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The Seldom Seen Kid
 
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The Seldom Seen Kid

~ Elbow
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (181 customer reviews)
Price: £4.98 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio CD (17 Mar 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Polydor Group
  • ASIN: B0013F2M52
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (181 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 109 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in these categories:

    #2 in  Music > Indie > Britpop
    #5 in  Music > Rock > Indie Rock & Punk
    #9 in  Music > Bargain CDs

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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. Starlings 5:05£0.79
Listen  2. The Bones Of You 4:49£0.79
Listen  3. Mirrorball 5:50£0.79
Listen  4. Grounds For Divorce 3:39£0.79
Listen  5. An Audience With The Pope 4:27£0.79
Listen  6. Weather To Fly 4:29£0.79
Listen  7. The Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver 5:14£0.79
Listen  8. The Fix 4:27£0.79
Listen  9. Some Riot 5:23£0.79
Listen10. One Day Like This 6:34£0.79
Listen11. Friend Of Ours 4:36£0.79
Listen12. We're Away 1:59£0.79


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

There are few things in life quite so liberating as the opening track on an Elbow album--they're like airlocks between the plainness of the outside world and the elaborate melancholic heave-ho that you are likely about to submerge yourself in. Following predecessors "Any Day Now", "Ribcage" and "Station Approach", "Starlings" opens their fourth album The Seldom Seen Kid rising from a bed of tumbling electronic subtlety like a depressed Atari game loading up, adding bare touches of piano, glimpses of ambient guitar, out of body background vocals, an understated pulse and a wisp of strings, before--EXCELSIS!--a fanfare avalanche of horns crashes the gate and elevates things to gasping palatial heights, before Guy Garvey's inimitable gravel tone and wrenchingly poetic reinterpretations of the everyday announce their arrival proper. It's astonishing, by far the most progressive moment on the album and if anything it sets the bar too high. But even when the pace dips, and songs like "Mirrorball" and "Weather to Fly" don't distinguish themselves quite enough, their textural peerlessness remains. This is a beautiful sounding record. Their collaboration with Richard Hawley may be more of a curiosity than a thing of beauty, but the highs, the riffing cross-stitch of "Ground for Divorce", the desolate grandeur of "The Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver" and the enlightened string-laden anthem "On a Day Like This" (like their own Sound of Music--only substitute the Alpine peaks for a Manchester high-rise) number amongst the best of their career. --James Berry


CD Description

Epic post-rock tinged emotional indie stalwarts Elbow release their fourth album 'The Seldom Seen Kid', another staunchand anthemic collection of songs. The tense and emotional sound of previous records remains, but with a distinctly morecommercial riff-based template, particularly on lead single'Grounds For Divorce'. The band produced the record themselves, as with previous outings, lending it a homespun qualitythat would be out of synch with any external influence. Revered by their peers as a reliably independent act, Elbow have created a subtly innovative extension of their sound and scope with 'The Seldom Seen Kid'.

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Customer Reviews

181 Reviews
5 star:
 (128)
4 star:
 (27)
3 star:
 (8)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (17)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (181 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
175 of 187 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Life's big issues by one of the best bands around., 22 Feb 2008
By Mr. D. J. Brindle (Merseyside, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
Rumoured to be Elbow's last new album in the traditional sense of the word (the band have hinted that future releases may be in the form of EP's / singles only) they return here with what can only be described as a beautiful, masterful, heartbreakingly delicate collection of simply brilliant songs.

It's an album on which Guy Garvey, lead singer and lyricist, seeks to address the big issues of life, love and loss and the resulting collection of songs is perhaps Elbow's finest to date.

"Starlings" starts the album off with aplomb, a hushed harmonised intro of vocals, glockenspiel and piano giving way to a huge burst of horns before Guy Garvey begins his vocal. Garvey has the sort of voice that could sing the entire telephone book to you and you'd still find it deep, and meaningful and melancholically beautiful.

"Bones Of You" with it's flamenco influences, details lyrically that moment whereby you're rushing around a town centre when suddenly you catch a few bars of a song you last hear when you were happy, and somewhere else, and it blasts you back to that time. And back to the love you felt then; "And I'm five years ago/and three thousand miles away". Musically it's quite a commercial and accessible song, like a few on the album. And there's a bitter lyrical under taste in the fact that it becomes apparent that the singer of the song has been lying to himself to a greater or lesser extent, all these years. Brilliant stuff.

