Urban Hymns The Verve

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/30/1997
  • Sales Rank: 8,273
  • Label: VIRGIN RECORDS US
  • UPC: 724384491321
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Urban Hymns

1LISTENBittersweet Symphony 5:58
2LISTENSonnet 4:21
3LISTENThe Rolling People 7:01
4LISTENThe Drugs Don't Work 5:05
5LISTENCatching the Butterfly 6:26
6LISTENNeon Wilderness 2:37
7LISTENSpace and Time 5:36
8LISTENWeeping Willow 4:49
9LISTENLucky Man 4:53
10LISTENOne Day 5:03
11LISTENThis Time 3:50
12LISTENVelvet Morning 4:57
13LISTENCome On 15:15

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The Verve split in 1995 after two albums and a particularly disastrous, hedonistic American tour. When Brit-pop icons Oasis championed their cause and wrote a song, "Cast No Shadow," about the group's charismatic singer, "Mad" Richard Ashcroft, the Verve regrouped and surprised all by delivering one of the great British rock albums of the late 1990s. A northern English five-piece that borrows from '60s rock and psychedelia while recalling '80s bands like Echo and the Bunnymen and Aztec Camera, the Verve wore their influences prominently on Urban Hymns' opening hit single, "Bittersweet Symphony," which used a sample from a Rolling Stones orchestral album as its foundation and catapulted the album to prominence and platinum sales. This classic rock stomp epitomized the re-formed band's newly found confidence with its emotional power, which featured Ashcroft singing with unequivocal passion of life's painfully simple struggles underneath those soaring strings. Nothing else on Urban Hymns quite matches the majesty of "Bittersweet Symphony" but plenty of songs challenge, especially the ballad "The Drugs Don't Work," the yearning mid-tempo love songs "Sonnet" and "Lucky Man," and the raucous finale "Come On." Tony Fletcher, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

From the Files of Phantom Critic !by Anonymous

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May 30, 2006: Quite possibly "One of the Greatest British Albums", the Verve creates a mid-tempo classic. The songs are about love, loneliness, hope, and personal philosophy. Richard Ashcroft sings with great spirit and the music is etched with precision, making every note important. The Verve's best! ***POSITIVES - Brilliant! A Modern Day Classic! ***NEGATIVES - Not necessarily for heavy rockers. ***Note: The Verve broke up in 1998.***STAND-OUT TRACKS - "Bittersweet Symphony", "Sonnet", "The Rolling People", "The Drugs Don't Work", "Space and Time", "Lucky Man"

love itby Anonymous

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November 13, 2004: i love this cd. it was because of track one that makes it so heart stopping


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