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London 0 Hull 4

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (24 ratings)
London 0 Hull 4 album cover
01
Happy Hour
2:25
$1.29
02
Get Up Off Our Knees
3:22
$0.99
03
Flag Day
5:25
$0.99
04
Anxious
2:21
$0.99
05
Reverends Revenge
1:27
$0.99
06
Sitting On A Fence
2:58
$0.99
07
Sheep
2:17
$0.99
08
Over There
2:58
$0.99
09
Think For A Minute
3:30
$0.99
10
We're Not Deep
2:15
$0.99
11
Lean On Me
4:29
$0.99
12
Freedom
3:20
$0.99
13
I'll Be Your Shelter (Just Like A Shelter)
4:53
$0.99
14
People Get Ready
1:41
$0.99
15
The Mighty Ship
1:55
$0.99
16
He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother
2:09
$0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 47:25

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eMusic Features

0

Who Are…Ski Lodge

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

Ski Lodge's debut Big Heart opens with a jangle and a pout, a tumble of giddy guitars, a handclap drum track and frontman Andrew Marr sighing, "You don't have to be like me/ You don't have to make the same mistakes." And while the go-to easy critical reference point for this Brooklyn band has been another band with a Marr in it, Big Heart is more than a mere Manchester mimeograph. Its songs sway and… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Like a box of chocolate truffles with BBs hidden in them, a Housemartins album offers deceivingly simple and tuneful pop songs that are designed to cause you some discomfort once you start chewing on them. Singer and songwriter Paul Heaton sings with a disarmingly boyish voice, high and adenoidal, and his bandmates contribute angelic harmonies as well as sweet and straightforward guitar pop instrumental settings. But listen closely to Heaton’s lyrics and you find yourself plunged into a world of class resentment, bitter economic disappointment, and strangled rage. “Get Up Off Our Knees” includes the deathless couplet “Don’t point your fingers at them and turn to walk away/Don’t shoot someone tomorrow that you can shoot today,” while “Sitting on a Fence” ridicules those who “see both sides of both sides” and “Sheep” bemoans the apathy of the downtrodden masses. Heaton is no simple lefty — his politics are a strange amalgam of Marxism and Christianity — but his views are brutally uncompromising, and they constitute a very iron fist wrapped in the velvet glove of the Housemartins’ blissful guitar pop. Agree with him or not, there’s no denying the music’s power. – Rick Anderson

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