Snow Patrol A Hundred Million Suns
  full reviewuser ratings (53) 
Tracklist:
1. If There's a Rocket Tie Me to It
2. Crack the Shutters Open
3. Take Back the City
4. Lifeboats
5. The Golden Floor
6. Please Just Take These Photos From My Hands
7. Set Down Your Glass
8. The Planets Bend Between Us
9. Engines
10. Disaster Button
11. The Lightning Strike


Release Date: 10/28/2008

user rating
3
good
Chart.
other reviews
Cam STAFF (2.5)
More of the same....
Adam Knott CONTRIBUTOR (2.5)
Atmospheric and confused, A Hundred Million Suns is an album that proves Snow Patrol know how to wri...
theTourist (2)
A commendable attempt at making a great album that falls sadly flat...

related



recommended by reviewer
Bell X1 Flock
Snow Patrol Eyes Open
Coldplay Viva La Vida

members also liked
Muse Absolution
Death Cab For Cutie Plans
Death Cab For Cutie Transatlanticism
The Killers Hot Fuss
Muse Black Holes and Revelations
Jimmy Eat World Bleed American
Arctic Monkeys Whatever People Say I Am....
Oasis Whats the Story Morning Glory

  On 5 Lists

2.5
average
Dave de Sylvia STAFF (188 Reviews)

2008-11-10 | 12 comments | 1,464 views

Summary: A Hundred Million Suns is another middling affair from a by-now-mature pop act, and now might be the time to ask why.

That Snow Patrol would achieve worldwide success with 2006’s Eyes Open was never exactly pre-ordained. 2003’s Final Straw had become a big deal in their native UK and Ireland, allowing for a worldwide release the following year, but the likelihood of the twee, introverted rockers going global amidst one of the hottest summers on record could was always going to be a long shot. Yet the Summer of ’06 didn’t reckon with ‘Chasing Cars,’ the subtly uplifting single that found its way into some important scene or other in Grey’s Anatomy, and very quickly units (for this was when people actually bought units) began to shift themselves en masse. And by the time rainy season (which in Ireland is basically all of them) rolled around, Gary Lightbody & co.’s quiet self-deprecation and ethereal soundscapes were in high demand. Expressed as an algorithm, Snow Patrol + inclement weather = cultural synthesis; add in a long train ride and a good set of headphones, and A Hundred Million Suns is basically the soundtrack for a drab, cold winter morning when even your socks are wet and everybody smells of damp or worse.

That’s not to say A Hundred Million Suns is as dull as the weather- although that’s sometimes the case- merely to say it captures a mood, and captures it quite well. It would be easy to read a degree of cynicism in Lightbody’s “woe is me” schtick, and most smart people would, but beneath the by-the-numbers pop rock there’s a gifted, occasionally brilliant, lyricist. Not that you’d know it by the opening verse of ‘If There’s A Rocket Tie Me To It,” mind (as far as bad first impressions go, this is showing up for work without pants.) Like U2 without guitars, the intro track builds with fluttering synthesiser sounds, before Lightbody announces: ”Two weeks later like a surplus reprieve / I found a hair the length of yours on my sleeve.” In just two lines, the singer reveals everything that is terrible and brilliant about him in one fell swoop: the second is a perfect example of his acute sensitivity to detail; the first a ballsed attempt at creating a sophisticated rhyme that renders the sentiment utterly unintelligible.

Elsewhere, Lightbody’s pop songwriting skills come to the fore as he combines broad, relatable sentiments with simple but clever images. On potential future single ‘Please Just Take These Photos From Me,’ he sings ”Through water damaged bloodshot eyes / The fleeting triumphs, brazen lies all seem to mingle into one.”On the Chris Martin-like ‘The Planets Bend Between Us’ he drops the dynamite line, ”your freezing speech bubble seems to hold your words aloft,” a golden moment in an otherwise forgettable acoustic ballad. Lead single ‘Take Out The City’ is arguably the most complete pop song in the group’s armoury, combining a bright, uplifting arrangement that gently builds in scope with lyrics centred around the band’s (3/5 of it anyway) home city, Belfast. Anybody who knows anything about Belfast knows it’s long overdue a positive song written about it after decades of Alternative Ulsters, ‘Take Back The City’ sees the group profess their love for the city, warts and all. As Lightbody sings: ”It's a mess, it's a start, it's a flawed work of art”

