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We Can Create
 
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We Can Create

MapsMP3 Download
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
Price: £7.49
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  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. So Low, So High 3:57 £0.89
Play   2. You Don't Know Her Name 3:52 £0.89
Play   3. Elouise 5:22 £0.89
Play   4. It Will Find You 5:33 £0.89
Play   5. Glory Verse 5:29 £0.89
Play   6. Liquid Sugar 3:53 £0.89
Play   7. To The Sky 4:16 £0.89
Play   8. Back And Forth 3:42 £0.89
Play   9. Lost My Soul 3:50 £0.89
Play 10. Don't Fear 6:10 £0.89
Play 11. When You Leave 6:07 £0.89
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Simply Beautiful 21 Aug 2007
Format:Audio CD
This album is gorgeous.
I bought it on impulse and have been listening to it nonstop.
I actually think it deserves 5 stars, but since I've only had it for 3 days it probably wouldn't be fair to give it 5.
I come from a Sigur Rós, Mogwai, Muse, Radiohead, Mew, 65daysofstatic... music background and I found this to be really refreshing and uplifting, but not in a cheesy way.
I especially love the song 'Liquid Sugar', but there is really not a single weak or even average track.
Can't wait for the next album.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By russell clarke TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
Maps : We Can Create was short listed for the 2007 Mercury music prize but didn't win it as some band from somewhere cooler than Northampton (Just about anywhere then) and with far more interesting haircuts won it instead . This is one of those albums I have been meaning to listen to but never found the time as I was too busy listening to other things that seemed far more diverting. I regret that now because having eventually got around to listening to We Can Create I really like it. It reminds me , and I realise I am not being especially cognisant in saying this, of many of the shoe gazing* bands of the early nineties. This is a good thing as I really quite enjoyed some of them and this album while harking back to that scene is not entirely derivative either. Bear with me while i do something academic*"Shoegazing (also known as shoegaze or shoegazer; practitioners referred to as shoegazers) is a genre of alternative rock that emerged from the United Kingdom in the late 1980s, lasting until the mid 1990s. The shoegazing sound featured extensive use of guitar effects, and indistinguishable vocal melodies that blended into the creative noise of the guitars."
(Adapted from Wikipedia)
So how does it differ from say My Bloody Valentine, to whom it has been most frequently compared? Well for a start Maps are like a shoe gaze version of The Streets, in this case James Chapman in his bedroom with lots of dreadfully complicated stuff. Using electronics rather than more traditional organic six stringed instrumentation Chapman manages to craft aurally compelling vistas that while using the quiet/loud template of his peers have a dynamic integrity of their own. Plus he can write good enough songs with which to drape his sounds capes over.
Opening track "So Low , So High" while encapsulating the music's whole philosophy is a tremendous panorama of manipulated vocal effects and neck craning orchestration. It reminds me also of M83 who do this kind of choral vocal/electronic amalgamation equally adeptly. This is the albums highlight and it must be said the first half of the album is superior to the latter where it becomes a little formulaic and less sonically captivating.
That said the scabrous shifting tones and heavy duty percussion of "Elouise" are hugely imposing and bring to mind the excellent "Band Of Susans". "It Will Find You" has the clipped precise beats of nineties dance music and the reticulated rhythmic grace of MBV,s masterpiece "Soon". "Back + Forth" does too funnily enough with it's breathy backing vocals . "When You Leave" is all gossamer keyboards and brusque beats like Spiritualized on a budget. "Glory Verse" unfortunately doesn't have a verse worth any glory but it is a commendable attempt at a melancholy sparse ballad , at odds with the fulsome tones most often utilised.
We Can Create is a laudable attempt to redefine or maybe resurrect a genre of music that for all it's flaws gave us some terrific bands. You can quibble that the album isn't diverse enough though that didn't stop MBV (Yes them again) releasing two wondrous albums and that Chapman's vocals lack the character and emotional strength to make the songs really connect emotionally with the listener but then vocal prowess was never what music like this was about .Given time , and maybe moving out of the bedroom Chapman has what it takes to make a true classic (Not like Adrian Gurvitz who wrote a "Classic " in his attic ) He may even win the Mercury but I wouldn't let that become his major motivator ....he should believe ....he can CREATE.
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29 of 34 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Sleep, shag, and make Mercury Prize-nominated albums, that's what. James Chapman aka Maps made the bulk of his aptly-titled debut LP We Can Create on an old 16-track recorder squeezed into his flat in Northampton, England. That's right, with noisy old instruments and ne'er a computer in sight. The neighbors must've kicked up murder.

