Asleep in the Back [US Bonus Track] Elbow

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CD - Reissue

  • Release Date: 07/28/2009
  • Original Release: 2001
  • Sales Rank: 14,444
  • Label: UME IMPORTS
  • UPC: 5033197190129

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Asleep in the Back [US Bonus Track]

1LISTENAny Day Now 6:17
2LISTENRed 5:11
3LISTENLittle Beast 4:15
4LISTENPowder Blue 4:31
5LISTENBitten by the Tailfly 6:16
6LISTENAsleep in the Back Bonus Track 3:47
7LISTENNewborn 7:35
8LISTENDon't Mix Your Drinks 3:16
9LISTENPresuming Ed (Rest Easy) 5:26
10LISTENComing Second 4:56
11LISTENCan't Stop 4:36
12LISTENScattered Black and Whites 5:30

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Quietly majestic and invitingly dark, Elbow's debut, Asleep in the Back, comes a decade after the Manchester band's formation, and they play with a confidence and intensity that belies their newcomer status. The five-piece band, centered around Guy Garvey's moaning vocals and Craig Potter's ominous organ chords, is unashamed of its prog-rock roots. The band specializes in mid-tempo creations that gather tension and power, sometimes leading to a grand release but just as often remaining deliciously foreboding. Garvey's tense but soaring voice has a bit of Jeff Buckley's intimate grandeur, a bit of Thom Yorke's sense of urgency, and a bit of Bono's inclination toward drama, and fans of pre-Kid A Radiohead will certainly find songs such as the beautiful, stately "Powder Blue" appealing. “Newborn” begins with the lyrics "I'll be the corpse in your bathtub," and Garvey, characteristically, turns a macabre attention-grabber into a deeply felt love song. "Bitten by the Tailfly" accomplishes a similar feat: Atop an insistent tribal drum beat, Garvey whispers and chants until interrupted by bursts of buzzing electric guitars and is then swallowed by dissonant layers of orchestration. It's exciting stuff. In Britain, where the album came out in mid-2001, Elbow has been showered with accolades, including a Mercury Prize nomination. With their contemporaries Radiohead more interested in twiddling knobs than in creating conventional songs, Elbow are ready to pick up the fallen neo-prog-rock mantle. Steve Klinge, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Excellent.by Anonymous

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October 05, 2003: I came across this record when it first came out and instantly felt it was worth the money plus some. Its daunting melodies and brooding vocals makes it a buy you can definately live with.

This review was written about the CD edition.

Hauntingby Anonymous

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January 24, 2002: This is a slow burning collection of songs which, given time, will lodge themselves in your mind.Aching vocals and insistent beats and melodies combine perfectly to produce an album to listen to from start to finish.If you have to listen to one track only, listen to 'Powder Blue'.Lazy comparisons to Coldplay and Doves abound, but this is something different....

This review was written about the CD edition.


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