Up the Bracket by The Libertines

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Up the Bracket by The Libertines

2002 | Rock

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Label Rough Trade

Track List
Begging (0 Ratings)
Boys in the Band (0 Ratings)
Horror Show (0 Ratings)
I Get Along (0 Ratings)
Radio America (0 Ratings)
Tell the King (0 Ratings)
Time for Heroes (0 Ratings)
Up the Bracket (0 Ratings)
Vertigo (0 Ratings)
[Untitled] (0 Ratings)

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Up the Bracket by The Libertines Reviews & Ratings (3)
9-10
66.7% (2)
7-8
33.3% (1)
5-6
0.0% (0)
3-4
0.0% (0)
1-2
0.0% (0)

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Up the Bracket by The Libertines reviews from people you don't follow
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Adam Green recommended (curated)

 
Up the Bracket by The Libertines
Up the Bracket by The Libertines
2002 | Rock
8.7 (3 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"On the first Strokes tour we had a Libertines demo on the bus. I remember thinking 'Oh man there's already a British version of The Strokes? That's fast, this is only the first tour!' Not that they were, but that was the perception around them. What is so cool about The Libertines is in fact that they're in that tradition of great British bands that really draw on being British to make a very special version of rock. The Sex Pistols are in that tradition, The Clash, all these really cool English bands that make you want to be some sort of geezer and know what a "two bob cunt" is. So being label mates with The Libertines and becoming friend with them they indoctrinated me into this whole British universe: listening to Chas And Dave, that comedian Tony Hancock and all kinds of weird British shit. In a way they became this vital group that almost channeled Lord Byron or Percy Shelley. They were almost a subculture unto themselves. At a time when England is in such a flux, their music reminds everyone why people love what being British is. The way they re-appropriated Albion and Blake's vision of England, it was just really beautiful. Their version of British, for me as a New Yorker, immediately made me want to learn about London and go to all these places. Their first record was a calling for people to learn about the history of England, their music made you want to educate yourself, but it is also so fucking catchy. I covered their song 'What A Waster' while they were in New York. They were recording 'Don't Look Back Into The Sun' at a studio but they were making these endless demo tapes that eventually appeared as the 'Babyshambles Sessions'. My version of their song was recorded while they were doing those. For me they were a band that birthed a new romantic movement in England."

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Carl Barat recommended track Death on the Stairs by The Libertines (curated)

 
Up the Bracket by The Libertines
Up the Bracket by The Libertines
2002 | Rock
8.7 (3 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I always go back to Death on the Stairs, the Libertines song. I love that tune. It’s the story it tells, it takes me to a place so far away and yet so familiar. It’s really hard though - I don’t believe in first or best or worse, I'm into liberty and verse - as Pete once sang [in a demo for The Libertines’ The Man Who Would be King]. It’s like going through your kids and picking your favourite child"

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