Tracks - page 22

The White Stripes - Fell in Love With a Girl

Even after time's arrow has twanged through 13 years and multiple Jack White projects, Fell in Love With a Girl is still a wonderful primordial stomp, its power and thrill undiminished.

The Strokes - Reptilia

In Reptilia, **Room on Fire** gets the best track of the first two albums by The Strokes thanks to its glorious sweeps in and out of bass, guitar, and the bridge into Julian Casablancas' distorted...

Echobelly - Great Things

For all the comparisons with The Smiths, and the focus on lead singer Sonya Madan, what makes Great Things is nothing more complicated than the atypical optimism in the chorus lyric.

Polarsets - Parasols

Like Madrid before it, Parasols is a ray of sunlight on an already sunny day, this time with the added pleasure-sensation that is the 80s power synth.

Vampire Weekend - A-Punk

When Vampire Weekend sprung forth with their self-title debut album, they seemed to be doing all they could not to make themselves loved by millions. Sporting a polaroid from one of the band’s early gigs...

Black Rivers - The Ship

By my count Black River is the third offshoot from Doves, after Rebelski and Jimi Goodwin's solo releases in 2014. With Goodwin off doing his thing, brothers Jez and Andy Williams have not been sitting...

Elastica - Connection

When it came to Britpop borrowings, no-one was quite as ballsy as Elastica's Justine Frischmann, who took the Wire back catalogue, melted it down, and reformed it using exactly the same jerky post-punk mould.

Supergrass - Mansize Rooster

Less drug-addled than The Libertines, and in my experience (apparently) more memorable live performers, Supergrass took the spirit of Madness and ran very much amok with it.

The Libertines - Up The Bracket

It was the chaos at the heart of The Libertines that made them the musical embodiment of Harry Lime's speech about the Borgias and cuckoo clocks.

Cornershop - Lessons Learned from Rocky I to Rocky III

Superlative indie disco funkiness from Cornershop's first album after the incredible success of Brimful...

Gossip - Standing in the Way of Control

As The Rat is to The Walkmen, so Standing in the Way of Control is to Gossip. For both bands its a case of one brief, towering and instantly recognisable anthem amid a sea of...

Curtis Mayfield - Move On Up

Extreme arm-hurtiness is preventing me from typing much right now, so I’ll be brief (and no, that is not a good thing, thank you…). I don’t care if hardcore indie kids look at me funny...

Stevie Wonder - Superstition

Stevie Wonder's spacious drum beat might have you wondering if Superstition has enough gravitational pull to attract a room full of dancing satellites. Hang in there - all will be fine.

Violent Femmes - Blister in the Sun

'Blister in the Sun has all the requisite parts: a skittish rhythm you can jerk along to, a lyric to yell, quiet bits, and even moments when the most precious air guitarists get to live...

Good Shoes - Morden

'Erstwhile indie DJ favourites thanks to tracks like Morden, the question should be asked - whatever happened to Good Shoes?'

Franz Ferdinand - Take Me Out

As Franz Ferdinand release an official video to Stand on the Horizon, the sleeper gem and Todd Terje collaboration from last year’s Right Thoughts, Right Words, Right Action, we’re heading back to their breakthrough hit....

Franz Ferdinand - Stand on the Horizon

I wasn’t that sold on Right Thoughts, Right Words, Right Action when I reviewed it last year, but along with the raw and aggressive Bullet, Stand on the Horizon was an undoubted highlight.

The Walkmen - The Rat

'The Rat is an astonishing tour de force: a non-stop adrenaline hit built on a riot of drums and vocals that give no ground.'

The Rapture - How Deep is Your Love?

It's a glorious gospel-disco-chicago-house-indie-bass-and-piano thing, wouldn't you say?

Tokyo Police Club - Hot Tonight

Hot Tonight is catchy and infectious, with some of 2014's best woo-woo-ing, and a video with a charming retro arcade machine feel.