Down in Albion [Japan] by Babyshambles: CD Cover

    Down in Albion [Japan] Babyshambles

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    CD - Bonus Tracks / Enhanced

    • Release Date: 12/20/2005
    • Label: TOSHIBA EMI JAPAN
    • UPC: 4988006834958
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    CD$9.99
     
    • Overview
    • Tracks
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Details & Credits
    Track List
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    Down in Albion [Japan]

    1La Belle et La Bete
    2Fuck Forever
    3A'rebours
    4The 32nd of December
    5Pipedown
    6Sticks and Stones
    7Killamangiro
    88 Dead Boys
    9In Love with a Feeling
    10Pentonville
    11What Katy Did Next
    12Albion
    13Back from the Dead
    14Loyalty Song
    15Up the Morning
    16Merry Go Round
    17Flop House
    18What Katy Did
    19Fuck Forever Clean

    About this Artist

    Editorial Reviews

    Throughout his career, Pete Doherty has always been remarkably honest about drawing inspiration from his self-destruction. During his time with the Libertines, his debauchery underscored the band's explosive, teetering-on-the-edge-of-chaos chemistry. But with his post-Libertines group Babyshambles (again, the name is up-front about Doherty's modus operandi), he doesn't just teeter, he jumps right over the edge, as evidenced by the band's debut album, Down in Albion, which is also heavily inspired by Doherty's drug use and troubles with the law. Most of the album's songs are barely beyond the sketch level; some of them, like "A'Rebours" and "32nd of December" are like ragged little urchins, starved of the care and focus it would take to flesh out their promising bones. Even within the album's murkiness, however, hints of the promise and intermittent brilliance Doherty had in the Libertines can still be heard. Interestingly, the most theatrical tracks on Down in Albion have the most clarity. "La Belle et la Bęte," a duet between Doherty and his infamous ex, Kate Moss, recasts the turmoil of their life together as meta-cabaret; "What Katy Did Next" brings back the character of his Libertines songs for a tongue-in-cheek cautionary tale (you can practically see Doherty's finger waggling as he sings, "If you play with fire, you will get burned"). Meanwhile, "Fuck Forever"'s choruses are rousing enough that you can almost buy into the nihilistic, romantic notion of Doherty alternately escaping and diving into his pain, and "Loyalty Song" is so good that it sounds like it was channeled from some other album. [This 19-track edition was released in Japan.] Heather Phares, All Music Guide

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