Shadows

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (91 ratings)

We’re sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (United States) at this time.

Shadows album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 47:43

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Dorian Lynskey

eMusic Contributor

05.31.10
No giant leaps forward, but some satisfying sideways steps
2010 | Label: Pema / PIAS Digital

Every generation has its musical comfort food, and for anyone who cherished 1991's Bandwagonesque as Britain's finest grunge album and 1994's Grand Prix as an underrated Britpop tour de force, Teenage Fanclub fit the bill. At the risk of smothering them with faint praise, there is something cozy and reassuring about the Scottish quartet. Whatever may change in the world outside, Teenage Fanclub will be there with their sun-dappled power-pop, sounding a bit like Big Star. When they sing "The Rolling Stones wrote a song for me/ It's a minor song in a major key" on "When I Still Have Thee," they might be self-effacingly describing their own oeuvre.

On their ninth album, they still seem able to pluck tender, yearning melodies out of the air — "Shock and Awe" is a particularly lush example — but, as on their last few albums, the most rewarding songs come when they stray from the template. "Sometimes I Don't Need to Believe in Anything", with its rushing blur of a chorus, recalls classic Boo Radleys. "The Back of My Mind" takes off midway through with a long, winding, Wilco-esque guitar solo. "Dark Clouds," a duet with former Gorky's Zygotic Mynciread more »

Write a Review 1 Member Review

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Still Have It

Tarik

As a lifelong TFC fan, obviously my view may be somewhat biased. However, this is their best album since Songs from Northern Britain. The variety from the three songwriters is superb, with Norman Blake in particular in stand out form - check out lead single 'Baby Lee' and the album's stand out track, 'When I Still Have Thee'. 'Shock and Awe' is also excellent. Like a good wine, the boys have matured with age. If you like harmony, melody and the summer, you can't go wrong here.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Life, on Repeat: Teenage Fanclub and Young Adult

By Barry Walters, eMusic Contributor

A youthful 30-something woman gets a baby-shower announcement via email that throws her entire world off its axis. She dumps clothes in her suitcase and hits the highway, and into the tape deck of her Mini Cooper goes a mix she retrieved from the bottom of her closet. With a screech of feedback comes Teenage Fanclub's 1991 college rock hit "The Concept": "She wears denim wherever she goes/ Says she's gonna get some records by… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Since 2000′s Howdy!, it seems as if Teenage Fanclub’s three singer/songwriters — guitarist Norman Blake, bassist Gerard Love, and guitarist Raymond McGinley — are on track to deliver a new album every five years. For longtime fans who remember the first time they heard “The Concept” off the band’s classic 1991 album Bandwagonesque, that level of output may seem a bit stingy, but when considering TFC’s consistently high-quality songwriting, no true “Fannie” fan is likely to complain. In that sense, Teenage Fanclub’s 2010 album Shadows is a sparkling and reflective follow-up to the band’s stellar 2005 effort, Man-Made. Released on the band’s own Pema imprint in the U.K. — Merge in the U.S. — Shadows picks up on the introspective, world-weary quality of Man-Made but also delivers a bit of the classic bright pop the band is known for. Where Man-Made found the band struggling with feeling like life was an illusion on the dogged “It’s All in My Mind,” here you get Love’s breezy baroque pop statement of purpose “Sometimes I Don’t Need to Believe in Anything,” with its chorus of layered synth, strings, flutes, and sundry wind instruments. Similarly, Blake’s leadoff single “Baby Lee” is a romantic ’60s-styled folk-rocker that veritably shimmers with positive vibes. Elsewhere, Love’s “Into the City” is a sunshine pop/country-rock love letter to urban days in the sun and McGinley’s “Today Never Ends” is slow-burn psychedelic country-rock rumination on the past, the present, and a perfect day that never ends. If the day is as sun-drenched and relaxed as the songs on Shadows implies, then may it and Teenage Fanclub go on and on. – Matt Collar

more »

Activity