- Artists:
- Bloc Party »
- Label:
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Who knew? Some bands explode into our consciousness with a flurry of publicity and a barrage of pop missiles. Others creep up on us over a matter of years. And then you get Bloc Party. About a year and a half ago this writer first glimpsed our heroes at a DiS gig, then named Union, and frankly, to her mind at least, they were not very good. They were a bit Sonic Youth-y, and a bit Strokes-y, as so many young bands seem to be, and distinctly lacking in style, identity or musical flair.
And then something sudden seemed to happen, and they changed their name, and set about morphing into one of the most exciting UK bands of the past two years, and that deep-ingrained, cunningly spotted potential burst forth. It's already somewhat a given that Bloc Party are going to do very, very well indeed. Yet all the angular pop pickings and fiery live shows in the world couldn't have prepared us for this record. The detractors who expected sixty minutes of Gang Of Four covers are in for a shock. Silent Alarm is a remarkably mature, expansive record. It's clear that Bloc Party have wanted to experiment from the word go; first step, turn down a Parlophone deal for a Wichita contract. Second step, fill your debut with weird noises and B-movie echoes, layered over compelling, jerky songs.
The singles are by no means the sole highlights on Silent Alarm. From the opener 'Like Eating Glass', it's clear that the bar has been set high. Shrill, grasping and desperate, its urgency sets the pace for the whole record, Kele Okereke's vocals ringing out like a frantic siren. 'Pioneers' is wordlessly gorgeous, and old single 'She's Hearing Voices' has been reproduced and tinted with a hollow, ghostly hue that replaces the original version's tinny sound. It's a trick that's echoed later on the soopafine 'Price Of Gas', arguably the record's peak; desolately urban, unsettling and alien, it's the sound of the Specials being methodically taken apart by Le Tigre, eerie two-tone rumblings being devoured by Okereke's peculiar, high-pitched and in places androgynous shouting.
Silent Alarm's not 100% filler-free - the forgettable 'So Here We Are' could have slipped out the back with little protest - but the autonomy, creativity and sheer, elastic beauty that spans this debut more than justifies the rapidly accelerating hype that Bloc Party are currently generating. Any of the lazy comparisons that initially dogged them are firmly laid to rest beneath the floorboards of Silent Alarm; if Bloc Party ever sounded like the Strokes duelling with Gang of Four, they don't anymore. Frankly in places this record sounds more like the Police (in a good way, mind), and sublime album closer 'Compliments' wears shades of Ultra-era Depeche Mode, saturnine and serpentine, winding languidly through the confines of your headspace. More than the sum of its influences though, it's an addictive, pulsing and innovative record that confirms Bloc Party's status as one of our most essential bands and showcases how exciting British music is capable of being right now.
- In Photos: Bloc Party @ The Academy, Sheffield
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- This Week's Singles: 10/08/2009
- T In The Park: The (slightly delayed) DiS review
- Glastonbury In Photos: Bloc Party
- In Photos: Glastonbury 2009 - Day 2
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The Weekly DiScussion: our alternative Mercury list...
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Bloc Party, Komakino at The Rescue Rooms, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, Thu 09 Mar
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Bloc Party - Hunting For Witches
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
That Le Tigre chic is hot isn't she?
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Go bloc party.
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Gen, I think you may have written your last article for DiS. ;-)
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The Price Of Gas stands out as possibly the best thing Bloc Party have recorded to date and yet they haven't released it as a single, which beggars belief when you listen to 'So Here We Are'. Still, it says a lot for the high standard of their material when two of their best songs to date 'Little Thoughts' and 'The Marshals Are Dead' don't make the final cut for the album.
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wheres the crossover 'radio1 killer' single, ie razorlights golden touch, killers 'iv got soul, bbut im etc'.
i reckon this modern love, but then that would be two 'slushy' singles and would give a very wrong impression of them.
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
I love So Here We Are though. Its the perfect shimmery indie ballad and the build up is fantastic.
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But I just wante dto point out thar "Price of Gas" is a little too close to Les Savy Fav for comfort. However, it's still a great tune and showing your influences is not a bad thing.
It isn't as immediate as I expected either and thet's a good thing as far as I'm concerned - you get the immediate fix of Like Eating Glass, Helicopter, Banquet and also the growers like Pioneers, Blue Light, Compliments = longevity.
About the only thing on this record I dont like is the harmonised guitar solo at the end of Plans. For me, that wrecks an otherwise delightful song - but hey, I just don't like harmonised guitar solos!!!
This album is wonderful.
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
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Hope that's OK 'Dad'.
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
they like Love Ends Disaster!!! how can it be bad.
the cover is very bunneyman, but then thats who travis based theirs on.
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to be honest i don't think i've ever encountered an album that quite deserved five stars - in the sense of me knowing that it would be a record i would love for all eternity, come hell or high water. what can i say? perhaps i have attention deficit disorder. yet i hold out hope that one day i'll find it...
xxx
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xxx
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Pioneers & Plans & Positive Tension are the highlights.
