''Build a Rocket Boys!'' is the fifth studio album by English
rock band
Elbow
The elbow is the region between the arm and the forearm that surrounds the elbow joint. The elbow includes prominent landmarks such as the olecranon, the cubital fossa (also called the chelidon, or the elbow pit), and the lateral and the m ...
, released on 4 March 2011 in the UK. Coinciding with the UK release, the album was available digitally in the United States on 8 March and released in the physical format on 12 April. It is the follow-up to the highly successful ''
The Seldom Seen Kid'', and like its predecessor, was self-produced by the band in Blueprint Studios, Manchester. The album was nominated for the 2011
Mercury Prize
The Mercury Prize, formerly called the Mercury Music Prize, is an annual music prize awarded for the best album released in the United Kingdom by a British or Irish act. It was created by Jon Webster and Robert Chandler in association with the B ...
.
It was supported by the
Build a Rocket Boys! Tour.
The first single, "Neat Little Rows", was released on 27 February 2011. The song received its first radio airplay on 13 January 2011. The video for the single was produced by The Soup Collective and filmed at Blueprint Studios where the album was recorded. It premiered on 31 January 2011.
Background
The album's title, track listing and cover art were "accidentally" revealed by frontman
Guy Garvey
Guy Edward John Garvey (born 6 March 1974) is an English musician, singer, songwriter and BBC Radio 6 Music presenter. He is the lead singer and lyricist of the rock band Elbow.
Early life
Garvey grew up in Bury, Lancashire. His father was ...
on 22 December 2010. It is said to be influenced by Garvey's childhood, as he moved back to the area he grew up in before the album was recorded, and is aimed to appease both their traditional fanbase and those who took a shine to the arena anthems of ''The Seldom Seen Kid''.
The band's success, according to Garvey, made it difficult for the band to continue in the same vein when it came to lyrics. For, as ''
Q magazine
''Q'' was a popular music magazine published monthly in the United Kingdom. It was founded in 1986 by broadcast journalists Mark Ellen and David Hepworth, who were presenters of the BBC television music series ''The Old Grey Whistle Test''. ''Q ...
'' put it, "...when heartbreaking melancholia is your currency, success and contentment can be a problem." The group's frontman admitted that due to being "too happy" he had to "look elsewhere for lyrics." "I can't sincerely write about where I'm at because I'm doing OK. It wouldn't work."
Elbow began writing new material and reviewing previous material they'd made on the road in January 2010, while on the
Isle of Mull. It was there and then that the new album's major motif began to take shape: that of nostalgia, missing family life and detesting the feeling of being unable to settle in. "In essence, they realised they've grown up, and the thought set Garvey on a nostalgic, reflective course," according to ''Q''.
The agenda, both thematically and musically, was set by "Jesus Is a Rochdale Girl," a
minimalist
In visual arts, music and other media, minimalism is an art movement that began in post–World War II in Western art, most strongly with American visual arts in the 1960s and early 1970s. Prominent artists associated with minimalism include Do ...
,
Eno-esque track based on Garvey's earlier poem he wrote about his first love. "I think our records have always had light and shade to a degree, this one more so than the others", commented Garvey. A couple of times, when struggling with lyrics, he made trips to
Peter Gabriel
Peter Brian Gabriel (born 13 February 1950) is an English musician, singer, songwriter, record producer, and activist. He rose to fame as the original lead singer of the progressive rock band Genesis. After leaving Genesis in 1975, he launched ...
's
Real World Studios
Real World Studios is a residential recording studio complex founded by Peter Gabriel and situated in the village of Box, Wiltshire, England, near to the city of Bath. It is closely associated with the Real World Records record label, Real Worl ...
in Wiltshire to "share thoughts" with its owner. On such occasions the frontman communicated via video calls with his band, which, on some occasions, had to place the laptop on top of the piano and play the latest versions of songs virtually to Garvey.
"Lippy Kids", according to Q, is a key song: it was written in defence of the British teenager, victim to, as Garvey put it, "the anti-
hoody shit that goes on in the media, the thought that if you hang around on a street corner you're a criminal." Speaking of the overall sound and its apparent lack of radio-friendliness, Garvey commented: "We could write deliberate radio hits
until the cows come home
Until may refer to
Music
*''Until'', a 1967 album by Robin Kenyatta
*''Until'', a 2008 album by One Little Plane
*"Until", a song by Wilfred Sanderson
*A version of the song " Anema e core" with English lyrics
* "Until..." (Sting song), a 2001 s ...
, but I think you can hear it really obviously when a band has done that." The singer mentioned the relative easiness of the atmosphere in which the album was recorded. "It's the first album we've made without the comedy anvil hanging over our heads," he said.
In January Guy Garvey sent Q Magazine a 'new album update', mentioning among many things that happened since the magazine's correspondent last visit to the studio:
Halle Youth Choir (which once has played with the band in 2009) features on six of the tracks, most noticeably, "With Love" and "Open Arms."
In 2012, the song "The Night Will Always Win" was used for the introduction for the video game ''
Call of Duty: Black Ops 2''.
Reception
Critics praised the album highly as it scored a rating of 82 on
Metacritic
Metacritic is a website that aggregates reviews of films, TV shows, music albums, video games and formerly, books. For each product, the scores from each review are averaged (a weighted average). Metacritic was created by Jason Dietz, Marc ...
, which indicates "universal acclaim."
