2009, Arena Rock Recording Company
“Being touted as the future of indie music and the next big thing, by the music media is a difficult thing to live up to and the debut album by The Twang, Love It When I Feel Like This arrived in mid 2007 with a lot to prove, but after crashing into the charts at no.3, it quickly plummeted downwards. Produced by Gavin Monaghan at the Magic Garden studios in Wolverhampton it followed the pattern set by the singles Wide Awake and Either Way with lead guitarist Stuart Hartland sounding like The Edge of U2 and the jangly background guitars are The Happy Mondays circa 1989 particularly on the opening track Ice Cream Sunday and Loosely Dancing. Phil Etheridge wrote about life as he saw it from the working class streets of Birmingham with humour throughout, reminiscent of fellow Brummie Mike Skinner of The Streets, chronicling the ordinary life of lad culture, going out shopping during the day and clubbing by night. There are influences from many guitar led rock bands including Oasis, The Smiths and even Big Country on the track Push The Ghosts. Virtually all lads use swearing to emphasize their thoughts but as always it loses its impact when used to excess as on the track The Neighbour. Etheridge also showed he had an ear for a good melody on the track Don't Wait Up.” ~ Sharon Mawer, All Music Guide
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | Ice Cream Sundae |
| 2 | Wide Awake |
| 3 | The Neighbour |
| 4 | Either Way |
| 5 | Push the Ghosts |
| 6 | Reap What You Sow |
| 7 | Loosely Dancing |
| 8 | Two Lovers |
| 9 | Don't Wait Up |
| 10 | Got Me Sussed |
| 11 | Cloudy Room |
| 12 | Either Way (Streets Remix feat. Professor Green) |
| 13 | Push the Ghosts (Radio Edit) |
| 14 | Drinking in L.A. |
| 15 | Two Lovers (Mint Royale Remix) |
Customer Reviews





