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Union City Breath [CD]

Crazy Arm Audio CD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Price: £8.71 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Union City Breath + Born To Ruin + England Keep My Bones
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Product details

  • Audio CD (26 Sep 2011)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: CD
  • Label: Xtra Mile Recordings
  • ASIN: B005J59LXS
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 128,596 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Of The Tarantulas
2. Bandalito
3. Tribes
4. The Right Wing Never Sleeps
5. The Endless Carriage
6. Little Boats
7. Song Of Choice
8. 200 Pints Of Blood
9. Meet The Marines
10. Southway Drive
11. City & Western
12. Charnel House Blues
13. Song Of Choice

Product Description

CD Description

Amazing second album from Plymouth's favourite punk rockers.
This album was produced by Peter Miles (King Blues, Sonic Boom Six) and features additional vocals from Victoria Butterfield.
`Union City Breath' features a cover of Peggy Seeger's `Song Of Choice'.
The band have previously toured with Frank Turner, Social Distortion and The King Blues, and will be touring with Against Me! in the Autumn.

Product Description

CD

Customer Reviews

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4.7 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The best album of 2011 18 Oct 2011
Format:Audio CD
In 2009, Crazy Arm released their debut album, Born to Ruin. At the time I gave it a rating of 9/10 but before I start out on their second album, I need to make one tiny adjustment to that score. I don't think it's always possible to identify a classic album when you first hear it. For me, a classic album usually comes to the fore after a period of time when you realise that each and every listen of that album brings as much enjoyment, interest or whatever it is you seek from music i.e. the law of diminishing marginal returns does not apply. Therefore, I'd upgrade my original rating to 10/10 as Born to Ruin is indeed a classic album.

With that out of the way, one can imagine how excited I've been as Crazy Arm has drip fed new tracks over the last 18 months or so, either in a live setting or via the two digital singles ("Ambertown" and "Tribes") that have come out since last December. From the four new recorded tracks it was plainly evident that Union City Breath was not going to be a Born to Ruin Part II. With the addition of the equally talented locals Patrick James Pearson and Vicky Butterfield, there has been a conscious effort to ensure that, whilst the album retains all of the elements of anger and outrage that underlie much of what Crazy Arm sing about, the resultant suite of songs would move the band forward in terms of the breadth of arrangements and the diversification of their sound. This doesn't mean they've turned their backs on the sonic assault that was such a feature on the debut album, more a case of it being refined without losing that edge, thanks again to another grand piece of work by producer, Pete Miles.

Opening with "Of The Tarantulas", it's clear that Patrick James Pearson is not along for the ride as the keyboards feature prominently here and crop up regularly across the album. A thunderous beginning which shows that Crazy Arm are able to maintain, with ease, the quality contained on their debut long player.

It's no surprise to find the epic "Tribes" third in the running order given this is renowned for being the position held for singles/anthems etc on albums, and as this track has been immortalised in a quality video recently and is also a belter of a song to boot, it warrants its place, highlighting how Crazy Arm are maturing as a unit. This track also provides a fantastic live sing-along in its second half, so if you're going to see them make sure you learn the words to join in.

Most commonly referred to as a roots-punk band, the word "country" is also bandied around too when describing their music. Although it is there to hear, the country element is far from being an overriding force within the music, it's more of a recurring theme. The same goes for the use of the word "folk" but here this is clearly reflected in the choice of "Song of Choice", an updated version of a Peggy Seeger protest song that in a live setting has proven to be a huge favourite and which deserves its place on the album both from a music perspective but also as part of a wider warning against the continued existence of the right wing organisations such as the BNP and EDL.

With Butterfield's voice working perfectly in unison with that of Johns, this opens up a whole new world for the vocals on this album. On Born to Ruin, the use of Kat Marsh as an additional vocalist was extremely limited but here the use of male/female vocals is much more plentiful and the positive results of the combination are there for all to hear.

If you're looking for the more punk rock side of Crazy Arm then look no further than "Bandalito", whereas for big guitar riffage, it's to be found in "The Endless Carriage" but intertwined with that oft mentioned country element too. For something that has a slight `pop' feel to it, mixed with some big guitars, "Little Boats" is a song which, for me, has the potential to follow "Tribes" as a single. What is clearly apparent is that this is a difficult band to pigeon hole, given the sheer variety of songwriting styles they adopt and without this diversity watering down their focus or consistency. Thankfully though, the band has not eschewed the more `in your face' sound that made Born To Ruin the tour de force it is and this still underpins much of Union City Breath.

As unlikely a consideration as it would seem for the band to think about, one of the by-products of the quality of Union City Breath is that the songs are potentially more accessible to the larger audience that the band so richly deserve.

