Product Details
Voices of Animals and Men

Voices of Animals and Men
The Young Knives

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Part Timer
  2. The Decision
  3. Weekends and Bleak Days (Hot Summer)
  4. In The Pink
  5. Mystic Energy
  6. Here Comes The Rumour Mill
  7. Tailors
  8. Half Timer
  9. She's Attracted To
  10. Dialing Darling
  11. Another Hollow Line
  12. Coastguard
  13. Loughborough Suicide
  14. Tremblings of Trails

Disc 2:

  1. Kramer vs. Kramer (Live)
  2. Kitchener (Live)
  3. She's Attracted To (Live)
  4. Another Hollow Line (Live)
  5. Weekends and Bleak Days (Hot Summer) (Live)
  6. The Decision (Live)
  7. Here Comes The Rumour Mill (Video)
  8. She's Attracted To (Video)
  9. Weekends and Bleak Days (Hot Summer) (Live)
  10. Weekends and Bleak Days (Hot Summer) (Video)
  11. We Are the Also Rans (Video)
  12. She's Attracted To (Acoustic)
  13. Another Hollow Line - Morris Dancer's Edit (Video)
  14. Part Timer (Short Film)

Product Details

  • Released on: 2006-01-01
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Format: Import

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Limited Edition two disc (CD + PAL DVD) version of the debut album by these young British hopefuls, featuring a bonus DVD containing videos and more multimedia fun. Literate observers of love, life and modern Britain, The Young Knives are not merely urgent, angry young men, they are capable of crafting alluring ballads and brooding mid-paced mope-rock of the most stunning kind too, as demonstrated on this, their debut album. The jerky, whip-cracking Disco-Punk energy of 'Weekends And Bleak Days (Hot Summer)' and the pile-driving Art Punk of 'Here Comes The Rumour Mill', you already know from their single incarnations. But, they only tell half the story. Placed alongside the neat, summery swoon-pop of 'Hollow Line' or the mordant, beautiful 'Trembling Of Trails', they reveal The Young Knives to be a band of many diverse talents. The Young Knives: sharp young blades with a steely resolve. Transgressive.

Album Details
2006 Issued Debut from Long Awaited Young Knives Debut Long Player that Follows Two Top 40 Successes with ‘she’s Attracted To’ and ‘here Comes the Rumour Mill’ and the Summer Smash "Weekends and Bleak Days (Hot Summer)". The Enclosed Dvd Includes all their Videos plus Specially Recorded Acoustic Performances at Singer Henry’s Home and Live Footage from their Initial Tour.


Customer Reviews

Young men3
Somehow it feels wrong to label the Young Knives "Britpop" -- they're so decidedly rock'n'roll that the last half of the word doesn't fit them.

In their full-length debut "Voices of Animals and Men," the British indie-rockers with the old-guy outfits blast out a series of explosive, high-energy rock songs, full of that old art-punk feeling. It's plenty of fun, though they sometimes have little but that blazing energy.

They open on repeating, screechy blasts of bass, with a bit of drum in between each blast. It's only the warmup for the frenetic, thumpy "Part Timer," apparently all about the woes of songwriting: "I'm not one to be at a loose end/But I found it hard to pick up the pen/Tomorrow I will try it again/With the sword..." Henry Dartnall howls.

It's a pretty weak song musically -- large spaces are filled with the blast-of-bass/drums combo -- but things soon pick up with the abstract, midtempo rocker "Decision." Most of the songs stick to the blazing, high-octane rock sound, whether it's muscular and grimy, or fast-paced and catchy.

But about halfway through the album, the Young Knives start experimenting with their style, such as the woobly abstract electrofolk of "Tailors," or the jazzy "Half Timer." And in this second lap, their rock tunes become smoother and more restrained -- they're still bursting with energy, but it's channeled into more confident tunes.

In fact, that second half is what makes me think that the Young Knives will go places -- the first half is fun, but there's not much unique stamp to it. It's just guitar rock. But it sounds like they got some maturity and polish while making the album, and learned a few things about making a lasting rock tune.

Most of the music is a jumble of the usual rock instruments -- blasts of muscular bass, driving guitar melodies that can sway or rocket away, and drums to set a solid beat. Later on, they tie the instrumentation together into a tight melodic rope, and experiment with darker, more dramatic melodies. And one song is basically a loose bind of airy synth, odd noises, and a meandering acoustic guitar.

As if the album wasn't already suffused with love o' rock, Dartnall has a pretty good voice -- strong, raw, and on key. In fact, sometimes he sounds like Art Brut's Eddie Argos. Not just because of the spoken vocals, but the clever songs: being a rocker, girls ("You were screaming at your mom and I was punching your dad!"), and general problems with being a young British guy ("And I think I'm going to die in here/Considering Loughborough suicide/Which I'm definitely going to do this year...").

The Young Knives are pretty mediocre for the first half of "Voices of Animals and Men," but this fledgling band starts to really soar halfway through. Definitely keep an eye on these lads.