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Post by Lennon2217 on May 17, 2014 21:32:12 GMT -5
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Post by Shockmaster on May 20, 2014 6:25:51 GMT -5
That's how it's officially spelt... And none of the tracks are capitalised, either... So, it's (shive), bumblebeee, stevie, etc etc Oh, and Serge is in NME this week with some knobhead. http://instagram.com/p/oBwpKtInK0 I'm surprised we never got an in depth album review from you Tom. That's easier said than done... You're listening to your favourite band's new album for the first time, a month and a half in advance, at Abbey Road, with free drinks, and the band are there... It's all a bit too hard to take in. Put it this way... It's fucking massive.
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Post by lahaine on May 20, 2014 15:42:13 GMT -5
I like that they are stepping away from the Geezer rock route, the greatest crime Oasis did for British Music was been dumb and a bit leery which many British rock bands took up , Noel aside anyway. I like what I'm hearing right now nothing amazing but enjoyable, still think their greatest album will be a live album. They are far too patchy.
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Post by dazza07 on May 21, 2014 3:34:43 GMT -5
Kasabian Tickets in Plymouth June 17th = ✔
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Post by ManofMisery on May 21, 2014 10:46:12 GMT -5
Was at their gig in Kilmarnock last night, up there with the best. Bring on Victoria Park.
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Post by oasisserbia on May 21, 2014 11:01:11 GMT -5
idiot.
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Post by kingcrawler on May 22, 2014 18:55:36 GMT -5
They were incredible in Dunfermline tonight, even allowing for the sound cutting out halfway through Shoot the Runner. Best I've seen them, the new songs sounded brilliant live, Bumblebeee especially.
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Post by shinealight on May 23, 2014 2:39:19 GMT -5
We'll see once we hear the album. I have a feeling Serge writes tunes that suits him more than actually for Tom to sing....
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Post by AbsoluteBeginner23 on May 24, 2014 11:53:55 GMT -5
Just back from the Kasabian gig in Dundee, absolutely insane.
Incredible atmosphere. Top top night.
Well worth losing my shoe!
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Post by deasy on May 25, 2014 4:56:25 GMT -5
Judging by the tracks I've heard so far (bumbleebeee, eez-eh, stevie, treat, beanz), I think this album will be a large improvement from Velociraptor
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Post by Beady’s Here Now on May 25, 2014 12:55:42 GMT -5
When, exactly, does this fucker actually get released?
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Post by jaq515 on May 25, 2014 13:11:31 GMT -5
2 weeks tomorrow? Strange non build up they must be confident it's an amazing album to do the business itself?
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Post by jordan71421 on May 25, 2014 16:20:39 GMT -5
Really excited for it now that I've heard songs like Stevie, Treat, and Bumblebee. Damn it's gonna be a good album
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seanraff07
Madferrit Fan
He's gonna find ya, he's gonna kill ya, he's gonna eat ya
Posts: 60
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Post by seanraff07 on May 26, 2014 13:48:02 GMT -5
Seen them in Dunfermline on Thursday, would put it in my top 3 gigs I've ever been to and I've been to a fair few.
They were honestly unreal, already seen them a couple times and know how good they are live but this was something else. They have so many ideal songs for gigs, that will get the crowd bouncing. Bring on Leicester next month!
Also found this video of them playing Treat in Dundee:
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Post by Lennon2217 on May 27, 2014 15:53:17 GMT -5
NME's First Impressions.................
This is it. This is the big one. Kasabian might've had a tiny bit of their Glastonbury headliner thunder stolen when the world's media suddenly went, "Look over there! Metallica!" but the Leicester titans will be the ones showing off new material to the masses on the farm, and it's a gilt-edged chance to stamp their baggy rock seal on the scene. Tom Meighan and Serge Pizzorno have talked the talk for years – often, in their unmissable interviews, with hilarious results – but now it's time to swagger the swagger too. '48:13' has a high concept. It's 48 minutes and 13 seconds long. Actually, Serge'll be disappointed to hear that the annoying gaps between tracks on record label streams push it over the 49-minute mark, but with any luck you'll witness the full dazzling effect when you pop the CD in the tray. On the more artistic side, we're to expect "evolution", "experimentation" and – according to Tom – a general feel of "less is more". Less is more? Kasabian? We'll see about that. Here are our first impressions of the album, out on June 9. '(Shiva)'
A buzz of static, some tentative trickles of synth, rising and rising into… actually, this is Serge trying to nudge the running time up to 48:13, isn't it? Classic 70-second intro shenanigans. 'Bumblebee'
'Bumblebee' bursts out of 'Shiva' with pounding drums and an addictive "yeah yeah yeah (yeah yeah yeah etc)" chant. "I'm in ecstasy," yells Tom over a loping groove and chunky Led Zep-a-like riffing, and he's not really on about a natural euphoria. "I fight off robots and the men in the suits," he adds before Serge sallies forth with a bagpipe guitar solo. This is a churning, muscular gig opener. 'Stevie'
"And all the kids they say/Live to fight another day," is the rallying cry as Tom hoists Serge up onto his shoulders – it's probably safer the other way around, to be honest – and la revolution lives. Switching from urgent low strings and parping brass to a quick dirty riff, 'Stevie' is a bit of a thriller, as Kasabian grasp the nettle and make a mockery of all that talk about a "stripped back" sound. '(Mortis)'
Adding another 47 seconds to that tally, 'Mortis' is a ghostly sliver of desert blues brightened up by a tinkling music box and dreamy murmurs. A breather before the havoc really starts. 'Doomsday'
Fairground psychosis here, with wobbly Wurlitzer sounds, like early Horrors jolted out of their goth-rock drone. It's a fidgety skank, afflicted with St Vitus' dance and a trumpet solo. "The dead will never be alive," declares Tom, denying the zombie apocalypse with an injection of pure truth. 'Treat'
With a bassline from somewhere east of Grandmaster Flash & Melle Mel's 'White Lines', 'Treat' is rough, tough motorik funk with muezzin call synths and Tom's claim: "Everybody knows I work it/Work it like a treat". It's hard to argue with that. This is an 'ave it anthem, with a namecheck for Leicester and the stones to change tack halfway and become a techno-rock epic. It's got a flavour of Super Furry Animals' extended 'The Man Don't Give A Fuck' mentalism, with perhaps a more prog feel to the spiraling synths. Prog, funk, techno, rawk – might as well, eh? 'Glass'
Pizzorno does Lennon's spacey 'Tomorrow Never Knows' drawl on a tripped-out track washed with vwormy (technical term) electronics and, um, 'phat' beats. Its narcotised detachment doesn't hide the political bent though: "When did we stop believing?" asks guest poet Suli Breaks at the end, "You're taught to remain a hamster on a wheel/Until you run out of energy". Kicking against the pricks without voting UKIP. 'Explodes'
A pummel of beats and pizzicato synths invite us into what sounds like a Russian folk song performed by Gary Numan's Tubeway Army. And if that was the intention, then hats off. It's grim in mood, odd and unsettling, a bad trip. "On and on it goes/'Til my head explodes," Tom intones blankly before the synths go interstellar Bladerunner prog again. Or a bit Flash Gordon. It's a fine line. '(Levitation)'
Eighty seconds of Spanish guitar curlicues and a repeated desire to levitate "in the machine". It's kind of blissed out. Might contain castanets. 'Clouds'
For one note, 'Clouds' sounds as if it it's going to go early Simple Minds on our asses – well, if it's good enough for The Horrors (again) – then an aggressive throb rises and Tom picks up a loudhailer to describe a jaunt to the shopping centre. Just when you think we're in a beatless dreamland again, in kick the drums for a piledriving psych-rock chorus, an immediate earworm. Then it's all wobbly electro bass and angelic vocoder crescendos, like an untranquilised Air. ' Eezeh' The single, the legend, the ineffable truth. "Every day is brutal now we're being watched by Google," is the refrain on a characteristically bananas Kasabian stomp that splices Madness and rave to leave us scratching our heads and wondering, "Why in Hades did no one think of this before?" Nutty dancing to the top of the charts. 'Bow'
The siren synth riff on this sounds a mite like My Bloody Valentine's 'Soon' for all you noise-devoted ageing shoegazers out there. Then Tom sings, "Are you kidding? This is mental," and we remember where we are. Actually, 'Bow', despite its splashy crashing beats, is glum and regretful. "Nothing lasts forever… It's all over now!" is the wail before big meaningful statements give way to big meaningful guitars. 'S.P.S.'