Having already played the first single from the album many times and having had the luxury of hearing a few of the new songs live, this album gets the perfect score reserved for the classic albums as discussed above. I'm breaking my own rule here because I cannot see how this can be anything other than one of those records that I turn to when I need something that brings enjoyment, both musically and lyrically, never faltering from the pinnacle it attains from the off.

One might question my objectivity here, given that I reside in the same city as Crazy Arm and occasionally chat over a beer or two with frontman, Darren Johns, but seriously, you have to have ears made of cloth not to find Crazy Arm one of the most exciting and invigorating (yet remarkably still under appreciated) bands that has surfaced in the last five years. I'm not talking just in terms of the UK here, but across Europe and beyond. This should be the record that takes them to the US where I'm convinced there lays a potentially huge and largely untapped market for their music.

The liner notes provided by Johns also add insight not only into the songs themselves but also to himself, as he opens one or two doors for glimpses that do not come through directly from those songs.

Having recently read through the excellent Touch & Go zine compilation I want to end by borrowing a line written by Tesco Vee when reviewing X's Los Angeles: "I don't feel like dealing with a track by track assessment of this one - you simply must own a copy of this LP". He nailed it on the head then and it's the perfect summary to apply here now.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Plymouth's finest rock! 8 Oct 2011
By J. Ody
Format:Audio CD
In 2009 Devon's Crazy Arm released their debut album 'Born To Ruin' and I for one was a fan. So now a couple of years later it is time for that 'awkward' second album, however Crazy Arm are a band that doesn't conform to the pressures put upon them by others. Even with the bands musical style you can tell that they play the type of music that they like, and not what they think people want to hear. 'Union City Breath' is not so awkward as awesome in the way that throughout each song you get another flash of a musical leaning that you would not expect...

For the most part Crazy Arm play Hard Rock but this has a roots-y undertone with more than a rebel yell of Punk to keep it interesting to many. The first released single on this album is 'Tribes' a song that is both The Loved Ones and Springsteen in equal parts, and this (as in the first album) is the underlining sound along with the likes of Gaslight Anthem, Hot Water Music and of course Chuck Ragan that can be heard throughout this offering. The song is a catchy mid-tempo tune that also has prominent keyboards and a tribal slash gospel backing singing at one point. This is after the opening track, 'Of The Tarantulas' has blasted out with it's locomotive chugging guitars and thumping drum beats, and the blast of Punk'n'Roll that is the fantastic 'Bandalito'.

The band aren't afraid to get political and this is evident in both the fast paced, ' The Right Wing Never Sleeps', and more prominently in the Pirate-Folk of, 'Song Of Choice' as they sing about the BNP being Neo-Nazi's. The maritime-influenced music can also be heard in 'The Endless Carriage' as the band can be a little (lyrically) like an English version of The Briggs, with the Punk ethos of the struggling working class on the docks, which Plymouth has in Davenport. Then we have a simple and hugely effective song like, 'Little Boats' that is as catchy as a radio jingle. Brilliant.

Elsewhere we have '200 Pints Of Blood' that sounds just like Billy Talent, and the big ballsy 70's rock of 'Meet The Marines' and 'City & Western', the latter being a smash and grab of chugging guitars, with a hint of slide guitar whilst the vocals have a great strong quality that is both whisky-Blues and fist-pumping Hard Rock. Then we have the gentle Folk of, 'Southway Drive' that is a mix of Chuck Ragan and Frank Turner, a song that builds up into a real foot-tapper. Then the more traditional Acoustic-Folk of, 'Charnel House Blues' - those without morbid tendencies may not know but a Charnel House is a place that either has human skeletal remains or a place associated with death - so this contrasts the beauty that this song beholds. The album finishes with 'White Canyon' that starts gently but builds up for the powerful chorus: "I wanted to leave // but I just couldn't leave // And I wanted to give // But they always wanted more..." we hear at one point.

Crazy Arm are a band that sit on their own, and whilst I have mentioned a whole host of other bands and singers, Crazy Arm remain unique. The songs are layered with love and care with a bit of this genre here, and a bit of another there, sown together to make a patchwork blanket of musical bliss that you can wrap around yourself and embrace bringing you comfort of what the horrible world may have to offer. The band's biggest problem is that people may not get them, and that would be a crying shame. Great debut album and great follow up album. Enough said.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Crazy Arm. 30 Oct 2011
By keliedo
Format:Audio CD
Crazy Arm are a very special band. Their music is not only inspiring but created with true passion and emotion.
This new album has such an amazing mix of songs that show their fantastic musical ability.
They are the best new British group in decades. It is about time they had the attention they deserve. I just cannot stop playing their music.
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