All That We Needed Plain White T's

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CD

  • Release Date: 01/13/2008
  • Original Release: 2005
  • Sales Rank: 107,181
  • Label: ADA GLOBAL
  • UPC: 714753010420
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CD$13.19
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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All That We Needed

1LISTENAll That We Needed 3:41
2LISTENRevenge 3:26
3LISTENTake Me Away 2:42
4LISTENMy Only One 3:49
5LISTENSad Story 2:57
6LISTENBreakdown 3:34
7LISTENWhat More Do You Want? 2:24
8LISTENLazy Day Afternoon 2:15
9LISTENAnything 2:59
10LISTENSing My Best 2:51
11LISTENFaster 2:51
12LISTENLast Call 2:53
13LISTENHey There Delilah 3:52

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Less punk than infectious power pop, Chicago's Plain White T's put a modern, airwave-affable stamp on that beloved strain of the rock & roll virus with All That We Needed. The jumpy title track launches the set with a nod to Tom Petty's "American Girl," but the hooks don't stop there. The band draws on Jimmy Eat World for the hit contender "Take Me Away," while tunes like the lovelorn "My Only One" and the punchy "Revenge" rock harder and feel more original. If the cowbell-heavy "What More Do You Want?" is as cheesy as it is alluring, the guilty pleasures continue with the "young horny guy on tour" missive "Sing My Best," which is just one of several songs that recall great lost bands like the Producers, the Ravyns, and the Romantics. The obligatory acoustic parting shot is also solid, evoking the spirit of Big Star's classic "Thirteen." John D. Luerssen, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Best album I've heard in a LONG timeby Anonymous

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January 29, 2008: I love their work. It lacks a cloud of metaphor, but If everyone wrote like Don McLean, we would all find it normal. I love them, although I don't like Hey There Delilah nearly as much as their song in Stop, A Lonely September. Awesome!

This review was written about the CD edition.

Pretty Good...by Anonymous

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October 28, 2007: For me, all it is is a strong sophmore effort. It's a nice CD and all... I crack it open at least once a month, even after two years, but... It's missing the punk element that attracted me to Stop, and the cheesey, poppy element that now attracts thousands of 12 year old girls to Every Second Counts. Good CD, if you're a PWT fan, but if not... settle for the Itunes download of hey there delilah.

This review was written about the CD edition.


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