Bloc Party - A Weekend in the City
Facts
| Artist(s) | Bloc Party |
| Studio | Vice Records |
| Release Date | February 6, 2007 |
| UPC Code | 075679459824 |
| Buy this item | $13.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 17 2:14 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Song For Clay (Disappear Here)
- Hunting For Witches
- Waiting For The 7:18
- Prayer, The
- Uniform
- On
- Where Is Home?
- Kreuzberg
- I Still Remember
- Sunday
- SRXT
Similar CDs
| Wincing the Night Away | Neon Bible | Silent Alarm | The Good, the Bad & the Queen | We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Loved it |
| Atmospheric...the druggy escapism of A Weekend In The City |
"Song For Clay" starts out the album with a simple vocal and guitar melody that turns into pounding drums and clashing guitars, but it's not quite as explosive as the rockers on Silent Alarm, it still sounds vulnerable. "Hunting For Witches" is a description of how the media has used "fear to keep us all in place", employing electronic-sounding guitars to fill as a symbol of modern paranoia, truly a standout track. "Waiting For the 7.18" is one of my personal favorites, with a somber melody dissolving into blissful noise pop behind the refrain "Let's drive to Brighton on the weekend." "The Prayer" is a slightly weird track, with synth and drums backing the harsh, abrasive verse, and a sweet little guitar melody serving as the backdrop for a chorus that contrasts well with the verse. "Uniform" is a song about the conformity of teens, with soft guitar becoming a riveting guitar solo. "On" provides a drug ballad, with gorgeous, melancholic lyrics such as "Drunken 'I love you's at the top of the world...and when it runs out, we buy more, a flatness so bleak, I've been bitten by a vampire". "Where Is Home?" is similar to "Prayer" in song structure, and is one of the weaker tracks on the LP. It is quite possibly the angriest song on A Weekend In The City, but instead of angsty lyrics, it is a resigned anger about racial injustice. "Kreuzberg" is an underrated song detailing the love the narrator wishes he could find after so many one-night stands. It is a perfect example of the vulnerability that wasn't present on their previous effort. "I Still Remember" is a radio-friendly single concerning an attraction between two schoolboys. "Sunday" is a very atmospheric song that lifts off the ground on its fragile melody. "SRXT" is a perfect closer to the album, a sad ballad about suicide.
One thing I mentioned a lot in the review was the word "melody", and it is appropriate, as the melody is pushed to the forefront more so than in Silent Alarm. Kele Okereke's lyrics serve perfectly to describe a vulnerable, confused young man in the middle of a city with nowhere to turn, surrounded by hypocrisy, corruption, and depression. It's a much darker album, lyrically, but it's a beautiful darkness, with the lyrics serving as a perfect counterpoint to the musicality of the album. There have been a lot of negative reviews for this album, but personally, I feel it is just as strong as Silent Alarm, but it needs a lot more time to grow on you. But what really makes it so appealing is that Bloc Party did not give us more of the same, but took their music in a new and beautiful direction. I can't wait to hear what comes next. May 26, 2008
| The Worst Second Album of All Time |
Every song on this album starts the same way: in silence, with a slow instrumental ramp up or sampler loop, and then Kele starts whining. And whining. And whining. And the lyrics are so trite and ridiculous. Take this sample from 'Uniform', perhaps the most irritating song ever recorded:
"Because we are so handsome and we are so bored
So entertain us, tell me a joke
Make it long, make it last forever
Make it cruel just make me laugh
We can't be hurt"
Or this gem from 'Waiting for the 7.18':
"Grinding your teeth in the middle of the night
With the sadness of those molars
Spend all your spare time trying to escape
With crosswords and sudoku"
What does that even mean? It doesn't rhyme. It doesn't have good meter. It isn't sung with force or power. It's like he threw a bunch of words in a hat and then sang each one as he pulled it out, whining nasally over a lackluster backing track.
Most people who know anything about Bloc Party undoubtedly know that 'Silent Alarm' contained a lot of old songs. So maybe that explains this seemingly radical change in sound for the band - they got famous on five-year-old songs and this is their new sound. Well, their new sound is awful. It's the most pretentious wanna-be-Radiohead junk I've had the misfortune to encounter.
There are no standout tracks on this album, zero actual rock songs, no dance numbers. Remember those pounding, intricate drum tracks on 'Silent Alarm'? Well Matt Tong might as well have been replaced with a half-broken drum machine for his miniscule presence on this album.
Somebody tell Kele Okereke that he's not Thom Yorke. We don't need two Radioheads, one has enough pretentiousness for ten. Kele took the 'party' out of Bloc Party. And that's a sad, sad thing. Don't buy this album as it will only depress you. Just spin 'Silent Alarm' for the thousandth time and hope they do better on the next one.
February 29, 2008
| An Awesome Second Album |
| Strikingly Beautiful Weekend in the City |
It is different than Silent Alarm, but I would say that the band has "evolved" for the better. Please check out this album!
ALSO! There is a set of B-Sides titled "Another Weekend in the City" and has some FANTASTIC songs that you must hear. One B-Side comes along with each single from the original A Weekend in the City. So to have the entire set of B-sides, you need all the singles of A Weekend in the City. November 19, 2007
More reviews at Amazon.com ...
