Kaiser Chiefs Yours Truly Angry Mob Album Download
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kaiser chiefs yours truly angry mob album download Kaiser Chiefs - Employment (2005) Artist : Kaiser Chiefs Title : Employment Year Of Release : 2005 Label : Universal Records Genre : Alt Rock, Indie Rock Quality : Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log) Total Time : 50:52 Total Size : 145/401 Mb (scans) WebSite : Album Preview. 01. Everyday I Love You Less and Less (3:38) 02. I Predict A Riot (3:53) 03. Modern Way (4:04) 04. Na Na Na Na Naa (3:01) 05. You Can Have It All (4:36) 06. Oh My God (3:35) 07. Born To Be A Dancer (3:31) 08. Saturday Night (3:28) 09. What Did I Ever Give You (4:09) 10. Time Honoured Tradition (2:45) 11. Caroline, Yes (4:13) 12. Team-mate (3:25) 13. Take My Temperature (2:44) 14. Wrecking Ball (3:50) 15. I Predict A Riot (Video) Line-up: Bass – Simon Rix Drums, Backing Vocals – Nick Hodgson Guitar – Andrew White Keyboards – Nick Baines Vocals – Ricky Wilson. Kaiser Chiefs are an English indie rock band from Leeds who formed in 2000 as Parva, releasing one studio album, 22, in 2003, before renaming and establishing themselves in their current name that same year. Since their formation the band has consisted of lead vocalist Ricky Barnett- Wilson, guitarist Andrew "Whitey" White, bassist Simon Rix, keyboardist Nick "Peanut" Baines and since 2013 drummer Vijay Mistry, who replaced founding drummer Nick Hodgson following his departure from the band in late 2012.] Primarily inspired by new wave and punk rock music of the late 1970s and 1980s, the band have released seven original studio albums: Employment (2005), Yours Truly, Angry Mob (2007), Off with Their Heads (2008), The Future Is Medieval (2011), Education, Education, Education & War (2014), Stay Together (2016), and Duck (2019), one EP: Lap of Honour (2005), one compilation album: Souvenir: The Singles 2004–2012 (2012) and numerous singles, including the number one hit song "Ruby". Their album Employment enjoyed critical and commercial success with over three million copies sold. It has won the band three Brit Awards, including the award for Best British Group, a NME award for Best Album, and was shortlisted for the Mercury Prize. Their UK hit singles include 2004 and 2005 number 9 hit "I Predict a Riot", 2007 UK number 1 hit "Ruby", which has sold over 461,000 copies, [10] from their platinum album Yours Truly, Angry Mob plus a further two Top 20 singles in 2007 with "The Angry Mob" and "Everything Is Average Nowadays". Their singles "Ruby", "I Predict a Riot", "Everyday I Love You Less and Less", "Never Miss a Beat" and "Oh My God" had sold a combined total of 1.1 million up to August 2012. Kaiser Chiefs, Yours Truly, Angry Mob. I n taking their name from the South African football team which erstwhile Leeds United favourite Lucas Radebe used to play for, Kaiser Chiefs seemed to be making a conscious break with the wilful parochialism of their Britpop forbears. And by the time it became apparent that this cosmopolitan gesture was actually to be their one and only concession to the possible existence of a world beyond the creative parameters of Blur's Modern Life is Rubbish, the issue was no longer material. The post-pub-slice-of-life-glitter-stomp genie that was 'I Predict a Riot' was out of the bottle, and there was nothing anyone could do to stop it. 'Ruby', the initial single from the second Kaiser Chiefs album, is a rather less auspicious point of departure. For all those who thought the Zutons' 'Valerie' marked 21st-century British pop songwriting's furthest possible regression into the primordial beat-group ooze, 'Ruby' will come as an unwelcome wake-up call. It's not just the craven 'da-da-das' or that whole 'using girl's name as song title in brazen bid for singalong status' thing. There are also the grisly lyrical glitches ('There is nothing I need/ 'Cept the function to breathe.' Que?) and Yoda-esque syntactical reversals to contend with. 