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
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As for leaving Little thoughts off, it really wouldn't fit, because (in crude terms) it's just too happy, Silent Alarm is upbeat but doesn't seem cheerful too often...
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
If they're lucky, and this album isn't pure shyte, I'll buy it like a good an honest boy. But before I do that, I'll need to give it a good and proper listen......*puts on the eye-patch*........ARRRRRGH!!!
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
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what don't you like about it?
pioneers is beautiful.
xxx
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
im think its fairly likely...although funeral by arcade fire finally comes out here next month (about bloody time) and thats the other top runner.
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"Turning down a major label deal isn't about integrity, it's common sense. Look at HIFH."-idlewildman
not just HIFH, but HR and all sorts of other bands that get signed to a major on a wave of hype . . . looks like bloc party made the decision that would give them most freedom and best shot at longevity
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
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a life time if nme has anything to say about it i bet
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The vocal melody is awful and the song is just a bit boring.
What do you like about it?
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I think its possibly the most ambitious Bloc Party song I've heard to date.
It doesn't stick to any "angular", "post-punk", or "discordant" (insert adjective of choice) formula and quite simply suggests Bloc Party are the new Specials, the intelligent Happy Mondays, the clean-living Primal Scream and (thank fuck) the antidote to Kasabian.
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xxx
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'compliments' is weak closer too if you ask me. it sounded a lot better on the peel session.
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xxx
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when was the last time a DiS writer expressed an opinion that hadn't been ripped off from one of the major music magazines? there are plenty of good bands that aren't being covered by the mainstream press but DiS ignores them.
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DiS were talking about Bloc Party a good 9 months before the NME had got anywhere near them FFS!
If thats following rather than leading then I'd rather be a follower, wouldn't you?
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i wrote the above review in december when i heard the album, and it was held back until closer to the release date. as dom says, many at DiS have been impressed with bloc party for a very long time. i'm just glad if the NME exposure they've now gotten has played a part in elevating them to the deserved success they're enjoying.
little i can say if you're truly convinced that we all study the nme slavishly, but that's your own problem really.
xxx
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incidentally, there's really no need for you or gen to be rude ...
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Unlike the NME, it doesn't state to be "pushing" certain bands on certain labels. There is no company policy that in order to write for DiS you should like (insert band names here)unlike the NME, which is why one writer's ecstasy could very wel be another's agony, which is what makes DiS stand apart as the writers are actually allowed to have and put forward their own opinions.
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As Dom said, they were championing Bloc Party ages ago, so get over yourself.
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I really like this site's structure - everything easily accessible.
Think the forum should be sorted out a bit though as when you get about 4 replies to a post the message board fails to indent and it gets hard to work out who's replying to who.
I like the current hompage as it sets it apart rags like the NME who push a line. They feature cool new bands, but in a more subtle way.
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xxx
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1) Rude
2) Deaf
3) Blind
4) Crap.
The same goes for anyone who likes being mean and nasty.
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But I stand by my original complaint that the fact that bands like Bloc Party are universally praised on here shows that the NME remains influential. Dom says DiS covered Bloc Party nine months ago - i'm sure a friend of mine went to see them this time last year on the back of an NME recommendation.
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well i guess it depends on what you regard as dubious reliability. i think a lot of people find writers whose tastes have parallels with theirs - in theory that goes, i think, for any magazine/website - and DO check out bands on that basis. on here alone i've investigated bands based on mat hocking's reviews f'rinstance [e.g. since by man, ephel duath].
it seems like you're very cynical about the site as a whole. if that's the case, you're entitled to your opinion. i don't think every single person on here necessarily approaches things the same way.
incidentally, part of the proactivity comes from the user-interaction; messageboards, profiles, ratings etc. band profiles tell you what else fans of that band are listening to and rating, and the boards are there for a reason. so be proactive yourself. who do you rate? who should we be covering? shout about some bands you like. it's something you seem to feel strongly about, so use your voice and do something about it. otherwise it's a bit rich accusing us of being followers...
xxx
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Surely you can see my dilemma? It's not just about reliability. There are so many reviews on here that i simply don't have time to trawl through hundreds of reviews of stuff i've never heard of and am unlikely to be interested in just to find a solitary band that i might like. can you not appreciate that that's a problem? as one of the writers, you may be more aware of the other writers' musically tastes than i am ... i dunno if other readers have the same problem.
incidentally, the band recommendation thing on the user account is a bit of a waste of time, really.
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"UNION are a four piece from London and Oxford who peddle a fine line of taut riffology, sounding not unlike that ever-popular New York five piece duelling with Fugazi in an art rock-shaped blender. With tunes to boot. Expect a half hour of dynamic, wiry entertainment."
that's from an article Adie Nunn wrote nearly two years ago, previewing a gig that we put on at the windmill. union are now called bloc party.
xxx
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I enjoy the maze-like quality of the site. You can find out about bands you never knew about through it. The term 'ezine' doesn't really apply; DiS is essentially an engine for (new) music lovers and not an agenda pushing product. Having said that, the editors do have a resposibility to seek out stuff and that ultimately means choices- but that's life. Everything's a compromise, I guess.