What type of music had the Jones's banging on the wall? An updated version of "shoegaze", don't you know. That bookish older brother of a genre from the early 90s that championed droning guitars, whispery voices, trippy lyrics, and floppy fringes.

Shoegaze strove to create a specific feeling. Namely, that of being off your head on drugs. In a quiet, let's-not-attract-the-barman's-attention kind of way.

Chief purveyors of this performance-enhanced music in the 90s were My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, Chapterhouse, and Chapman's closest descendent Spacemen 3. They followed in the footsteps of the world's first shoegazer, John Lennon. He tried his damndest to replicate an acid trip with Tomorrow Never Knows. The result was out of this world. And he had a floppy fringe.

Chapman (no relation to Mark) has given us Shoegaze 3.0. A refit that maintains the genre's mood of low-key psychedelia. He's kept the breathy vocals, angelic aahs, and kiss-the-sky mantras. But the droning guitars are gone. Replaced by a universe of atmospheric electronics, including buzzing synths, trip-hop drums, and the odd Namlook-esque space bleep. In other words, ShoeRave.

Album centrepoint To The Sky winds into being like a musical jewellery box. Then the space-age beats kick in, and we're through the bedroom window off towards the clouds, where an ethereal voice drones dreamily, "I can sing it to the sky/ But there's a risk it won't reply/ If I could change it man I would/ And I won't screw it up this time". Words that seem meaningful but make no rational sense. Perfect.

The euphoric outros of Back & Forth and Eloise are also highlights. Non-stoned listeners will feel like they're pepped up on goofballs. Stoned listeners may have to be scraped off the ceiling.

Every respectable drug-related album needs a microdot of mysticism. On the stately Glory Verse Chapman gets transcendent while ruminating over his gift for music. "These sounds will never leave you/will be there to receive you/these songs, they seem to write themselves."

More prosaically I love how Chapman drawls a colloquial "yerrr" for "yes" on this and other songs. It suggests that when not writing music that reaches for the sky, James Chapman is very down to earth. Should serve him well at awards ceremonies.

...

For Fans Of
M83 , Stars, Low, Spiritualized, Spaceman 3, Sigur Ros, Chapterhouse, Slowdive, My Bloody Valentine, Ride, Flying Saucer Attack, and Kid-A era Radiohead.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Fine Album.
The swirling vocals and many layered backings make this a hypnotic and addictive set of music. Much of the backing music follows the main lyrical melody - making much of this... Read more
Published on 17 July 2009 by SCM
How Shoegaze should have been
I think many people don't quite understand Maps. James Chapman allegedly spearheaded the Nu Gaze movement, but this suggests he's producing walls of sound, droning space rock and... Read more
Published on 12 Feb 2009 by Mr. T. Ainslie
Addictive
If this album gets its soft claws into you it will never let go. There is not one track on it that I skip, unlike every other album I own. Be warned; can be extremely addictive. Read more
Published on 5 Oct 2008 by A. Ross
Dreamlike
We Can Create by Maps is a swirling, swaggering, modern shoe-gazing classic and, by the power of Greyskull, it is growing on this eager punter with every listen. Read more
Published on 27 April 2008 by Mr. M. J. Cole
Pleasant electro-noodling
Romantic in the sense of elegiac or idyllic other-worldliness; pastoral in its undulating restfulness. Read more
Published on 3 Mar 2008 by A. Smith
Glittering Whispered Beauty
A glittering treat of a record in amongst some of the mud of the year. Not at all what I expected when I bought it. Read more
Published on 25 Jan 2008 by Christopher Hunter
Blissful on one level, intense on another
This album is mind twisting. I mean that in the best possible way. The multilayered songs wash through you. Some songs are deep and enigmatic in nature (esp; When you leave). Read more
Published on 15 Oct 2007 by W. Thompson
slow incandescence
The sticker on the album cover has a Guardian review which says 'A joy from start to finish'. And that isn't even hype - for a change it's just simply true. Read more
Published on 13 Sep 2007 by Dr. Robert A. Josey
Too sweet
Having bought this album on the strength of the standout track It Will Find You, I found the rest of the album just slightly disappointing. Read more
Published on 11 Sep 2007 by Marchespie
Bloddy lovely
A cross between Beloved (from the original summer of love, '89, natch), Aqualung and some kind of blissed out David Arnold, this is simply too bloody nice... Read more
Published on 9 Aug 2007 by Chudpiper
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