We Were Promised Jetpacks - These Four Walls

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1. "It's Thunder and It's Lightning"
2. "Ships With Holes Will Sink"
3. "Roll Up Your Sleeves"
4. "Conductor"
5. "A Half Built House"
6. "This Is My House, This Is My Home"
7. "Quiet Little Voices"
8. "Moving Clocks Run Slow"
9. "Short Bursts"
10. "Keeping Warm"
11. "An Almighty Thud"

Bee OK, Friday, 10 July 2009 06:11 (fifteen years ago)

i'm liking this and came across this:

There's nowt so rock'n'roll as discovering that the older generation turned out to be wrong, and, of course, there's nowt so 2009 as old-skool futurism. The best-named band to emerge in the last twelve months win on both counts. Intriguingly enough, though, while their moniker suggests a bunch whose formative Thursdays were spent in front of Tomorrow's World, We Were Promised Jetpacks have emerged with an album that indicates that, rather than sticking around afterwards for Top Of The Pops, they tended to make immediate exits in favour of the more obtuse delights of night-time Radio 1.

In fact, it's difficult to think of any album from the Class Of '09 that spreads itself so wholeheartedly across the spectrum of performers with Peel appeal. There are countless hints of Sonic Youth on show, for instance, although they do tend to err on the side of actual charging-in-from-far-afield tunes rather than atonal yowling, which results in such excellence as the recent single 'Quiet Little Voices'. Moreover, there's often a structural jitteriness in play that smacks of an artsy sensibility which nevertheless avoids tumbling into preciousness. Take, for example, the heads-down judder of 'Roll Up Your Sleeves', which gives way to a cascade of compactly windmilling guitars and tremuluous piano, bringing to mind turn-of-the-90s Blue Aeroplanes or, better yet, New Fast Automatic Daffodils; or the way 'Conductor' evolves into an ever-more-intense, twinkling hug of a chug, a trick they go on to build an entire song out of in the epic near-farewell 'Keeping Warm'. And as if that terrific new Jason Lytle album wasn't enough excitement for Grandaddy fans this year, 'Short Bursts' does a masterful job of shoving 'The Crystal Lake' into a barrel and hurtling down a mountain after it; needless to say, this is excellent behaviour.

Above and beyond all this, there's Adam Thompson's astonishing vocal dominating proceedings. Yes, his unashamed Scottishness will call to mind the Twilight Sad and Frightened Rabbit, both bands that the 'Packs have cheerfully acknowledged in their time; but, if anything, he gives an even more ravenous performance, towering and devouring amid the Frankenstein allusions of 'It's Thunder And It's Lightning', wrestling with wistfulness on the unexpectedly acoustic-inclined 'An Almighty Thud', and thoroughly luminous among the cryptic horrors of 'This Is My House, This Is My Home'. In fact, it's astonishing to think that hearing them instrumentally could impress as much, but then they go and do 'A Half Built House', which revisits the tender delights of the post-rock heyday with a deft, starfaring panache that's as close as they come to the space age conceits their handle suggests.

Alright, so These Four Walls might be a slightly magpie-ish affair, but it's also a sparkling showcase for a young band of fathomless appetites, considered discernment, and noisy allure. In a more just world than this, their takeoff would be assured.

Bee OK, Friday, 10 July 2009 06:13 (fifteen years ago)

i really like the single, reminds me of new rhodes or early idlewild when they were still exciting

phillippa minge (electricsound), Friday, 10 July 2009 06:15 (fifteen years ago)

Seen them live and have the album, and can't shake the feeling that they're just an unsatisfying combination of Frightened Rabbit and the Twilight Sad, but with weaker songs and poorer arrangements. Drummer's solid though, and I can see how they'd appeal to teenagers in the way that early Idlewild appealed to me at the time. I'm saying this as someone who wanted to like WWPJ, too.

MichaelJLambert, Friday, 10 July 2009 11:19 (fifteen years ago)

Is that piece of writing intended to make people want to listen to this?

Matt DC, Friday, 10 July 2009 11:25 (fifteen years ago)

Love the album title, perhaps it's subtitle could be, "but were given segues"

twentyfourtracks, Wednesday, 22 July 2009 16:43 (fifteen years ago)

love this album, and they're even better live. but i have to take issue with the constant Twilight Sad and Frightened Rabbit comparisons, which I think are lazily made on the basis that they share a label (FatCat) and have a singer with a strong Scottish accent. That's it. Far as I can see, the band most frequently compared to TS is Mogwai, and their new album seems to be leaning a bit more towards MBV and shoegaze (from one casual listen). Meanwhile the band most frequently compared to FR is Snow Patrol, because they're both basically epic & weepy indie-rock bands for girls.

Jetpacks are like none of the above.

bakerstreetsaxsolo, Wednesday, 22 July 2009 18:41 (fifteen years ago)

one year passes...

i still love this album.

OLD MAN YELLS AT SHOUT RAP (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 1 March 2011 18:42 (fourteen years ago)


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