Here We Stand [Japan CD/DVD] by The Fratellis: CD Cover

    Here We Stand [Japan CD/DVD] The Fratellis

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    CD

    • Release Date: 06/11/2008
    • Sales Rank: 201,637
    • Label: UNIVERSAL JAPAN
    • UPC: 4988005517890
     
    • Overview
    • Tracks
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Details & Credits
    Track List
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    Here We Stand [Japan CD/DVD]

    Disc 1
    1My Friend John
    2Heady Tale
    3Shameless
    4Look out Sunshine
    5Straggler's Moon
    6Mistress Mable
    7Baby Doll
    8Acid Jazz Singer
    9Lupe Brown
    10Milk and Money
    View all tracks on this disc

    Disc 2
    1Henrietta
    2Everybody Know You Cried Last Night
    3Ole Black Eyed Blue Eyes
    4Chelsey Dagger
    5Baby Fratellis
    6Flathead

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    About this Artist

    Editorial Reviews

    On Costello Music, the Fratellis sounded like a ragtag gang, churning out pint-hoisting anthems with anything goes charm and creativity. On their follow-up, Here We Stand, it feels like they worked on this music, stepping out of the pub to smooth the edges off their songs and clean up their sound. This doesn't always play to the band's strengths -- where their debut was effortless fun, Here We Stand is more effortful and less memorable. Nothing here clicks like "Chelsea Dagger" or "Flathead" did; even though the album's polish doesn't diminish the Fratellis' energy, bright, lively songs such as "Look Out Sunshine" and the '60s throwback "Babydoll" are, strangely, not as catchy as they could be. However, the Fratellis' charm triumphs more than a few times on Here We Stand, especially when the band loosens up a little. "Shameless" lives up to its name, with jaunty riffs and cheeky lyrics ("Is it me, or are they getting younger every night?"); "Tell Me a Lie"'s stomping glam punk choruses rival the White Stripes, and the single "Mistress Mabel" delivers on the pop potential the Fratellis try for elsewhere. A few songs use Here We Stand's ambition and slickness to the band's advantage: the surging, minor-key "My Friend John" turns the band's irrepressible energy moody, and "A Heady Tale" boasts shifting tempos, layered percussion, and bouncy, Elton John-esque pianos that are one of the strongest ties to the '70s rock obsession the band wore proudly throughout Costello Music. Meanwhile, "Acid Jazz Singer" shows that the Fratellis are developing as witty lyricists with surprisingly fleshed-out narratives. Like a lot of second albums that aren't exactly a slump, Here We Stand is more accomplished than dynamic, but there are still quite a few enjoyable moments here. [A Japanese CD/DVD edition was issued in 2008.] Heather Phares, All Music Guide

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