| Baby 81 |  | Artist: Black Rebel Motorcycle Club Label: Red Int / Red Ink Category: Music
List Price: $13.98 Buy New: $3.50 as of 6/4/2012 15:06 EDT details You Save: $10.48 (75%)
New (32) Used (30) from $0.61
Seller: TRSOne Sales Rank: 44,144
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 8 3 00703802 UPC: 886970380225 EAN: 0886970380225 ASIN: B000NVIXPA
Release Date: May 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | BLACK REBEL MOTORCYCLE CLUB BABY 81 |
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| Tracks:
| • | Took Out a Loan | | • | Berlin | | • | Weapon of Choice | | • | Window | | • | Cold Wind | | • | It's Not What You Wanted | | • | 666 Conducer | | • | All You Do is Talk | | • | Lien on Your Dreams | | • | Need Some Air | | • | Killing the Light | | • | American X | | • | Am I Only |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description UK pressing of the 2007 release from Black Rebel Motorcycle Club features one bonus track: 'The Likes Of You'. BRMC are back with their fourth album! l. Combining the classic songwriting of Howl (2005) with the sleazy Rock N' Roll of the band's first two albums Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (2001) and Take Them On, On Your Own (2003), Baby 81 shows the three piece at the top of their game. The album's first single, `Weapon of Choice', showcases the album spectacularly with a blistering mix of driving guitars and an anthemic chorus. Universal.
Amazon.com After the surprisingly spare acoustic diversion of 2005's acclaimed Howl, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club's fourth album returns the San Francisco group to the big guitars and rock swagger of their earlier albums. Baby 81 is a loud affair, and with each track polished to a high shine (the album was self-produced by the band, co-produced by Michael Been, who formerly led the Call), the results are slick and serviceable rock. BRMC are sometimes accused of rehashing courses charted by earlier bands, and here that tendency occasionally works in their favor ("All You Do Is Talk" opens on an airy organ, recalling U2's majestic "Where the Streets Have No Name"), but also leads inevitably to comparison (much of Baby 81 evokes Oasis or a T-Rex-lite sound). Here's hoping BRMC won't shy away from following their noses down some previously unexplored musical paths in the future. --Ben Heege
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