Track Listing 1. Love Burns 2. Red Eyes and Tears 3. Whatever Happened to My Rock 'N' Roll (Punk Song) 4. Awake 5. White Palms 6. As Sure as the Sun 7. Rifles 8. Too Real 9. Spread Your Love 10. Head up High 11. Salvation
| Details | | Producer: | Black Rebel Motorcycle Club | | Distributor: | EMI Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Black Rebel Motorcycle Club: Peter Hayes (vocals, guitar, harmonica, keyboards, bass); Robert Turner (vocals, guitar, keyboards, bass); Nick Jago (drums, percussion). Engineers include: Peter Hayes, Robert Turner, David Shiffman. The brooding Los Angeles-based Black Rebel Motorcycle Club belies its roots in sunny California with a dark, edgy sound that is indebted to 1980s/early-'90s British shoegazer bands, particularly the architects of the sound, Jesus & Mary Chain. While many bands take at least a few albums to work up to their full sonic range, the BRMC presents a dense, wide-screen set of songs on its assured 2001 debut. (In fact, the group would spend subsequent releases scaling back the formidable aesthetic on offer here.) "Love Burns" opens the record and establishes the BRMC template with slowly building intensity, as jangly guitar lines shift into thick layers of distortion and the coolly detached vocals of Peter Hayes and Robert Turner (who alternate playing guitar and bass) evoke scenes of disillusionment and damaged love. While many of BLACK REBEL MOTORCYCLE CLUB's tunes are effective mid-tempo tracks (particularly "Awake," which unleashes majestic, Ride-like squalls of feedback), "Whatever Happened to My Rock 'N' Roll (Punk Song)" is a blistering, revved-up number that recalls the fervor of the Stooges. Regardless of influences, the BRMC warrants attention by the sheer force of its music, making this an album for those who like their rock bold, brash, and unapologetically loud.
Editorial Reviews Included in Magnet's 20 Best Albums of 2001. Magnet (12/01/2002)
Included in Q Magazine's The 50 Best Albums of 2002. Q (12/01/2002)
...A collection of charismatic songs that explore the classic themes of lost love, the demise of rock...and the second coming... CMJ (04/09/2001)
8 out of 10 - ...BRMC are the rightful heirs of the Enigmatic And Vaguely Dangerous Looking Men In Black crown...all of their incredible songs shimmer and vibrate with the riotous majesty of PSYCHOCANDY... NME (01/19/2002)
...Boasting vogue MC5 and Stooges influences and possessed of Strokesesque cool...Believe the hype. Mojo (02/01/2002)
4 out of 5 - ...The latest testament to the undeniable energy and power of rock....channelling the garage-rock ghost of the Stooges... Alternative Press (06/01/2001)
...There's definitely something happening here... Magnet (06/01/2001)
4 out of 5 stars - ...Young men from San Fransisco in thrall to mid '80s British FX pedal rock....granite thwacks of drums...sustains for an hour of fuzz bass eruptions [and] wild tremolo panning... Q (01/01/2002)
3 stars out of 5 - ...A mix of woozy, sinister psychedelia. BRMC steer clear of becoming a total knockoff act by filling out their sound with blues-rock romps and spacey elements....in other words, a sonic Snickers bar... Rolling Stone (04/26/2001)
4 stars out of 5 -- Their eponymous 2001 debut was an intensely melancholic journey through psychedelic indie rock... Record Collector
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