Amazon.co.uk Review
It's this unapologetic rock & roll spirit that makes Permission to Land a stand-out debut album (well, for 2003 at least--sometimes, you've gotta look back in order to move forward). There's no bedsit electronica, acoustic surrealism or garage rock to be found here; instead, this is music as pure entertainment, best suited to a wall of Marshall amps, guitars turned up to 11 and a pyrotechnic display visible from orbit. Singles "I Believe in a Thing Called Love", "Growing on Me" and "Get Your Hands off My Woman" are all typical of what's on offer here: huge guitar riffs, crashing drums and the over-the-top falsetto vocals of singer Justin Hawkins. But they're not the only stand-outs here: "Black Shuck", "Givin' Up" and "Love on the Rocks (with No Ice)" are all anthemic fist-raisers, packed with sing-along choruses and guitarist Dan Hawkins' ultra-infectious hooks. Original? No. Ironic? Maybe. Fun? Oh yes. A lesser band would have approached the spandex-clad rock of Permission to Land with tongues firmly in cheeks, and it's to the Darkness's eternal credit that they manage to inject the whole thing with enough sincerity to carry it off. And why shouldn't they? After all, Bon Jovi always looked like they were having a heck of a lot more fun than Nirvana anyway. --Robert Burrow
Review
What follows is an orgy of good old rock 'n' roll excess, as singer Justin Hawkins prances around (in a pink, slashed to the waist catsuit) like a demented Freddie Mercury, with perhaps a bit of Jagger thrown in. Meanwhile the equally rock 'n' roll attired members of the band do their stuff, visiting every heavy rock cliche along the way. As the video ends, Hawkins, still wearing 'that catsuit', plays the song out with the most amazing guitar solo in front of a wall of amplifiers. Pure class.
But then The Darkness are the saviours of heavy rock. And the proof is Permission to Land, their debut album, released on 7th July 2003.
Seventies revival bands aren't anything new - witness current media darlings The Datsuns and The White Stripes - but The Darkness are very, very different. For a start they set out to entertain and go about their business with smiles on their faces, which makes for a refreshing change. Then there's the sheer showmanship of Hawkins, who apparently makes their gigs a whole new experience. This utterly over the top flamboyancy has certainly got the music press going, as many wonder whether The Darkness are another Spinal Tap - and if they are just having a joke with us.
Bass player Frankie Poullain sums up the band's attitude on their website."Everyone's too uptight these days," says Frankie. "I hate the arrogance of bands who think their petty emotions are interesting. If you look at bands from 25 years ago, people have smiles on their faces. We're bringing a bit of that back."
Are they for real or not? Well, it doesn't really matter if you like their music and they've got the songs to do carry it off. And they have. Permission to Land begins just as it means to go on: Scintillating guitar riffs, Hawkins' falsetto voice and some damned good tunes which have an instant appeal.
The Darkness wear their influences: AC/DC; Thin Lizzy; Led Zepellin; Rainbow and a host of other bands on their sleeves, but this doesn't get in the way. The heavy rock attitude pervades the whole album, with its - ahem - 'interesting' song titles, such as "Get Your Hands Off My Woman", "Love on the Rocks with no Ice" and "Love is only a Feeling". But that was the thing about the 70s - there wasn't any political correctness.
They are also a dab hand at turning a slow tune, as well as the hard-rocking variety, as the album's closing track, "Holding my Own", demonstrates. The lyrics are pretty choice, too, but I can't elaborate further than that - at least not on a BBC website. Let's just say it's well and truly earned the 'Parental Advisory' sticker that lives on the CD case.
All in all this is an impressive debut album, and like a breath of fresh air to those fed up of the introspective and ultra-serious bands such as Coldplay and Radiohead.
The Darkness are going to be huge.
Review courtesy of BBC Shropshire Music --Jack Smith
Find more music at the BBC This link will take you off Amazon in a new window