'Due to lack of interest, tomorrow is cancelled' is a line even Be Here Now-era Noel Gallagher would have rejected. On first hearing, the rest of Yours Truly, Angry Mob feels like more of the same: throwaway sketches of songs which weren't really worth finishing off anyway. But then this band's peculiar magic starts to take hold. Their special gift is to pre-programme their music to contain just the right amount of slack for the listener to pick up. So what starts out sloppy and half-realised gradually tightens up, and then holds steady at just the right level of tautness to make you want to hear it again. This effect intensifies over a whole album. So Yours Truly, Angry Mob ends up a bit like those new-fangled surgical stitches which melt away into your flesh when their work is done, only in reverse. It starts out inchoate and hard to put your finger on, then coalesces into something wiry and unshakable. Thus the last minute rabble-rousing anti-populist chorus of 'The Angry Mob', which seemed embarrassing first time round, quickly gathers the unstoppable momentum of the closing scenes in Ealing Studios' Brit-cop landmark The Blue Lamp. 'Everything is Average Nowadays' soon transmogrifies from drearily self-fulfilling prophecy to gleeful fiesta of mediocrity. And the snappy Graham Coxon-esque triplet at the heart of the excellent 'Highroyds' ('Got a text/ From an ex/ She wants to know when we're in London next') rubs up against the killer pay-off - 'Will you write a song about me?/I don't think so' - until the resulting spark sets the whole song on fire. Like a lot of those who find success relatively late in life, Kaiser Chiefs seem reluctant, or unable, to slough off their unsuccessful old skin. Songwriting drummer Nick Hodgson's debut lead vocal, on the seductively bittersweet 'Boxing Champ', finds him effortlessly taking on Paul Heaton's mantle as the voice of early middle-aged self-pity. It's this very refusal to relax and enjoy their upturn in fortunes that has stopped Kaiser Chiefs' music becoming bloated and complacent. And, if there's any justice, it should also ensure that the vast majority of Employment's three million satisfied customers will want to renew their contract. Kaiser Chiefs. * Delivery cost to Russia (based on your detected location) for a single item. Adding multiple items to your order can reduce the cost per item. Choosing a different delivery option can change the cost per item. Final delivery cost will be shown in order review page. Heavyweight vinyl pressing of Kaiser Chiefs 2nd studio album ‘Yours Truly, Angry Mob.’ The album went to Number 1 on release. ‘Yours Truly, Angry Mob’ includes the huge number 1 single ‘Ruby’ alongside Everything Is Average Nowadays & The Angry Mob. Vinyl has been out of print since release. Yours Truly, Angry Mob. Yours Truly, Angry Mob is a English album released on 26 Feb 2007. This album is composed by Simon Rix. Yours Truly, Angry Mob Album has 13 songs sung by Kaiser Chiefs. Listen to all songs in high quality & download Yours Truly, Angry Mob songs on Gaana.com. Related Tags - Yours Truly, Angry Mob, Yours Truly, Angry Mob Songs, Yours Truly, Angry Mob Songs Download, Download Yours Truly, Angry Mob Songs, Listen Yours Truly, Angry Mob Songs, Yours Truly, Angry Mob MP3 Songs, Kaiser Chiefs Songs. Yours Truly, Angry Mob. It's no secret that the Leeds-based Kaiser Chiefs love the Jam. The band's 2005 excellent but uneven debut Employment was an infectious salute to all things mod and Brit-pop, boasting three solid singles ("I Predict a Riot," "Oh My God" and "Everyday I Love You Less and Less") that held great promise for future endeavors. On Yours Truly, Angry Mob, the group takes a little more time in establishing its pop acumen, offering no immediate pay-offs despite its insatiable thirst for FM melody. Opener and first single "Ruby," a rowdy, mid-tempo singalong that gets everything right but feels a little tossed-off and disposable, is indicative of Angry Mob's first half -- "Heat Dies Down," "Love's Not a Competition (But I'm Winning)" and "Highroyds" have all of their cogs well-oiled and reliably dressed, but there's nothing here that warrants the inevitable second listen in which a perfectly constructed pop song's true genius is revealed. To that end, Angry Mob is creatively back loaded (though not genius), relying on a series of rewarding and occasionally subversive tracks like "I Can Do It Without You," "Learnt My Lesson Well," "My Kind of Guy" and closer "Retirement" to avoid the dreaded sophomore slump, revealing a band that is likely to continue pumping out albums with a few great songs on them until the requisite "Greatest Hits" collection arrives. [Yours Truly, Angry Mob is also available in an edition with three bonus tracks.].