Mirrorball is a typically stunning and beautiful Elbow ballad; "Dawn gives me a shadow I know to be taller. All down to you. Everything has changed." over acoustic drums and semi-whispered, right in your ear and head vocals. Gorgeous strings too. Stirring and yet romantic.

Grounds For Divorce, a track many of you have probably heard by now, or at the least seen the country and western tinged video, is based around a stinging guitar riff, part Bloc Party part Led Zep, and a darkly humorous lyric about spending far too much time in a spit and sawdust underground bar; "I've been working on a cocktail / Called grounds for divorce"

With "Audience With The Pope" Garvey tackles religion in a song that he's dubbed "A Bond theme if Bond was from Bury and a recovering Catholic.". It even has the requisite Bond-theme-esque guitar solo.

Next track "Weather To Fly" is beautiful and the sort of track Snow Patrol would record if they could actually write and sing songs that were anything deeper than shallow. It starts with a heartbreaking falsetto sub-vocal and a bass line that sounds distinctly "Chasing Cars" before the beautiful lyrics spin out over the gentle beats;

Pounding the streets where my fathers feet still
Ring from the walls,
we'd sing in the doorways,
or bicker and row
Just figuring how we were wired inside
Perfect weather to fly.

Brilliant.

Loneliness Of A Tower Crane Driver is a stunningly intelligent track in which the misery of someone else's life is played out through all of us. Sounds complicated - it's actually brilliant. It's a heartfelt song, the type which Elbow do best, an industrial percussive line underpinning a swooning vocal and a string laden melody.

Richard Hawley duets with Garvey on next track "Fix", a chirpy, atmospheric, after last orders little number which lyrically deals with a pair of chancers making plans for their ill gotten gains.

Some Riot sounds like a mournful plea to a long lost friend, possibly "The Seldom Seen Kid" himself (Bryan Glancy, a friend of the bands who sadly died in 2007). "I think when he's drinking / he's drowning some kind of riot / what is my friend trying to hide / cos it's breaking my heart / it's breaking my heart".

"One Day Less" sounds like the natural successor to "Any Day Now", whether the main character's luck has changed. Or has it? The strings soar, the drums beat endlessly and Garvey swoons about seeing the light, and being in love.

"Friend Of Ours" is definitely a tribute to the bands lost friend Bryan Glancy, the seldom seen kid. It's beautiful, not at all sugary, and genuinely touching and moving. A fitting album closer if there ever was one. If Garvey's "Love you mate....." doesn't move you then you must have a heart of stone, surely.

This is a fantastic album, sure to please Elbow fans and I think equally sure to attract hoardes of new fans too. If you like your music delicate yet powerful, swooning yet direct and happy yet sad - this is most certainly the album, and the band, for you.
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64 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars make room for Elbow, 14 Mar 2008
By William Rycroft "blogs @ Just William's Luck" (Hertfordshire, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
I first heard Elbow on one of those late night car journeys listening to the radio. The track was Any Day Now and I thought it was amazing. Slightly dissonant, almost like a medieval chant and it stuck in my head for days. There have been a further two albums since that debut which are both filled with consistently interesting tracks and increasingly honest lyrics dealing with Guy Garvey's relationships and emotions. Why anyone would bother listening to a band like Coldplay when they could have Elbow instead is beyond me but there we go. The band have said that this may be their last album proper with future work released on ep's and singles so is it a fitting farewell (of sorts)?

