What's Not To Love?
What's Not to Love? is the fifth studio album by British band The Nightingales. The mini-album was recorded in January 2007 in Birmingham.[1] Along with five original songs, the album contains a cover version of the Murray Wecht composition "Drummer Man", originally recorded by Nancy Sinatra.
What's Not to Love? | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 2007 | |||
Recorded | 27-28 January 2007 | |||
Genre | Alternative, rock | |||
Label | Caroline True Records | |||
Producer | Bob Lamb & The Nightingales | |||
The Nightingales chronology | ||||
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Track listing
- "Plenty of Spare" – 4:52
- "Eleven Fingers" – 2:24
- "Bang Out of Order" – 5:18
- "Drummer Man" – 3:33
- "Overreactor" – 3:02
- "Wot No Blog?" – 4:03
Reception
Dave Hoffman of PopMatters rated the album 4/10 stars and called it "completely forgettable".[2] Jennifer Kelly of Dusted Magazine was more positive writing All six songs are killers and It's too complicated to be punk, too hard and fast to be anything else...maybe it's time for the Nightingales to invent their own genre.[3]
gollark: Basically nobody 100 years ago, as far as I'm aware, got much about now right, except possibly vague trends.
gollark: Or just fission, which isn't technically renewable but good enough.
gollark: So nuclear?
gollark: My problem with somewhat far-future predictions is that technology and stuff seems to typically develop in ways people don't expect.
gollark: KSP probably does way more work simulating your rockets.
References
- What's Not to Love? (CD Cover). Caroline True Records. 2007. CTRUE5.
- Hoffman, Dave (2007-07-29). "The Nightingales: Whats Not To Love?". PopMatters. Retrieved 2014-04-20.
- Kelly, Jennifer. "Dusted Reviews: The Nightingales - What's Not To Love?". Dusted. Dusted Magazine. Retrieved 17 May 2018.
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