Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
The Maccabees
Colour It In
The Maccabees:  Colour It In Tell a Friend about this album

$6.99
Listen

Album Review

Released: 2007
Label: Geffen
Selection #: 171540
New wave/post-punk hip-shakers w/dual-guitar attack. About Your Dress, Precious Time, First Love, All In Your Rows, Toothpaste Kisses, Lego, etc.
Listen RM WM
1 X-Ray
2 All in Your Rows
3 Latchmere
4 About Your Dress
5 Precious Time
6 O.A.V.I.P.
7 Tissue Shoulders
8 Happy Faces
9 First Love
10 Mary
11 Lego
12 Toothpaste Kisses
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

Futureheads fans beware. There's someone else threatening to take away the title of best harmony singing, guitar-wielding band in town: the Maccabees. The five-member Brighton (by way of South London) group use the same angularly warm riffs, pounding guitars, occasional background yelping, and quick, syncopated, catchy melodies that brought stardom to the Futureheads (and, to a lesser extent, Bloc Party and Interpol, both of whose influences can also be heard here), and while they don't necessarily add much more of their own to the formula on their debut full-length, "Colour It In", (the few bars of harmonica on the fantastic "Latchmere" don't count), they follow it well enough that it doesn't really matter. Lead singer Orlando Weeks has a wonderfully animated voice -- moving from pained and annoyed in "Tissue Shoulder" to smitten in the rolling "About Your Dress" to dramatic and emotional in the poppy "O.A.V.I.P." -- rich and just a little rough, which keeps the fact that the chords, the arrangements, and the rhythms of the album are all rather similar a show of strength, of realizing where your assets lie instead of signaling a lack of versatility. Weeks brings life and individuality to each of the songs, though, to be fair, his bandmates' bright arpeggios, sharp like broken glass, sixteenth-note, tom-filled drum lines and heavy bass don't make his job very hard. "Colour It In" bursts with vitality and youthfulness, with thick London accents and falling in love and breaking rules and simply enjoying one's self. So while the album may sound like it's been done before, it's just expressing the fact that all the things they're singing about, that all bands are singing about, really, have been done before, too. The Maccabees are in touch with the times they're living in, with the music and the energy around them, picking up on the trends they hear (i.e. the Futureheads, Dogs Die in Hot Cars) but only in a way that compliments their influences, making "Colour It In" an enjoyable, even if ephemeral, record. ~ Marisa Brown, All Music Guide

Back To Top
Shipping Is Always Free
About This Artist
Biography

Related Artists
Gang Of Four
Franz Ferdinand
The Futureheads
Bloc Party



Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC