The Cribs (album)

The Cribs is The Cribs' debut album, released in 2004. It was recorded in 7 days in mid/late 2003 at London's Toe-Rag Studios, a vintage styled 8-track studio in the Hackney area. It was self-produced by the band with Ed Deegan engineering, all except track 9, "Tri'elle", which was culled from the band's original sessions at Fortress Studio with Chicago-based Avant-Garde musician Bobby Conn. In 2005, this record was awarded the prestigious American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) College Award. Previous winners have included Coldplay and Franz Ferdinand.

The Cribs
Studio album by
Released8 March 2004
RecordedToerag Studios, London
GenreIndie rock, garage rock, lo-fi
Length35:40
Label Wichita Recordings
Wichita/Worlds Fair
V2
Festival Mushroom Records
ProducerEd Deegan, Bobby Conn
The Cribs chronology
The Cribs
(2004)
The New Fellas
(2005)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
NME[2]
Mojo
Tiny Mix Tapes[3]
Fader(positive)[4]

Background

The band formed in 2001, and for the first few years of their existence they played small gigs in local venues. After being signed by Wichita Recordings, the band released this album in 2004. The majority of the album was recorded at the Toerag Studios in London, and were recorded and produced by Ed Deegan, although the ninth track on the album, "Tri'Elle", was produced by Bobby Conn and engineered by Gareth Parton at Fortress Studios.[5] Conn also provided backing vocals on the track. The album has a mixture of garage rock and indie rock sounds, and features Ryan Jarman on electric guitar and vocals, Gary Jarman on bass guitar and vocals, and Ross Jarman plays the drums. All other instruments on the record are played by the band members.

Track listing

All Tracks written by Gary Jarman, Ross Jarman, and Ryan Jarman

  1. "The Watch Trick" - 2:09
  2. "You Were Always The One" - 2:28
  3. "The Lights Went Out' - 2:57
  4. "You & I" - 2:44
  5. "Things You Should Be Knowing" - 2:33
  6. "Another Number" - 2:53
  7. "What About Me" - 3:00
  8. "Learning How To Fight" - 2:41
  9. "Tri'elle" - 2:41
  10. "Baby Don't Sweat" - 2:46
  11. "Direction" - 3:33
  12. "Third Outing" - 5:14
gollark: I can upload some memes from my library?
gollark: Besides, we've had the majority of gods in active containment since 1996.
gollark: They should be. Religion mostly deals with unfalsifiable vague claims and "faith", which is basically the opposite of empiricism.
gollark: Declining religion.
gollark: Sure. Although it's still hard to distinguish whether that's a "science" thing or a "weird societal factors" thing.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.