Bang Bang Rock & Roll

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Bang Bang Rock & Roll album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 41:30

eMusic Review 0

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Daphne Carr

eMusic Contributor

11.11.08
A party at the crossroads of art and artifice.
2008 | Label: Downtown Records

Pop music loves to look in the mirror — and Art Brut are one of the only current British bands willing to make faces in it. Their absurdly self-referential, unapologetically catchy debut, Bang Bang Rock and Roll, anticipated how much the Coldplay nation needed a piss-take, and now spearhead the backlash against pompous sincerity just like their spiritual granddad Johnny Rotten in punk's first generation.

Breakthrough single "Formed a Band" is their manifesto. "Look at us!" it asks, mocking (and begging for) fly-by-night NME celebrity. When you do look, you'll see that their awkward leader Eddie Argos, who resembles a deflated Robert Smith, is an odd cover boy indeed. Argos doesn't sing so much as hurl his lyrics, expounding on new girls, exes, little brothers, flatulence and delusions of deportation over an enthusiastic bare-bones punk sound a la the Fall or Alternative TV. Like Mark E. Smith or Mark Perry, Argos is best at wry sarcasm, as on the title cut. "I can't stand the sound of the Velvet Underground/ I can't stand that sound the second time around," he snarls while backups scream "White Light! White Heat!" over a hair metal boogie. He then demands "No more songs… read more »

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Snarky

javachip

I love it! Great lyrics. Clever, obnoxious and hilarious. You just have to listen. And the songs are catchy.

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a band that makes me laugh

brwnmamba

This band is funny - Bang Bang Rock & Roll, Good Weekend and Emily Kane are tops.

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My Little Brother Just Discovered Rock and Roll!

Ascender

And just try getting that song out of your head. I sing "Modern Art" every time I visit the new contemporary art wing of the Art Institute in Chicago. This album is great. Simply. Great.

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It's not irony, and it's not rock 'n' roll...

ClubMedSux

The first time I listened to this album, I thought the irony was over the top. Then one day I realized it really ISN'T ironic. Eddie Argos is a latter-day Jonathan Richman, writing everyman songs about remembering his first girlfriend and his new girlfriend, the joy of being in a band, and weekends--both good and bad. A great debut from a great band.

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These guys are exhilarating

really32

Kind of a new- millennium version of the Modern Lovers: slightly nerdy front man with a great punky band behind him. Like Jonathan Richmond, he talks his way through sometimes hilarious stream of consciousness songs. The band is surprisingly heavy and like the Modern Lovers, there's a feeling of anonymity and a slight disconnect from Argos like they just happened to be there , although, there's no doubt this is the band. You just got to love a band that writes a song about rocking out over modern art. They don't take their material very seriously but that does not mean that they don't have anything important to say about contemporary society. Art Brut is art through the medium of music and it can be absolutely exhilarating.

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Punk with lyrics

Whipdancer

Musically, I like the sound. The lyrics are interesting and often insightful. These guys are Punk Rock, not Punk Pop. Heavier on the guitar, but thankfully not the screaming.

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Punk without the DRAMA.

paultaylor_2009

Art Brut is punk-rock with a heavy infusion of Brit-attitude. Most recognizable are the vocals of Argos, which are half-sung, half-narrated, and one-hundred percent over the top. In the catchy love ballad 'Emily Kane' when he sings "Other girls went and other girls came / I can't get over my old flame," its hard to take him at his word. Or in the closer "Maternity Ward", when he assures the listener "Everything's gonna be alright," one can't help but feel that he really doesn't care. Yet despite his lack of sincerity and empathy, it is nice to have musical punk without the drama. Musically, Art Brut is a guitar-heavy rock band (see both "Weekend" tracks), but also show off a nice stadium sound on late track "These Animal Menswe@r". Altogether, the album is a consistent, energetic production. Recommended!

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“Formed a Band” was such a brilliant first single, and summed up Art Brut’s aesthetic so perfectly, that there almost seemed to be no need for more songs from them. Driven by a jagged, ragged guitar riff, it sounded like it was thrown together in ten minutes tops, and had lots of great, quotable lyrics (“I wanna be the boy — the man — who writes the song/That makes Israel and Palestine get along”), which were held together and topped off by Alfred Molina look-alike Eddie Argos’ speak-singing — which he informed his listeners wasn’t irony, and wasn’t rock & roll. Actually, it’s both, and there’s a lot more of both on Bang Bang Rock & Roll, an album whose title kills and celebrates rock & roll at the same time. “Formed a Band,” which appears here in a slightly more polished version than the original Rough Trade single, is still Art Brut’s calling card, but the album has plenty of nearly-as-great songs to choose from. Chief among them is “Emily Kane,” a plea Argos wrote to find his lost teenage sweetheart. He doesn’t just pine for her, though, he wants “school kids on buses singing [her] name.” Truly brilliant in its sweet simplicity — especially on the breakdown, where he lists, to the second, exactly how long it’s been since he’s seen Emily — it’s an incredibly vivid distillation of how large your first love looms in your memory. On the album’s title track, Art Brut return to “Formed a Band”-style, tongue-in-cheek meta-punk: while Argos snarls, “I can’t stand the sound of the Velvet Underground!” the backing vocals chime in “White light! White heat!” and a John Cale-like violin screeches in the background. While all this irony could be suffocating, there’s a pure, unadulterated joy underneath most of Art Brut’s best songs that prevents their witty stance from becoming too clever-clever; the way Argos roars, “I’ve seen her naked twice!” about his new girlfriend on “Good Weekend” feels entirely genuine. Indeed, a lot of Art Brut’s appeal lies in Argos’ way with storytelling, whether he’s singing about impotence (“Rusted Guns of Milan”), drinking Hennessey with Morrissey (“Moving to L.A.”), or indulging his fascinations with Top of the Pops or Italy (“18,000 Lira”). Though it runs out of steam slightly (at least in comparison to the pop art brilliance of the band’s best songs) on its second half, Bang Bang Rock & Roll is a terrific debut, and Art Brut are smart, catchy, and fun — everything you could want in a band, even if they do sound like they formed ten minutes ago. – Heather Phares

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