Ready For The Weekend

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (52 ratings)
Ready For The Weekend album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 52:20

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Addictive and Revitalizing

Biklar

This album is so starchy to listen to. I liked Calvin Harris before, but once I heard the samples to this album, downloaded the album, and listened to the entire thing, I was hooked. The beats are huge, the tracks are energizing and the music is passionate and well produced. Great for shifting moods, dancing and moving to, and putting inspiration back into your system. I full recommend it. I enjoy the entire album, however my favorite tracks are: The Rain, Stars Come Out, You Used to Hold Me, Blue, I'm Not Alone, Flashback, Relax.

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They Say All Music Guide

Calvin Harris’ second album ups the ante on the glossy dance-pop of his debut, I Created Disco, boasting more energy, more hooks, more professionalism, and, in places, a little more sincerity. It’s clear that Harris has an unaffected fondness for all of the most immediate, most commercial dance music of the past 30 years — from disco to synth pop to video game soundtracks to New York house. What’s more, he has the talent to produce it all at the highest level possible, right up there with Daft Punk, creators of the best throwback dance music of the ’90s and 2000s. Still, Harris isn’t quite as self-aware as Daft Punk, and he certainly doesn’t pull as many punches. Ready for the Weekend, even compared to his debut, is focused like a laser directly at listeners’ pleasure centers, dismissing anything that might distract or detour from the type of pumping dance-pop capable of filling the main room at any club. And where Daft Punk or Scissor Sisters play up the stereotypes of dance music in an affectionate way, Harris is still, ultimately, making fun of dance music’s emptiness (just listen to the chorus of the hit title track: “Ooh, I put on my shoes and I’m ready for the weekend”). This isn’t stadium house as Paul Oakenfold envisioned it, but it’s an enjoyable amalgam of dance energy and pop focus. – John Bush

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