The album begins with Starlings; a cacophony of sound which suddenly cuts out to reveal a quiet glockenspiel punctured with loud horns and eventually Guy Garvey's voice sounding as heartfelt as ever. Bones Of You takes its starting point from the power of a song to transport you back in time to a memory - 'And I'm five years ago/And three thousand miles away' but we should realise that Garvey is not a rose tinted spectacles kind of guy. Mirrorball is a great example of what Elbow do well; a gorgeous ballad with piano, drums, soaring strings and Garvey's voice up close and personal, filled with emotion ' When we make the moon our mirror ball/the street's an empty stage;/the city sirens - violins./Everything has changed.' The tempo lifts with first single Grounds For Divorce, a down and dirty, bluesey, western influenced anthem with a kick. And then we have Audience With The Pope, a challenge to religion which with its Russian sounding melody comes on like a Bond theme 'I've an audience with the Pope/And I'm saving the world at eight/But if she says she needs me/Everybody's gonna have to wait'. Weather to Fly has a simple melody and three verses which go round in a similar way to Any Day Now, building in intensity, a beautiful track about the band's wish to follow their own course. Then we have the huge Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver a song which soars lyrically, vocally and musically. Richard Hawley guest duets with Garvey on The Fix, a real character piece which is steeped in smoky, after hours atmosphere. Some Riot is a quiet song, a plaintive cry to a friend in trouble. The big crowd pleaser One Day Like This is the penultimate track, filled with strings and a rousing chorus, sure to be a festival and live favourite with it's chorus of 'It's looking like a beautiful day'. The closing track Friend Of Ours is a heartfelt tribute to the seldom seen kid of the title, Bryan Glancy, a friend of the band who died two years ago. 'Never very good at goodbyes/So gentle shoulder charge.../Love you mate.' Touching stuff.

This is a fantastic collection of songs, not the kind of watered down pop that will make them a chart success like Coldplay or Snow Patrol but the sound of a band confident in their abilities (this album was self-produced for the first time). They have always been good at creating depth musically, and with the honesty of some of the lyrics and Garvey given full range with his voice this is a fitting tribute not only to Glancy but to the band themselves for following their own direction.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Albums are seldom THIS good..., 9 Dec 2008
By A. Sweeney "campaign for real music" (London, England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Let me get one thing straight - there is no hype surrounding this album, every word of praise lavished on this album has been justified and, in 'The Seldom Seen Kid', Elbow haven't just made one of the best albums of 2008, they have made one of the best albums of all time. It isn't often that the grandeur and beauty of the music is equally matched by the poetry and prose of the lyrics, but on this album it is almost a battle between the lyrics and music to see which excels most. Winning the Mercury Music Prize for this album was a great moment for Elbow and, as far as I am concerned, it was a worthy winner, although it has caused me just a little bemusement as their last album, 'Leaders Of The Free World' was pretty much just as exceptional as this one.

In a way, winning the Mercury Music Prize is a double edged sword, because it will bring listeners to this album who wouldn't naturally wander in this direction. Some will be absolutely beguiled by the album, some won't really get what the fuss is all about. Quite honestly, if you approach 'The Seldom Seen Kid' with a superficial pop mentality then you're likely to be disappointed. If you approach this album thinking that you can press play, listen to it once, and then expect to get all it has to offer, then you're likely to be disappointed. Indeed, if you're easily bored by slower, more expressive music, then this album isn't likely to be your cup of tea. I don't honestly know how many times I have listened to this album - my only estimate is "lots" - but, like any truly great release, I appreciate it more and more each time I listen to it.

You just can't pick favourites from 'The Seldom Seen Kid' - well I can't, anyway. The vast majority of the compositions are just brilliant. How can I put the powerful, heartbreaking strings of 'A Day Like This' above the latin-influenced passion of 'The Bones Of You'? How could I possibly put the tremendously catchy, bluesy, 'Grounds For Divorce' above the sheer magnificence of 'The Loneliness Of The A Tower Crane Driver'? I could go on until all of the titles are exhausted, but I won't. It isn't a case of having something for everybody here, it is a case of having everything for somebody, all glued together by Guy Garvey's gorgeous voice. This is a piece of art which speaks to me on so many emotional and intellectual levels. This is an album which towers over all of its contemporaries in terms of ambition, execution and quality - nothing else this year has really come close. The word is often overused, but this IS a masterpiece.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Sensational
Simply one of the best albums that I own full of subtlety, beauty & heartfelt passion.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing - a few gems, but not as many as anticipated
No doubt Guy's vocals are emphatic, emotional and inspiring, but some of the tracks on The Seldom Seen Kid are just plain dull. Read more
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