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The Big Come Up

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (687 ratings)
The Big Come Up album cover
01
Busted
2:34 $0.99
02
Do The Rump
2:38 $0.99
03
I'll Be Your Man
2:21 $0.99
04
Countdown
2:39 $0.99
05
Breaks
3:01 $0.99
06
Run Me Down
2:27 $0.99
07
Leavin' Trunk
3:00 $0.99
08
Heavy Soul
2:09 $0.99
09
She Said, She Said
2:32 $0.99
10
Them Eyes
2:23 $0.99
11
Yearnin'
1:59 $0.99
12
Brooklyn Bound
3:11 $0.99
13
240 Years Before Your Time
23:21
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 54:15

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The Big Come Up

thedavidsons

Sweet Mother, how did I miss this when it first came in...? This is by far the best thing they have done. I just bought it. Can't wait to put it into heavy rotation.

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Garage Gods

cog71

Words fail to convey the power of the Black Keys. Unless they are growled into a dark and smoky bar. Makes me think of Muddy Waters every on song: "Been drinkin' TNT, been smokin' dynamite!!!" for some grade A gut bucket try 2, 3, 5, 7, 12

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heavy soul!

specialK

good to see this here. "heavy soul" is the track to grab if you're just thinking about this, but i recommend the whole damn thing.

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The best?

TaosBlanco

I've had this album since it came out, as well as all their others...this is the one I keep coming back to. Good stuff.

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An Introduction to the Yardbirds

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

There were many British bands that swiveled rock's glorious adolescence, but for my nascent psychedelia and guitar drool, the Yardbirds have long held the most resonance. The wonder of first hearing the extended rave-up of "I'm A Man;" the Gregorian chants of "Still I'm Sad;" the eastern swami of "Over Under Sideways Down;" the clarion clang of the harpsichord in "For Your Love" forever changed for me how I would hear rock music. I sometimes think… more »

0

New Blues Rising: The Black Keys

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

The Black Keys are easily the freshest thing to happen to blues in this millennium, but you can't really call them a blues band. But then, neither can you call the duo — drummer Patrick Carney and guitarist/vocalist David Auerbach — a rock band. Or even a blues-rock band in the conventional sense of the term. Their music is garage rock that knows that blues is at the very heart of rock, and it is… more »

They Say All Music Guide

As minimal two-man blues-rock bands go, this has to be near the top of the heap. The problem with minimal two-man blues-rock outfits (and there have been more of them than you think) is that they’re, well, usually too minimal, with thin garage sound and a shortage of variety. The Black Keys’ sound, impressively, is not too thin (though it is garage-ish), and there’s enough deft incorporation of funk, soul, and hard rock into the harsh juke joint-ish core to avoid monotony. Most importantly, Dan Auerbach has a genuinely fine, powerful blues voice, sometimes approximating a white, slightly smoother Howlin’ Wolf (particularly on the opener, “Busted”). Auerbach’s a good guitarist, too, conjuring suitably harsh and busy (and sometimes heavily reverbed) riffs out of what sounds like a cheap but effectively harsh amp. Patrick Carney’s drums might be the cruder component of this two-man band, but they keep the sound earthy without sounding sloppily punkish for the hell of it, as too many such groups searching for the blues-punk fusion do. The very occasional insertion of hip-hop snippets seems neither here nor there, and the cover of the Beatles’ “She Said, She Said” seems like an odd choice. But overall it’s quite cool raunchy electric blues with more vigor and imagination than similarly raw, elderly Southern juke joint artists who came into vogue starting in the 1990s. And it’s way fresher than the standard bar band blues-rockers with slicker execution and more reverence for blues clichés. – Richie Unterberger

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