The Broken Hearted Bride

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (15 ratings)
The Broken Hearted Bride album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 59:43

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Deja Fou better? Your opinion, but not mine.

cowboomie

While Deja Fou has some brilliant moments this album is much more "even" and consistent in quality. I can see playing this album many more times than I have DF over the years. If you are like me and thought Deja Fou sounded like parts shipped around the world digitally, recorded upon and sent back to headquarters to be included in the mix, it was. This album sounds more a group project and is a more pleasing result because of it.

user avatar

good, but "deja fou" is better

alextorres

This is ok, but not as good as their best and, of their recent albums available on emusic, "Deja Fou" is definitely better.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Few bands that first rose to prominence in the late 1960s and ’70s have been as prolific releasers of new material in the early 21st century as the Strawbs. The fusion of folk and progressive rock with which they established themselves remains intact on this 2008 album, with several of the members from their most highly regarded lineups remaining aboard, foremost among them of course chief singer and songwriter David Cousins. It’s an accomplished if rather grim effort; even when the ominous opening track “The Call to Action” is followed by a song titled “Christmas Cheer (Everything’s Going to Be Alright),” the mood hardly brightens at all, or certainly at least becomes scarcely any less somber. The title track, as foreboding as it might look on paper, is actually one of the more upbeat, hard-rocking tunes, musically at least if not lyrically. “You Know as Well as I” verges on the sunny and wistful, almost sounding like a graver Cat Stevens. Observational lyrics with a mini-vignette feel are used not infrequently, as you’d expect in a Strawbs record, but there are also more tender sentiments acknowledging the healing power of love, particularly in “Everybody Knows.” – Richie Unterberger

more »