Employment

Employment

Product Type: Music

Product Price: $9.98

Manufacturer: Umvd Labels

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Description

Sometimes the greatest success stories sprout from the tiniest of ambitions. When Kaiser Chiefs formed up in Leeds around the summer of 2003, their aim wasn't to conquer stadiums and change the world. Instead, these five Britpop-obsessed oddballs began plotting a rather more modest plan. In the shadowy corners of clubs and venues across the city Ricky Wilson (lead vocals, owner of stylish blue and orange suit), Andrew 'Whitey' White (guitar), Simon Rix (bass), Nick 'Peanut' Baines (keyboards and modeller of impressive pork-pie hats) and Nick Hodgson (drums and vocals) decided to form a band that would harness the awesome capability of being able to blag an early slot at the following year's Leeds Festival.

The Kaisers' story actually begins some time before they'd decided to name themselves after a successful South African football team. School friends Simon, Peanut and Nick had been playing together in various bands since the age of 15 before spying art school graduate and restless-ball-of-energy Ricky singing with a Rolling Stones tribute band.

Right now, everybody wants a piece of the Kaiser Chiefs. Blur producer Stephen Street was so bowled over he offered his services for debut album Employment. A barrage of bouncing art-pop brilliance, it's scheduled to soundtrack 2005 from the minute it hits stereos this March.

Is it too early for a Britpop revival? Not on the watch of Leeds quintet Kaiser Chiefs, who just a decade after the release of Blur's scene-making 1994 album, Parklife, offer a striking follow-up. They've hired the same producer--Stephen Street. They've studied the same influences--the Buzzcocks, the Jam, the Kinks. They've even picked up the same English slice-of-life themes--"I wanna wear my clothes tight/Matching jackets and a fistful of notes/New sneakers and a fresh pack of smokes," goes "Saturday Night." The resulting album, Employment, is just as catchy and captivating as you might expect, swinging from the stormy social commentary of "I Predict A Riot" to the shouty insouciance of "Oh My God." A Trainspotting sequel can't be far off. --Aidin Vaziri

Reviews

Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-07-20
Summary: "great cd"

This is the first kaiser chiefs album I have bought. I actually found it as a recomendation from amazon. I listened to the samples and tried it. I was plesantly supprised. It is a very good album. There are a couple of songs I don't like as much, but most of it is very catchy, and reminds me of the Kinks.


Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2009-11-11
Summary: "Oh My God (I can't believe it!)"

This band, like Interpol, was cool to me at first, a British indie-rock style with a few catchy songs. However after buying this CD I haven't listened to it more than a couple of times. Some of the songs are downright annoying and stupid, while the rest have repetitive lyrics and seem to be trying to copy British 60's pop music. A few of the songs are OK, including "Modern Way", but it's a very forgettable album and I see this band forgotten in ten years or so. Buy a Blur album instead.


Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2009-11-05
Summary: "More filler than killer"

A couple of songs are well known and great fun, but there isn't a lot of creativity here.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2008-06-25
Summary: "Sweep Me Up"

I don't know where I was when this album came out but Kaiser Chiefs were sweeping the Brit Awards the year I watched it and after catching their performance of "I Predict A Riot" I realized I simply had to have this CD, so I bought it and you know what? I frickin' love it! It's one of the best CDs I've ever heard. The opening chords of the 80s synth on "Everyday I Love You Less & Less" and then going into "I Predict A Riot", the album just gets better and better with each listen.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2008-05-31
Summary: "Employment"

I recently purchased the new Kaiser Chiefs CD "Employment". I thought it was excellent. I enjoyed every track on the album, especially "Modern Way", "Caroline, Yes", "Oh My God", and, of course, "I Predict A Riot". This was the first CD from the Kaiser Chiefs I have bought and I would recommend it to everyone.