The Verve - A Northern Soul
Facts
| Artist(s) | The Verve |
| Studio | Virgin Records Us |
| Release Date | June 20, 1995 |
| UPC Code | 724384043728 |
| Buy this item | $14.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 18 18:12 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About The Verve - A Northern Soul
Though The Verve has finally taken its rightful place in the Brit Rock cannon, it languished for years behind such English luminaries as Oasis and Radiohead. During that time, The Verve release several albums that got less attention than they deserved. Mark A Northern Soul as one of them. The 1995 release was perhaps the first album on which the band reeled in its trademark guitar epics and fashioned bona fide pop songs. "On Your Own" is one of the lushest and loveliest tracks never to find a minute of commercial airplay in the U.S. or abroad. No self-respecting fan of modern rock should be without this one. --Nick Heil Amazon.com
Tracks
- New Decade
- This Is Music - The Verve, Jones, Simon [The V
- On Your Own - The Verve, Jones, Simon [The V
- So It Goes
- Northern Soul
- Brainstorm Interlude
- Drive You Home
- History - The Verve, McCabe, Nick
- No Knock on My Door
- Life's an Ocean
- Stormy Clouds
- Reprise
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Pure Genius! |
| Corporate Music Can Go to Hell.... |
Well, this is an album, not just a bunch of singles, and it is a testament to the history and greatness of both Rock and the British Invasion.
Listening to "A Northern Soul" is a journey, reminiscent of Pink Floyd and the Moody Blues, wherein a story is told over the course of an entire album. Today's music is, yes, a bunch of singles meant to be published on the radio piecemeal by Corporate Radio and its sponsors. But the Verve have captured something far more meaningful than a handful of singles they intended to have sold separately to Corporate Listeners...they captured a feeling.
The title track is the best, undoubtedly, but you can't listen to it without the rest, and you can't listen to it jumbled; it has to flow from the first, to the second, to the third, right down to the last track.
Everyone knows "Bittersweet Symphony" is one of the best rock songs ever, and certainly one of the best in the modern era, but the Verve are much more than just that one song; they are a story waiting to be told...through haunting guitar and a timeless voice.
The Rolling Stones? With all due respect, they can kiss my @$$, because they decided to steal the Verve's well-deserved royalties for Ashcroft's incredible writing. HE wrote the song, HE deserves the credit for it, and the Verve deserve the royalties that THEY - not Mick Jagger and Keith Richards - earned.
Listen to "The Last Time" by the Stones, then listen to "Bittersweet Symphony." They're not the same song. May 6, 2008
| One of the best albums of the 90s, yet unknown by many |
| This Is Music! |
Perhaps one of the darkest albums of the mid-90s in texture and content, this album sends you into the middle of a psychedelic freak-out storm at sea and doesn't let up until it's over. On first listen, any expectations of The Verve you might have formed after hearing "Birttersweet Symphony", will be blown away, and you'll be left wondering if A Northern Soul is the worst album you've ever heard, or the best, or maybe somewhere inbetween. You could imagine that this is a tough album to pin down and examine, since so much of it flies overhead in the first few listens. One day though, something clicks, and then it all makes sense.
"New Decade" and "This Is Music" kick things off into high gear, signalling what's to come. Loud yet soft guitars, hypnotic grooves and rhythms, uncharted and unchartable song structures, and Richard Ashcroft's abyss of angst-ridden lyrics, with sneering delivery. What follows jumps between the two extremes of hypnotic bass driven bluesy numbers "Life's An Ocean" and "Take You Home", to the other extreme of total psychedelic storms "Brainstorm Interlude" "A Northern Soul".
This album is a voyage into an endless well of angst brought on by loneliness and drugs, and that angst is displayed in an epic scope that easilly rivals that of Layne Staley and his own drug-fueled demons on the album "Dirt". Thankfully there is some kind of resolution to it however, encapsulated in the song "Sotrm Clouds", where Ashcroft tells us his story of "how his life seemed to change in a matter of days" asking "Why does change always seem to bring the rain?". If weren't for the resolution on this disc, it would be the next In Utero, perhaps the most alienating experience in music as we know it. A Northern Soul is a well-rounded, epic listen, one that anyone who has ever been plagued by angst can relate to, and even learn from. It's an enlightening listen.
If you are looking for a challenging and rewarding listen, as well as brutally honest emotional rock music, as opposed to radio-ready mainstream music of the present, I can only ask you why you don't have this cd already? June 22, 2006
| in my top 10 - everytime |
nick mcabe, what a guitarist. March 21, 2006
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