Got What We Want

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (19 ratings)
Got What We Want album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 37:20

Write a Review 3 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Vastly Underrated

Automobile

I find it hard to believe that this album didn't generate more buzz for the group. It is tight and excellent. Last Chance is one of the better rock songs you will hear. And I feel confident this just isn't my Detroit bias shining through. Go Pistons!

user avatar

Wish eMusic had their new one. . .

geldriver

Eponymously titled - but I think they signed with WB/New Line - so I had to get it at the online MP3 store that shall not be named (worth the $). The Sights are one of those bands that is most impressive when you listen to their body of work in chronological order - with the punchy, but uneven psychedelic garage pop of their first album they wore their influences on their sleeves (harmonies straight out of early Beach Boys, freak-out jams straight outta the Fillmore), but with this album, they dig a little deeper and take a more balanced approach. Not everything hits the mark ("One and only" is just ok, and "Sorry Revisited" just barely misses the harmonic grandeur and tension of the version on their debut), but this would be a great addition for anyone looking for a young band with a bright future.

user avatar

classic, catchy and fun

KingMonkey

sweet guitars, fun melodies, tons of energy and some cool twists and turns. some simple/dumb lyrics are just part of the fun. gonna track down more by the sights. hear their eponymous is awesome ... worth it! like brendan benson but much more real and much better for my taste.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Got What We Want is a melodically complex and accomplished album, and ample evidence that this young band from Detroit have a tacit understanding of what made primal ’60s garage rock and early-’70s power pop so exhilarating and memorable in the first place. Not only do the Sights seem like they’ve educated themselves with repeated listenings to albums from a Rock History 101 syllabus, but they have an audible confidence and forcefulness that one usually only finds in bands who’ve been playing together for many years. Indeed, they have: Eddie Baranek (vocals/guitars/keyboards) and Mark Leahey (bass/vocals) have been making music together since 1995, when both were classmates at De LaSalle Collegiate High in Detroit. In October 2001 — a few short months before they were to enter Ghetto Recorders to record this sophomore effort for L.A.’s Fall of Rome — Baranek and Leahey made the decision to replace longtime bandmate Eugene Strobe (now playing with the Witches and the Alphabet) with a new drummer, Dave Shettler (ex-Moods For Moderns). This last-minute switch-out might have slowed the band’s momentum, but now seems to have renewed their resolve to successfully accomplish the task at hand. Consequently, Got What We Want is a concentrated and well-produced group effort with strong and varied songs. The super-charged power pop numbers — “Don’t Want You Back,” “Be Like Normal,” “Sweet Little Woman” — are rife with crunchy guitars, catchy percussive elements, and memorable hooks. Meanwhile, the title song, “Got What We Want,” and the last track, “Nobody,” recall the bombastic heaviosity of Mott the Hoople, Humble Pie, and Led Zeppelin at their most glorious. The main bass riff from the blues-soaked “Nobody,” in fact, plays like an homage to Zeppelin’s “How Many More Times?” (the song — with lyrics purloined from Albert King’s “The Hunter” — may have also provided the Sights with their moniker). There’s also an enjoyable assortment of keyboards on the album; drummer Dave Shettler contributed Hammond organ and swirling Mellotron. The fathoms-deep Got What We Want should provide the Sights with a promising and (hopefully) propitious future once the world discovers its many treasures. – Bryan Thomas

more »