a free copy of "Norgaard (Live)" right now!
2011, Columbia
"The Vaccines' debut album will blast away any cynicism, because it's just too damn good to be sniffy about. It bristles with the unerring ease and confidence that all the best debuts possess. You sense it in the way 'If You Wanna' opens with a shotgun drum intro that recalls 'I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor'; 'Blow It Up' works with the simplest of materials – just three glassy guitar notes – and ascends until singer Justin Young's voice shreds with the effort. But this is more than just galloping indie-disco fodder. There's a deep well of gloom to Young's baritone croon that belies his clod-hopping onstage demeanour. Songs like 'Post Break-Up Sex' and 'A Lack Of Understanding' ("I've got too much time on my hands/But you don't understand") brood on the futility of casual relationships. There's something quite Morrissey-like about the way he sings about sex, as though it's an alien world.
It's the work of a band who in theory push all the wrong buttons: they're posh, their singer lurches about like Frankenstein's monster, they have nothing to say in interviews – but who are redeemed by the simple brilliance of their songs. The Vaccines' debut does a wonderful thing – it reminds you that guitar music still works. Hurtling Libs-y choruses can still alter your body chemistry, make you want to wade recklessly into a moshpit, chase a girl, shove your best friend round a dancefloor. It's the sound of youth. It's not shameful or old hat, or worn out or exhausted. It's indie rock, and The Vaccines do it better than any young British band has done in years." - NME
It's the work of a band who in theory push all the wrong buttons: they're posh, their singer lurches about like Frankenstein's monster, they have nothing to say in interviews – but who are redeemed by the simple brilliance of their songs. The Vaccines' debut does a wonderful thing – it reminds you that guitar music still works. Hurtling Libs-y choruses can still alter your body chemistry, make you want to wade recklessly into a moshpit, chase a girl, shove your best friend round a dancefloor. It's the sound of youth. It's not shameful or old hat, or worn out or exhausted. It's indie rock, and The Vaccines do it better than any young British band has done in years." - NME
Customer Reviews




