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Is This It

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (1762 ratings)
Is This It album cover
01
Is This It
2:30
$0.99
02
The Modern Age
3:27
$0.99
03
Soma
2:33
$0.99
04
Barely Legal
3:54
$0.99
05
Someday
3:03
$1.29
06
Alone, Together
3:08
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07
Last Nite
3:12
$1.29
08
Hard To Explain
3:43
$0.99
09
When It Started
2:53
$0.99
10
Trying Your Luck
3:22
$0.99
11
Take It Or Leave It
3:14
$0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 34:59

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eMusic Review 0

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Matthew Fritch

eMusic Contributor

Matthew Fritch spent more than a decade as senior editor of the Philadelphia-based magazine MAGNET, where he wrote about wildly unpopular indie rock bands and r...more »

04.22.11
The 21st century's first masterpiece of blasé theatre
2001 | Label: RCA Records Label

Forget about "Last Nite." The single that launched the Strokes is, to paraphrase NFL coach Dennis Green, what we thought it was: the riff from Tom Petty's "American Girl," an adolescent growl, too gutless to be big dumb rock, a song so dimensionally-challenged that it couldn't draw a square around a typical mid-'60s garage stomp. Is This It begins with a yawn — the resigned-sounding, sing-song title track hears frontman Julian Casablancas admitting, "I'm just way too tired" — and it turns out that boredom is the most authentic emotion on the Strokes 'debut. (Tellingly, the album also contains songs titled "Soma" and "Take It Or Leave It.")

It also turns out that boredom is the catalyst for nearly all of the strange and wonderful things that have happened in the history of rock 'n 'roll. Is This It was the 21st century's first masterpiece of blasé theatre, a conscious changing of the style guard by five privileged Manhattan prep-school types. Much has been written about the upper-crustiness of the band members, but the Strokes 'real advantage was their cultural affluence: early teenage years spent listening to Guided By Voices, the Velvet Underground and Television — bands most Gen… read more »

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Belongs in Every Collection

EagleRocker

Along with the impossibly catchy tunes on this album, Julian Casablancas' high-emotion vocals sound like a mix of Jim Morrison and Lou Reed. It's uncanny. Anyone who claims to be well-informed about recent pop music should have at least one Strokes album, and this is it.

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WHO IS MORE OVER RATED

Hoofprints

I cant figure out whether this band is the most over hyped band ever or whether that would be Kings of Leon. This stuff is so boring it is almost funny. The Strokes: "oh feel my angst. oh share my pain. oh buy my drek. oh how this sucks"

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Really Good, Though Maybe Not Great

KrisWright

I thought it was a surprise that "Is This It" turned up on a lot of "Best of the 2000s" lists last year. It's a really good album, no question. If you don't have it, I recommend it wholeheartedly. But is it among the best of all time? I don't really hear that. In a way, aren't the Strokes really one of the big disappointments of the 2000s? Back in 2001, we all thought the Strokes had a dozen great records in them. So far that hasn't really proven itself, has it? Listening to this album today is like living in an alternate universe where the Beatles' never did anything incredible after "Please Please Me". Still, there's a lot of fun in "Is This It", even if it turns out to be a lot of empty promises. If nothing else, it has one of the most appropriate album titles in music history. And I particularly love that title track.

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Is This It

pablo13

The best Strokes album. Period! Just download it and enjoy it!

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Great introduction to the "Strokes!" !

WillLuvsMusic

When this album came out, The Stroked had already been an established band. However, I never really gave them a listen until I heard Is This It! What a fantastic album from start to finish! Particularly, I was immediately drawn in by the song, Soma! What an amazing song! I love this entire album, download it now!

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haters gonna rotate

illovich

Hate on the Strokes all you want, they are alright. Is this the #1 album of the aughts? That might be pushing it, but it's definitely near the top of my list.

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The parts are greater than the whole......

Morpha

Wierd experience! I love every song, but if new to the Strokes let me warn you... do not listen to "Is This It" all at once -- you'll be snoozing by song #4. Each song flows into the next until all sound similar. BUT, drop any song onto a mix tape and it becomes the highlite, the standout, the song you remember, and come back to again and again. These songs do have the same feel, energy... but, each is its own little gem.

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He did say it best

derekmichaels

definitely in my top 500,000. I'm stealing that. And this record is average at best. the masterpiece of blase theatre quote is laughable. Where do you find these reviewers? In the gutter of failed writer jobs?

user avatar

The Strokes play music...

MattEightZeroTwo

Mikemos said it best: "Definitely in my top 500,000."

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Blessed and cursed with an enormous amount of hype from the British press, the Strokes prove to be one of the few groups deserving of their glowing reviews. Granted, their high-fashion appeal and faultless influences — Television, the Stooges, and especially Lou Reed and the Velvets — have “critics’ darlings” written all over them. But like the similarly lauded Elastica and Supergrass before them, the Strokes don’t rehash the sounds that inspire them — they remake them in their own image. On the Modern Age EP, singles like Hard to Explain, and their full-length debut, Is This It, the N.Y.C. group presents a pop-inflected, second-generation take on late-’70s New York punk, complete with raw, world-weary vocals, spiky guitars, and an insistently chugging backbeat. However, their songs also reflected their own early-twenties lust for life; singer/songwriter/guitarist Julian Casablancas and the rest of the band mix swaggering self-assurance with barely concealed insecurity on “The Modern Age” and reveal something akin to earnestness on “Barely Legal” — a phrase that could apply to the Strokes themselves — in the song’s soaring choruses. The group revamps “Lust for Life” on “New York City Cops” and combines their raw power and infectious melodies on “Hard to Explain,” arguably the finest song they’ve written in their career. Nearly half of Is This It consists of their previously released material, but that’s not really a disappointment since those songs are so strong. What makes their debut impressive, however, is that the new material more than holds its own with the tried-and-true songs. “Is This It” sets the joys of being young, jaded, and yearning to a wonderfully bouncy bassline; “Alone Together” and “Trying Your Luck” develop the group’s brooding, coming-down side, while “Soma,” “Someday,” and “Take It or Leave It” capture the Strokes at their most sneeringly exuberant. Able to make the timeworn themes of sex, drugs, and rock & roll and the basic guitars-drum-bass lineup seem new and vital again, the Strokes may or may not be completely arty and calculated, but that doesn’t prevent Is This It from being an exciting, compulsively listenable debut. [In light of the World Trade Center disaster, the track "New York City Cops" was pulled from the U.S. release]. – Heather Phares

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