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Favourite Worst Nightmare

Favourite Worst Nightmare
  • List Price: $15.98
  • Buy New: $9.52
  • as of 2/13/2012 02:40 EST details
  • You Save: $6.46 (40%)
In Stock
New (30) Used (17) from $5.93
  • Seller:Music Music Music
  • Sales Rank:9,798
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0
  • Dimensions (in):5.7 x 4.9 x 0.4
  • Release Date:April 24, 2007
  • MPN:00801390013621
  • UPC:801390013621
  • EAN:8013900136214
  • ASIN:B000NQR7NO
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks
  • Brianstorm
  • Teddy Picker
  • D Is For Dangerous
  • Balaclava
  • Fluorescent Adolescent
  • Only Ones Who Know
  • Do Me A Favour
  • This House Is A Circus
  • If You Were There, Beware
  • The Bad Thing
  • Old Yellow Bricks
  • 505


Editorial Reviews:
Album Description
While this sophomore release is unmistakably Arctic Monkeys, everything's a little more muscular and aggressive. Each song is embedded with revelatory moments, as if some sort of critical mass is achieved through skillful song craft and sharp arrangements until an explosive release of energy or emotion is inevitable. Arctic Monkeys have exceeded expectations with this record.
Amazon.com
Snarly and stone-sharpened, the Arctic Monkeys open their sophomore effort with "Brianstorm," a bracing blast of guitar fractures and rhythmic herky-jerks. Alex Turner's voice is the centerpiece, scoured the way the Streets' Mike Skinner's quick. Favourite Worst Nightmare moves from frontal blast quickly to the lean, mid-paced pop nugget, "Teddy Picker," which even with its clear guitars and straight rhythms still has Turner's tart intonation piercing the air. The tugging bass and guitar of "Fluorescent Adolescent" show shades of the retro-soul tip that drives Amy Winehouse (and Lily Allen), showing that the Arctic Monkeys have a taste for the dancefloor that spans generations, even if their guitars can cut across each other with relentless jaggedness while Turner's caustic pipes lasso the ears. Nightmare expands the band's reach, as when "Do Me a Favour" goes wonderfully haywire from tumbling rhythm, clear-guitar, and fluid narrative to a cresting blast of guitars--big and brawny and borne from the merely tumultuous, like the band itself. --Andrew Bartlett

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