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http://www.drownedinsound.com/articles/9310.html
Next you'll be saying people on here only like the Kaiser Chiefs because the NME have jumped on their bandwagon as well.
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Yes, I would say that this is how things tend to work... on clicking articles about bands that I haven't heard of then I will be more inclined to check out the band if it is by Gareth just because he is someone that I've tended to agree with from his articles about bands that I did already know. Although since it doesn't actually say the writer on the front page normally it doesn't help so much with choosing articles, but I would have said that there is a small enough amount of stuff posted here that I can at least skim through almost everything that I can't tell that I won't be interested in.
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The gig you mention at the Bierkeller was three months or more after the show at Nottingham Social, by which time Banquet had already been released and Little Thoughts would have been playlisted on MTV2.
If the NME started writing about them around this time then I guess you've proved the point both myself and Gen were making.
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sigh, i'm lost ... perhaps we should talk about something else ?
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
good point. i was referring to the people who slag it off and look toooo deeply into the whole thing.
cock eggs the lot of 'em!
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xxx
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
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For the first week I had it my favourite track was like eating glass
then in the second week it was helicopters
then in the third week it was positive tension
..do you see a pattern emerging?
After 2 and a half months with this LP I finally had a day (yesterday) when I didn't listen to it and frankly I missed it.
'This Modern Love', 'Pioneers' and 'she's hearing voices' are just dynamite and the rest of the LP is shamelessly good to boot.
I think the harmonised guitar solo at the end of plans is an ironic stab at certain retro rockers (note the low 'ha ha ha' vocals at it's crescendo)
But the greatest thing about this LP is that it is a PROPER LP in the sense that, as Gen mention, it outstrips the some of it's parts.
It's a true work of art
and despite the fact that I've had a copy since mid November I'm still going to go out and buy several when it's released and give them as presents to everyone I know who's in a half decent band in order to put a rocket up their arses!
Good bless Bloc Party and Simon White and Paul Epworth and Rich Costey (and elliot too)
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typotastic!
I'm not a retard - honest...
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Cliff Richard
Westlife
Then its bound to be SHite!!!
Go Bloc Party!!!
Rumors for them to play at leeds i hear you say?? Even better!!
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it's a truly magnificient record. paul epworth has taken a bunch of truly wonderful, deep, sexy, sad, up lifting, catchy rocking pop tunes, and poured liquid crystal all over them.
i cant wait for the next record.
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
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not quite close enough, but close nonetheless.
xxx
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Excellent start, hopefully no burn out from the lads. A lot of diamonds therein.
Modern Love when it kicks in..... yeah baby
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
I just signed up this moment so I could say that, and to suggest that you might be a wee bit hasty in dismissing "So Here We Are" as filler.
Please allow me to suggest an alternative way of thinking about the song in the context of the album as a whole.
Silent Alarm is significant for the way it recalls the potential of the rhythm track track to define and empower a song. How many times have I heard someone say that the drums and bass are the "backbone" to a song? In a song like "She's Hearing Voices", the rhythm section is more like a _cage_. SHV's a taught, atmospheric, yet supremely danceable song. The tension builds from the opening note from the almost-feeding-back guitar -- as fine and as cutting as a garotte -- through a drum and bass section that binds with chains; the guitar eventually thrashes against but just can't break that rhythm section; the guitars drop back again, building their strength, waiting for the moment that they unleash in that furious, chaotic break towards the end of the track. Sublime. But SHV is not an isolated example: exactly the same sorts of things could be said about "Luno", "Helicopter", "Banquet" (which, with its chopping, stabbing guitars, pseudo-disco beat and big fat bass line, is surely a match for "Take Me Out" in the dancefloor stakes!), etc.
In this context, songs like "This Modern Love" and "So Here We Are" feature an intricacy of melody and orchestration (made all the more delicate in the case of "This Modern Love" by the fact that it's the same tempo as "Helicopter"!), which nevertheless retain the rhythmic sensibility observable in "Banquet", "Positive Tension", etc.. The way the guitar melodies for the first two thirds of "This Modern Love" are anchored on a single note that marks the beat, or again in the measured, chiming guitar and bass arpeggios that make up "So Here We Are" -- there's something _percussive_ about the melody. It's not just a case of melody AND rhythm, but rather melody AS rhythm.
And in that repsect, there's something very clever about the way the arpeggios of "So Here We Are" are backed by a kind of a-rhythmic drum track, like the respective roles of the drums and the guitars are reversed. Put in that light, I have to object to your depiction of it as filler.
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Cheers.
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Hm. Job as a music journo... would be nice, but there'd be too much competition, I think. Unless DiS have a job opening...?
Cheers
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Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
Yes.
Spot on review.


Bloc Party
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