Kasabian - Kasabian - Album Review

Floyd

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Staff member
Kasabian were the surprise hit of the British summer festivals, playing just about anywhere that would have them and taking the crowds by storm. Hailed as the new Oasis by more people than I care to count, all UK music industry eyes were on this band as they released their debut LP, which flew into the chart at #7. This is a band that can do no wrong; surrounded by a degree of mystery, represented by a mysterious logo and the simple slogan join the movement. This band have done everything from playing a guerrilla gig in the Cabinet War Room to slagging off The Darkness, and for once the media hype surrounding the band is fully justified because Kasabian are truly fantastic.

As a side note, their name is taken from one Linda Kasabian, a former lover of Charles Mansons, who testified against him at his trial.

Kasabian are:

Tom Meighan lead vocals

Sergio Pizzorno lead guitar

Chris Edwards bassist

Christopher Karloff drums

This album fairly explodes into life with the mega-anthem Club Foot. A work of atmospheric, pounding art this was the song that started all the hype many months ago. Hypnotic vocals, a driving rhythm and some crazy synthesisers make this song a serious contender for any Track of the Year award. This is a song that if it catches you in the right mood can leave you breathless and exhilarated. Worth checking out by just about anybody.


We then move on to Processed Beats and Reason Is Treason, another couple of radio-friendly yet inventive songs that sets up this bands highly distinctive sound. You can see where all the Stone Roses comparisons are coming from, but somehow Kasabian turn their influences into something fresh and fascinating. These two songs are more accessible than Club Foot but no less well-crafted. Great for singing along to and dancing. Reason Is Treason is a proper foot-tapper as well.

After that, the album delves into slightly more experimental territory. Distorted vocals, electronica-influenced rhythms and many synthesisers add a lot to their sound without making them sound over-produced. On the contrary, the album is very real sounding and has a very home-grown talent feel to it, in the best possible way.

LSF is another great single catchy, mesmerising and has got just that little bit of funk about it. 5 full tracks, 5 fantastic songs so far. The in-your-face catchiness dissipates slightly by the time we get to Running Battle but that does not detract from the song, it merely draws you in deeper to Kasabians cleverly constructed web of hooks and hypnotism. Test Transmission lives up to its name, you really dont hear a lot of this played on British radio these days, however influenced you think this band are.

The interludes, Orange and Pinch Roller are nice and really flow with the rest of the album, rather than being just wastes of space as is so often the case.

The band chills out a little as they play Cutt Off, the next single, the beat is still insistent but noticeably calmer and the vocals are almost happy, an emotion that doesnt really go in to the album. I especially dig the instrumental section of this song, seems an indication of where this band could go next.

The last three tracks are possibly slightly weaker than the rest of the album, but if they were put on weaker albums they could well be flagship singles. They make interesting and pleasant listening and the quality of musicianship remains at the same standard as the rest of the album, which is competent but not extraordinary, although very well suited to what they are trying to create.

The reworking of Reason Is Treason at the end of the album in the form of a hidden track is a decent remix, although you probably wont end up listening to it on every play of the album. It reminds you how great the original was and does add something to track, but its not exceptional.

Pros:

Some truly fantastic tracks

Great overall feel to the album and it does sound like one piece of work

A lot of freshness and excitement in the record

A good quality, interesting sound

Club Foot all by itself

Cons:

Band don't quite keep their original high standard of song-writing up for the whole album

Debatably quite a heavily influenced album

Summary:

Worth a look if you'e interested in indie rock, Britrock and new talent. A great debut album, I for one cannot wait to see what this promising band do next.


Tracklist for Kasabian:

1. Club Foot

2. Processed Beats

3. Reason Is Treason

4. ID

5. Orange (Interlude)

6. LSF (Lost Souls Forever)

7. Running Battle

8. Transmission

9. Pinch Roller (Interlude)

10. Cutt Off

11. Butcher Blues

12. Ovary Stripe

13. 14U Boat

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