I am one of many who became a big fan of the Arctic Monkeys when they arrived on the music scene nearly 10 years ago. Their first 2 albums still rate highly for me, and I think that certain songs from those albums are classics - which I still enjoy today. Then for some reason the band changed.
Their last album Humbug was a big shift in direction. It was slow, moody, introverted, and lacked the urgency and catchiness of their opening 2 albums. I still liked parts of the album, and there were some good tracks on it, but it was a fairly mixed bag. Nonetheless it showed a different side to the band, which wasn't totally my cup of tea, but I could appreciate some of it.
So, when this album came about, I was hoping that it would be somewhere in between their first 2 albums and their last. Sadly, it has for me less appeal than them all. Opening track, She's Thunderstorms is a solid opener, and one of the albums highlights. From there it loses its way. Black Treacle, Brick by Brick, and Hellcat Spangled Shalalala are poor, lifeless songs. I've always praised the Arctics lyrics, but having 'I wanna Rock n Roll, Brick by Brick' repeated 3 times in a song is the kind of thing an aspiring songwriter in a high school band would wince at. Also, having 'Shalalala' in a song is just irritating. 'Don't Sit Down Cos I've Moved Your Chair', 'Library Pictures', and 'All My Own Stunts' liven things up a bit, where the heavier guitar sounds echo their past glories. After that, it's all a bit dull and lifeless. 'Love Is A Laserquest' is a decent enough mellow song, as is closer 'That's Where You're Wrong', but around that it all sounds very bland.
I'm OK with the idea of bands trying new things, and going in new directions, but not when it completely takes away from what made them great in the first place. Initially I liked the progression from their first to second album, but now it seems the Arctic Monkeys are trying so hard NOT to be the Arctic Monkeys, that they don't really know what they want to be now. They now sound like a solid enough, middle of the road Indie band, but they aren't offering anything that makes them stand out, which is why they were so popular in the first place.