Arctic Monkeys “Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not” (2006)
I remember first encountering Arctic Monkeys via their video for “I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor”
and not being impressed. From vocalists Alex Turner’s intro “Arctic
Monkeys... don’t believe the hype” (it just seemed like a humble brag,
like ‘yeah there’s hype around us, but we’re like whatever’) to the
throwback 1970s garage-rock style they were playing and the accompanying
lo-fi late 70s/early-80s retro look to their Strokes-esque performance
video. It all smacked of effort masquerading as ‘we don’t care’.
The songs worked their way under my skin though, and the song “Teddy
Picker” from their second album
really turned my opinion of them around, and I eventually embraced this
album.
While it is less diverse than their later releases, and is definitely
in that retro, garage-revival vein, with guitar ranging from trebly-and-jangly to distorted-and-raucous; there’s lots to recommend the album.
Whether it’s the propulsive punky energy of “I Bet You Look Good on the
Dancefloor”, the lazy funky groove of “Fake Tales of San Francisco” or
the speedy, tight arrangement and zingy lyrics of “You Probably Couldn’t
See for the Lights but You Were Staring Straight at Me”. Alex Turner
would improve in leaps and bounds as a lyricist but "When the Sun Goes Down" was already a great narrative and some good word-smithing.
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