A dab of prettiness to close. It's a comfy, country strum with the sort of cooing harmonies that wouldn't disgrace a Crosby, Stills & Nash song, as the boys look back on a splendid night: "Didn't we all have such a good time?/I know there's time for one more song/Let's play at paper scissors stone". Possibly a euphemism there. Alexis Taylor sings about paper scissors stone on his new solo album too, so it's clearly a thing right now. Nothing else is going to unite Hot Chip and Kasabian, let's face it. Read more at www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/kasabian-nmes-first-impressions-of-new-album-4813#a6mcJWFJXoZQK0gy.99
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Post by Swarfiga on May 28, 2014 5:27:10 GMT -5
Here's a preview of all the songs from the new album:
I have to say that it sounds pretty good. I'm little more relaxed now after I've heard these previews, cause I didn't liked Eez-Eh or Bumblebee when I heard them for the first time. All though, they've grown on me a bit. Glad I've pre-ordered the signed version of the album.
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Post by beentherenow on May 28, 2014 5:40:24 GMT -5
I should like Kasabian more than I do,
I first saw them in Sept 2003 supporting the The Cooper Temple Clause in Birmingham and then saw them again in early 2004 supporting Chikinki at Lichfield Garrick (which holds about 250 people) back when I thought it was pronounced Kaz-a-buy-an so I was there pretty early on
I really liked their first album but the 2nd one did nothing for me. Therefore I was late getting the 3rd because I thought I'd be shit. A mate recommended it and I'm glad he did because it was decent (not as good as some make out but very good). Again however the 4th did nothing for me, so here we are,
I think they've done one great album, one very good album and the others are a bit meh. I don't get excited when I hear a tour or a new album which I should do because they seem great lads and a decent band in an age of mediocrity and they're Leicester boys but there's something missing
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Post by jordan71421 on May 28, 2014 7:44:59 GMT -5
I have a feeling this is gonna be my favorite album of the year, it sounds amazing
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Post by RUBIKON on May 28, 2014 8:55:19 GMT -5
Sounds like they've made there best album since their debut!! All the clips sounds quality. Especially 'Doomsday', 'Clouds' and 'Bow'.
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Post by Shockmaster on May 28, 2014 13:35:24 GMT -5
This is gonna be the big one, honestly.
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Post by kingcrawler on May 28, 2014 16:53:27 GMT -5
Trying not to form too much of an opinion on those previews, but nothing else on it sounds as dull as Explodes which is good. The rest of it sounds pretty decent, but I'll wait until the album comes out and I see most of the new songs live before deciding how good the album will be. Looking forward to it being released.
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Post by kingcrawler on May 29, 2014 9:30:03 GMT -5
Two new songs tonight, Bow's being played on XFM and Bumblebeee's on Zane Lowe at 7:30.
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retrolego
Oasis Roadie
Walking to the sound of my favorite tune
Posts: 279
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Post by retrolego on May 29, 2014 20:29:30 GMT -5
Bumblebeee
Bow
Bow is nailed on to be used by the BBC as the music behind a montage after England are knocked out the World Cup.
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Post by Cast on May 29, 2014 23:46:56 GMT -5
I like that they are stepping away from the Geezer rock route, the greatest crime Oasis did for British Music was been dumb and a bit leery which many British rock bands took up , Noel aside anyway. I like what I'm hearing right now nothing amazing but enjoyable, still think their greatest album will be a live album. They are far too patchy. Oasis had there fair share of big dumb moments, but Kasabian poses as a "serious experimental" band. Oasis never tried to be something that they were not. Kasabian try to be outside the box so much but really they are just a bunch of lads who make big dumb danceable music. "John was a scientist, he was hooked on LSD, Interested in mind control and how the monkey held the key" Really dumb but love that song. They need to get away from the lad rock but they don't need to masquerade as a "revolutionary" band which Serge and Tom do all the time.
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Post by Lennon2217 on May 30, 2014 8:30:17 GMT -5
I think I like Bow more than Bumblebee.
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