Repulsion Box

Repulsion Box Artist: Sons & Daughters
Label: Domino
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Format: Import
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


EAN: 5034202015529
ASIN: B0008F111E


Release Date: 2005-06-09

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Listmania:

  1. 2005, Get Off of My Face!!!
  2. Best of 2005...for now

Tracks:

  1. Medicine
  2. Red Receiver
  3. Hunt
  4. Dance Me In
  5. Choked
  6. Taste the Last Girl
  7. Monsters
  8. Rama Lama
  9. Royally Used
  10. Gone

Similar Items:

  1. Love the Cup

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars No "Repulsion".......2005-11-23

Sons and Daughters have performed with some pretty big names in indie rock, with Decemberists, the Fiery Furnaces and fellow Scots Franz Ferdinand. But aside from sharing stages, these bands don't really have anything much in common.

In fact, Sons and Daughters don't really sound like, well, any other rock band that's around at the moment. Instead they try something unique: combining the rhythms of punk and folk, resulting in the a gloriously dark debut album, "Repulsion Box."

It opens with a trashy drum solo, which is quickly joined by some sputtering bass and razor-sharp electric guitar. "Then I cannot feel my body and I'm floating then I'm drowned/And nothing I have taken keeps it down /It's a riiiide," Adele Bethel rapid-fires, sounding like an ingenue who's gotten mean after downing a few whiskeys.

And once the final explosive chords of "Medicine" have faded away, the album doesn't slow down. Okay, it slows down for exactly one song, a slow-burning rocker, before exploding into slow-burning rock, dancerock that puts trendier competitors to shame, and swirling punk set to earthy traditional rhythms. Result: both ominous and entertaining.

Okay, it's a pretty short album, clocking in at only about half an hour. I do wish they had tacked on a few more songs -- but then again, better a short good album than a lesser, longer one. And whatever it lacks in length, "Repulsion Box" makes up for in punch and energy. There's a purity to their music; no jumping onto trends or bandwagons, no filler songs.

Anyone who has heard Celtic folk will recognize the jiggy rhythms that make you want to dance, with handclaps, whistling and references to banshees. But this is not cheery music, with its sparsely-worded lyrics about broken love affairs and a woman drowned in the tub. It's ominous and rough, and it makes you feel that way even as you tap your feet to it.

This is also one of those bands that harmonizes male and female vocals. Bethel is paired with guitarist Scott Paterson, who usually does backing harmony. But occasionally bursts out with a brogued croon (or a snarl), "Monogamy to you it seems is just black and blue/All the best psychotic lovers ain't got nothing on you!" Yep, their burrs are intact, for people who like the accents untouched.

"Repulsion Box" is the ideal fusion of punk hellraising and traditional catchiness, resulting in dark, intense music that doesn't let up for a second.

5 out of 5 stars Short and brutal - quite perfect!.......2005-06-28

The first thing I will tell you is that 'The Repulsion Box' is just ten songs and 31 minutes long. It is not intended as a warning as the second thing I will say about it is that, from the opening drum beat of 'Medicine' to the sudden final chord of 'Gone', it is as near perfect as any album I have heard.
In a way that bands of this genre are so often not (and it is an just an observation, not a criticism) Sons and Daughters have a crystal-clear touch to their sound and it somehow makes the songs seem much longer than they actually are. Few albums manage the focus of The Repulsion Box and no doubt all the influences were put into the equation but ultimately, when it came to making the journey, absolutely everything that was not strictly necessary was left behind. The result is influenced but nothing more and the band wrote the whole lot so it is highly original and done to perfection. Quite amazingly six tracks attain completeness in less than three minutes, so there are no self-indulgent ramblings. This is straight-talking music! The longest track, Rama Lama, which seems to involve almost endless twists and turns, is however only just over 5 minutes long!
The vocals are mainly by Adele Bethel, with backing by Scott Paterson, though that is not really a fair reflection of the way it works because they also alternate vocals in several songs and this works to spectacular effect; it is something that makes Sons and Daughters really stand out and it develops as the album progresses.

The album starts with the rather upbeat 'Medicine' but the rot sets in emotionally, not musically, with 'Red Receiver' which is excellent. 'Dance Me In' is incredibly catchy and the band saves some of its heaviest work for this song but the band is so good that you often almost don't notice it because it is perfectly in tune with the music. It reaches an apogee in 'Monsters', one of my favourite tracks on the album, when Adele at her petulant best issues an ultimatum of love gone-badly-wrong, only to be answered by Scott who gets to sing one of the best knock-back lyrics:

Monogamy for you it seems is just black and blue.
All the best psychotic lovers ain't got nothing on you!

The next track is 'Rama Lama', as mentioned above, and another case in point before finishing with 'Royally Used' and 'Gone'. Beyond that there is little more to say. It is just 31 minutes of sheer brilliance!

4 out of 5 stars I knew this was going to be a good one!.......2005-06-27

This album is fantastic. After last years EP (Love the Cup), I had a strong feeling about this band.
They do the common guy/girl vocals but it fits perfectly.
They twist folk/punk/rock/alt. pop all into one solid rhythm. The lyrics are dark and destructive. Much of the writing is about betrayal or being fed-up with someone once close to you.
I'm guessing it will be years before this band does a bland album.
You can watch them live on www.xfm.co.uk opening up for the Fiery Furnaces (I suggest listening/watching both shows)

5 out of 5 stars At least as good as "Love the Cup" if not better.......2005-06-19

If you enjoyed their previous album, "Love the Cup," you should enjoy this. This is a fantastic album. You can compare Sons and Daughters to other bands like Franz Ferdinand and The Futureheads, but the fact remains that they have their own unique sound and I don't get any of that "phony" vibe from them that I get from most of the new pseudo-garage/new wave bands that are proliferating now. Sons and Daughters are for real.

Note: At this time this CD is available in the US only as an import. Save some time and money and order directly from amazon.co.uk rather than waiting for amazon.com to import it for you. You'll get it much quicker and save a lot of money.

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