According to ''
The Daily Telegraph
''The Daily Telegraph'', known online and elsewhere as ''The Telegraph'', is a national British daily broadsheet newspaper published in London by Telegraph Media Group and distributed across the United Kingdom and internationally.
It was f ...
''s Helen Brown, Guy Garvey, very much in the vein of artist
LS Lowry
Laurence Stephen Lowry ( ; 1 November 1887 – 23 February 1976) was an English artist. His drawings and paintings mainly depict Pendlebury, Lancashire (where he lived and worked for more than 40 years) as well as Salford and its vicinity ...
, "make(s) something moving and original from the experience of the man on the street", drawing "poignant, minimalist sketches of urban life that seem to be observed with a big yearning heart from a remote distance".
The band followed the success of ''
Seldom Seen Kid'' with "greatness and without fuss", providing "…more of the same: richly textured, intelligent and warm stuff", according to the critic.
''
NME''s John Doran, insisting that its 'artistic bravery' that places Elbow "in a different league to other purveyors of emotional atmospheric rock", compares the album favourably to
Coldplay
Coldplay are a British Rock music, rock band formed in London in 1997. They consist of vocalist and pianist Chris Martin, guitarist Jonny Buckland, bassist Guy Berryman, drummer Will Champion and creative director Phil Harvey (manager), Phil H ...
's ''
Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends
''Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends'', often referred to as simply ''Viva la Vida'', is the fourth studio album by British rock band Coldplay, released on 12 June 2008 on the Parlophone label. "Viva la vida" is a Spanish phrase that t ...
'', noting that the group is "rooted in the sublimely specific and the gloriously mundane" with Guy Garvey here cementing his position of "the laureate of the everyday."
"If you've ever been chucked, realised that you miss your parents, or thought that you don't see enough of your mates, then he has written a song that hits the heart of the matter with frightening resonance", writes the reviewer.
Not exactly impressed by the track "Lippy Kids" ("which sees him lamenting the shortness of childhood in a manner that threatens to become Hovis ad-esque"), the critic points to "Jesus Is a Rochdale Girl" as a "sublime counterpoint to this", calling it "a beautifully vivid recollection of moving in with someone for the first time." Elbow, according to ''NME'', remain "a gently progressive and subtly innovative force."
On the other hand,
Alexis Petridis
Alexis Petridis ( el, Αλέξης Πετρίδης; born 13 September 1971) is a British journalist, head rock and pop critic for the UK newspaper ''The Guardian'', as well as a regular contributor to the magazine '' GQ''. In addition to his mus ...
of ''
The Guardian
''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper
A newspaper is a periodical publication containing written information about current events and is often typed in black ink with a white or gray background.
Newspapers can cover a wide ...
'' pinpoints "Lippy Kids" as "the album's emotional centre", calling it "a gorgeous meditation on adolescence that recognises both the gauche awfulness of it all
..and the fact that you may never feel quite as rawly alive again."
Johnny Davis of ''Q'' argues that this is an album "that maximizes the use of light and shade"; this is what makes it different from ''The Seldom Seen Kid'' which was full of "autumnal melancholy."
According to Ian Cohen of ''Pitchfork'', Elbow, who are more than ever "hitching their fortunes to their lead singer" have recorded "by a large margin their quietest record to date, the closest thing to a Garvey solo album we've heard."
Commercial performance
The album debuted at number 2 on the UK album chart with first week sales of 78,177 units, having been kept off the top by the sixth week sales of
Adele
Adele Laurie Blue Adkins (, ; born 5 May 1988), professionally known by the mononym Adele, is an English singer and songwriter. After graduating in arts from the BRIT School in 2006, Adele signed a reco ...
's album ''
21''. In 2011, ''Build a Rocket Boys!'' sold 327,000 copies in the UK.
Track listing
All lyrics written by Guy Garvey; all music composed by Elbow.
Personnel
;
Elbow
*
Guy Garvey
Guy Edward John Garvey (born 6 March 1974) is an English musician, singer, songwriter and BBC Radio 6 Music presenter. He is the lead singer and lyricist of the rock band Elbow.
Early life
Garvey grew up in Bury, Lancashire. His father was ...
– vocals; string, brass & choral arrangements
*Mark Potter – guitars
*Craig Potter – keyboards
*
Pete Turner – bass
*Richard Jupp – drums
;
Additional musicians
* John Moseley – lead vocal (track 10)
*
The Hallé Youth Choir – additional vocals (tracks 2, 3, 8, 9, 10 & 11)
* Margit Van Der Zwan – cello (tracks 1, 7 & 9)
* Adrianne Wininsky – cello (tracks 1 & 9)
* Stella Page – violin & viola (track 7)
* Bob Marsh – trumpet & flugelhorn (track 7 & 11)
;
Production
* Craig Potter – production, mixing
* Danny Evans – additional engineering (tracks 2, 3, 8, 9, 10 & 11)
* Tim Young – mastering
* Gregory Batsleer – youth choir director
*
Joe Duddell – assistant
* Oliver East – illustrations
* Paul West – layout & design
Promotion
In July 2011, Elbow and Robinson's Brewery announced the release of a cask-ale named after the album. Formally unveiled at the Manchester Food & Drink Festival on 13 October 2011, the beer was available by the cask or in a case of 8 bottles and was served at various Robinson's pubs and the brewery. Originally intended for a two-month run, its popularity kept it an active product until the end of 2013.
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Release history
References
External links
Album homepage
{{Authority control
2011 albums
Elbow (band) albums
Fiction Records albums