Sleep Is For The Week

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Sleep Is For The Week album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Frank Turner (See All Albums by Frank Turner)
  • Date Released: Sep 3, 2010

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Indie Rock, Alternative, Commercial Alternative

  • Label: Epitaph

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 47:09

eMusic Features

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Folk Goes Punk

By Peter Blackstock, eMusic Contributor

How exactly does one identify "folk-punk"? There's no easy answer, as different artists within the subgenre's horizons arrived at its intersection via different journeys. One could argue that Woody Guthrie was not only the original folkie but also the original folk-punker; look no further than the iconic photo of Woody with a guitar bearing the slogan "This Machine Kills Fascists." Boiled to its essence, folk punk is generally tradition-based acoustic music delivered with a forceful… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Following up on his debut EP Campfire Punkrock, Bahrain-born, London-based acoustic singer/songwriter Frank Turner makes his full-length bow with 2007′s Sleep is for the Week. Former leader of the political punks Million Dead, Turner’s solo records are more along the lines of very early Billy Bragg: social-minded rants and more personal lyrics performed mostly on acoustic guitar with minimal accompaniment. Turner is not Bragg’s equal as a wit: indeed, an almost painful earnestness permeates songs like “Father’s Day,” a standard-issue generation gap song culminating in the my-how-perceptive line “For better or for worse, I am turning into you.” It’s not all as wet as that, however: the rueful “Ladies of London Town” is a self-deprecating dating song, and “A Decent Cup of Tea” comes closest to Bragg’s knack for short story-like lyrical detail. The album’s twin highlights are “Once We Were Anarchists,” a wry tune about the passions of youth colliding with the real world, and the simply charming “Back in the Day,” a tune about hardcore punk’s glory days, played on the banjo, that recalls the more recent, folky side of Half Man Half Biscuit. – Stewart Mason

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