A Weekend in the City (CD)
Bloc Party's newest collection of songs, A Weekend in the City, is a stunning, intense and brilliant follow-up to their celebrated debut, Silent Alarm. A Weekend in the City is inspired by lead singer Kele Okereke's interest in what he calls the living noise of a metropolis. On Weekend, the band captures every detail from the ebullient to the mundane of daily life in a modern city, and the quiet desolation that suffuses everything from commuting to casual sex, from going out on a Friday night to the long ride home near the early hours of the morning. These are songs desperate to understand the meaning that pulses under the moments of our every day; they're bursting with tension, paranoia, sadness, love, and an intense need for reasons as to how city life has become so displacing. Not since Radiohead's OK Computer has a British band explored the diseased state of modernity so completely.
| Tracklisting | |
| Disk | 1 | |
| 1 | Song For Clay (Disappear Here) |
| 2 | Hunting For Witches |
| 3 | Waiting For the 7:18 |
| 4 | The Prayer |
| 5 | Uniform |
| 6 | On |
| 7 | Where Is Home? |
| 8 | Kreuzberg |
| 9 | I Still Remember |
| 10 | Sunday |
| 11 | SRXT |
| Ben E.
- , WI, |
| Bloc Party returns with their sophomore effort. This time, the band has moved away from the dance punk of Silent Alarm, and evolved into a darker, more mature sound not unlike that of Coldplay. However, don't let that discourage you. The lyrics still speak of the desperation and feelings of youth in today's modern world, while the music tumbles around the haunting voice of leader singer Kele Okereke. Definitely a buy. | |
| Steven Berry
- Chicago, IL, USA |
| I'm still a little on the fence about this one. The album definitely shows some growth from Silent Alarm. They are expanding their sound while maintaining elements like Matt Tong's amazing frenetic drumming. However, maybe with the exception of "The Prayer" there's not a lot of big hooks, as there was on silent alarm. Still good, but needs to grow on you. | |