselves willingly to the vivacity and irresistible proposition of Do You Like Rock Music?

Hold the bus though! Don't think for one minute that im saying the content of Do You Like Rock Music? is only good for the armchair and headphone Nodders of this world. Not by a country mile. There is huge potential for crowd participation when played live also. All In It and We Close Our Eyes will unify young and old, east and west, whether serving as an opener, or show closer. Waving Flags will conjure up a Multicoloured Revolution in the name of peace and alcoholic jollity. If the band fire any or all of Atom, A Trip Out, No Lucifer and Lights Out For Darker Skies into the already bubbling crowds of '08, they will react like ravenous piranha on a bloodied calf. This could be the album to finally propel British Sea Power onto a level more deserved, yet as a fan of a few years now I feel they have pushed themselves onto the next level already. They seem far more focused, channelling their collective energies, borne through hunger and want I suspect, into something that is a little more coherent. That may not suit all fans, but those that were there during the chaos and cartwheels of the past have those memories to hold, yet they must realise, things grow and change, like children, and British Sea Power now have the key to the door.

Avance indeed sirs. More please and thankyou.

Nora Dindian.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
One of the albums of the decade from one of the best bands this side...
One of the most interesting alternative bands around. I say alternative because they are still something of a cult here rather than a household name but even though that cult... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Sammac
Astonishing
Well what can one say about the phenomenon that is British Sea Power? A band that, whilst not totally original in the musical sense (after all, even BSP have their clear... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Keith M
The album of 2008?
I bought this album on the strength of seeing BSP on BBC2's "Later..." program early in 2008 and from the word go I've enjoyed it every time I've played it, even now many months... Read more
Published on 23 Dec 2008 by James A. Needham
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... Read more
Published on 21 Sep 2008 by R. E. Wilkinson
power plus
B.S.P. Saw at Latitude and no problem best new band of recent times...powerful energetic, intelligent..... on par with Grinderman
Published on 14 Aug 2008 by Martin J. Clarke
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... Read more
Published on 25 July 2008 by Mr. Simon J. Woodsell
Poets in their own light
Listening to this album was only my second listen to BSP other than hearing Waving Flags on the radio, as I had listened to an earlier single and not liked the sound of it. Read more
Published on 18 May 2008 by Derek Connor
Yes I do
The riffs come from the annuls of rock history but the slant that British Sea Power put on their music sounds fresh and exhilarating. Read more
Published on 27 April 2008 by David Johnson
Decent Raw Rock
Intelligent literate rock from this Brighton outfit that seems to be sufficiently different from the mainstream to warrant further investigation. Read more
Published on 11 April 2008 by Mr. Peter Steward
Life enhancing indeed
British Sea Power have created a sprawling, anthemic masterpiece that welds together rock influences from every era and yet is distinctively their own. Read more
Published on 4 April 2008 by M. G. Wilson
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