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(4 Customer Reviews)
Moving away somewhat from the post-hardcore formula that characterized the band's first two albums, Funeral for a Friend's 2007 release, TALES DON'T TELL THEMSELVES, edges closer to traditional rock territory. The emo-tinged themes are still in place, however, as are a bevy of slicing guitar riffs and pummeling thunder from the rhythm section, but the Welsh quintet are clearly re-defining themselves here. Still, even though these young rockers occasionally trade screamo for orchestration (there are string sections on tunes like "Raise the Sail" and "Sweetest Wave"), they play with punk's intent and conviction.
Funeral for a Friend: Gareth Davies, Ryan Richards, Darran Smith, Kris Coombs Roberts, Matthew Davies .
Additional personnel: Lianne Francis (vocals); Emma Welton, Laura Melhuish, Juliet Snell, Liz Partdrige, Katherine Shave, Claire Thompson, Jayne Harris, Joan Atherton, Fenella Barton, Boguslaw Kostecki, Ann Mordee, Robert Salter (violin); Jane Atkins, Peter Collyer, Peter Lale, Sue Dench (viola); Ann Lines, Harry Napier, Nick Cooper , Andrew Fuller (cello); Richard Bissell, Richard Watkins (French horn); Elizabeth Bradley, Corin Long (bass guitar); Luis Jardim (cowbells); Nigel Thomas (timpani); Heather Cairncross, Jacqueline Barron, Clare Henry, Andrew Butler, Helen Rathbone, Gerard O'Beirne, Micaela Haslam, Amanda Morrison (background vocals); Audrey Riley.
Alternative Press (p.152) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "[I]t's a dramatic departure from the band's name-making discography; one that suggests they're ready to not only rock the boat, but eardrums and expectations, too." Tales Don't Tell Themselves Music | List Price | $13.97 (You save $1.48) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, Pop, Heavy Metal, Alternative | | Label | Atlantic | | Orig Year | 2007 | | All Time Sales Rank | 67918  | | CD Universe Part number | 7425567 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | May 15, 2007 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Gil Norton | | Engineer | Steve Price; Richard Matthews; Adrian Bushby; John Dunne; Matt Bartran; Simon Dawson; Helen Atkinson | | Recording Time | 40 minutes | | Personnel | Peter Lale, Boguslaw Kostecki, Richard Watkins, Luis Jardim, Katherine Shave, Audrey Riley, Laura Melhuish, Heather Cairncross, Sue Dench, Fenella Barton, Nigel Thomas, Jacqueline Barron, Nick Cooper, Jane Atkins, Jane Atkins, Corin Long, Peter Collyer, Robert Salter, Gerard OBeirne, Micaela Haslam, Richard Bissell, Andrew Butler, Andrew Fuller, Andrew Fuller, Ann Lines, Claire Thompson, Clare Henry, Harry Napier, Helen Rathbone, Jayne Harris, Juliet Snell, Lianne Francis, Amanda Morrison, Elizabeth Bradley, Emma Welton, Joan Atherton, Joan Atherton, Peter Collyer, Ann Mordee, Liz Partdrige |
Funeral For A Friend Tales Don't Tell Themselves Songs Tales Don't Tell Themselves Music Review Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)   main stream went towards main stream. its not funeral for a friend. missing songs like juneau and rookie of the year Submitted by zwarts_2good4u (New Zealand) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Impressive! It seems that bands that used to scream are leaning more towards singing. I think that it's the best logical move and it shows in this new cd. I'm not only impressed with Funeral For a Friend, but also Atreyu's new album that came out this year, too. Although, Atreyu made a smart move, Funeral For a Friend's album is better. Maybe bands like The Chariot will smarten up. . .probably not. Submitted by Nick "flea" (Grand Forks, ND, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Great Awesome cd,,diffrent form the last ones, not as much screaming. It has a lot of meaning behind the words,,great cd I would recommend getting it Submitted by gordonrboyer (Anchorage, Alaska) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
I'm not a big fan of their earlier records I'm taking aim that this is a natural progression that sets them far apart from Hours. It's better than Hours probably due to that there's a concept involved behind in this outing. This is nice if you are also interested in digging some Story of the Year and Taking Back Sunday that similarly strike close to this vein in their music. How conceiving, indeed! Submitted by Hmmm (Edmonton, Alberta, CANADA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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$110.59 Recorded between 1963 & 2003. Includes liner notes by Peter Doggett.
This box is a difficult thing to recommend, good -- no, make that great -- though it is. Partly, that's because it's almost too much of a great thing for most Hollies fans -- if they don't mind paying $120 for the six-CD U.K. import set, but most listeners aren't capitalized that way. And it does have its shortcomings, despite its cost. In contrast to, say, Crossroads by Eric Clapton, or Dreams by the Allman Brothers, it isn't where one could start listening to the Hollies -- there's too much that's not here, including "Bus Stop," and "Look Through Any Window." The shortcomings are understandable in a way, because between EMI in England, Sony Music in America (which still controls the Hollies classic sides from between 1966 and 1973 in that market), and sub-licensors like Disky in Holland, the Hollies may be the most heavily anthologized '60s British group this side of the Who; what to include, and how far to overlap existing collections become major problems, and they seem to have limited the hits to those that are biographically important in the band's history. such as "He Ain't Heavy He's My Brother," which re-established them commercially after Graham Nash's departure, or "Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress," which precipitated a major personnel crisis. Even with that limitation, there's almost too much here, at 136 tracks spanning 40 years. Disc One is certain to appeal to all of the group's fans, opening in 1963 with the first three tracks they ever recorded, the jangling "Hey, What's Wrong With Me," "Ain't That Just Like Me," and the achingly beautiful ballad "Whole World Over," only one of which has made extensive appearances in the decades since. Then things start jumping around in some pleasing and unexpected ways, between singles and album tracks that do showcase the many sides of the group's sound -- the selection of tracks does perhaps shine the spotlight on Tony Hicks' guitars a little more prominently than they would be with a totally random sampling, but, then, he was always the group's secret weapon; the B-sides with which the group graced British audiences, including "Keep Off That Friend of Mine," "Baby That's All," and "Come on Back," are some of the best songs ...
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