What’s most grating about A Hundred Million Suns is its inconsistency, both lyrically and musically; there is a sense early on that there is a very good record in the making, but the longer it progresses the more remote that possibility seems. It’s not so much the familiar pop story whereby an artist frontloads an album with singles and phones in the rest; Snow Patrol clearly harbour some ambition, and they’re well capable of producing quality pop music, but they rely on the strength of their melodies, and often they’re just not that good. For the third album in succession, the recording is helmed by Irish producer Jacknife Lee (U2, R.E.M.), and it’s a comfortable fit for the band. Lee is a seasoned pop producer and his arrangements are rarely anything but interesting, as evidenced by ‘Take Back The City,’ which builds from a straightforward jangle-pop shuffle into a trashy barre chord affair reminiscent of early Oasis before slipping, on cue, into one of the group’s trademark airy choruses. It’s a rare moment of real dynamism on the record, where the only escape from the chronically middling tempos is the generally stellar arrangements.

It can’t all be put down to Jacknife- guitarist Nathan Connolly has clearly felt the itch too, as his presence is clearly felt throughout the album’s more experimental tracks. On ‘Engines,’ Connolly pairs up with keyboardist Tom Simpson, layering haunting ‘Morning Flory-style feedback atop Simpson’s boogie woogie piano motif, and the same duo combine for ‘What If This Storm Ends?,’ the Oasis-like psychedelic rock stew that opens the three-song closing suite ‘The Lightning Strike,’ Simpson this time adding eerie, gothic piano lines to Connolly’s more orthodox melodies. Conversely, acoustic guitar looms large through much of the rest of the record, from the double-tracked strumming that opens ‘Take Back The City’ to the elegant, precise fingerstyle of ‘Set Down Your Glass.’ The latter boasts one of the album’s strongest melodic performances, but it’s marred by Lightbody’s insecurity as a vocalist: amid the sparsest instrumental arrangement on the CD, the singer persists in multi-tracking his voice, and predictably it sticks out like a sore thumb. On an album where great melodies are relatively thin on the ground, this is one instance where the producer’s gotten it wrong.

Snow Patrol deserve to be commended for what they’ve attempted to do with A Hundred Million Suns. With long-term success by no means guaranteed, they could have been forgiven for playing it safe on the most vital record of their career, but instead they’ve attempted to subtly evolve without shattering the core that’s taken them this far. There is just about enough top quality pop music on offer to ensure Snow Patrol’s star continues to grow on the world stage but, worryingly, A Hundred Million Suns is another middling affair from a by-now-mature pop act, and now might be the time to ask why.

Share: Facebook Stumble Digg!Digg Twitter Del.icio.us


Recent reviews by this author
AFI Crash Love
fun. Aim and Ignite
Daughtry Leave This Town
And So I Watch You From Afar And So I Watch You From Afar
August Burns Red Constellations
Fight Like Apes You Filled His Head With Fluffy Clouds...

Comments:Add a Comment 
AtavanHalen


Comments: 8530
11.10.08


Pretty sure Final Straw came out in 2004, but otherwise cool man

Digging: Biffy Clyro - Only Revolutions

sickofantsid


Comments: 114
11.10.08


(which in Ireland is basically all of them)


Lol. Bloody true as well.

Digging: Hour of Penance - The Vile Conception

DaveyBoy
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 5825
11.10.08


Great use of lyrics to back up your points Dave, especially the "terrible & brilliant" one. I love that "speech bubble" line too.
What's your full take on the long closer...???

Digging: Paloma Faith - Do You Want the Truth or Something Beautiful?

AtavanHalen


Comments: 8530
11.10.08


Why do you write questions like this...??? as opposed to simply this?

DaveyBoy
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 5825
11.10.08


It stands out more for the person it's directed to. I got sick of writing questions and not having them answered. Not so much here, but elsewhere. Just habit I suppose.

taylormemer


Comments: 1925
11.10.08


Kind of like your hyphens Atavan...?

Digging: Olivier Messiaen - Quatuor pour la fin du temps, I/22

Auldy


Comments: 321
11.10.08


lol
i mean
lol...?

Dave de Sylvia
Moderator


Comments: 6856
11.10.08

Album Rating: 2.5

Pretty sure Final Straw came out in 2004, but otherwise cool man

In the colonies maybe, but in the centre of the world it came out in 2003.
What's your full take on the long closer...???

Long, messy, not particularly interesting. Sounds like Oasis would sound if they stopped trying to appeal to people.

Digging: Natasha Bedingfield - Pocketful of Sunshine

Altmer
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 5464
11.10.08

Album Rating: 2.5

i am listening to this now and i pretty much like crack the shutters but it sounds kind of like the previous record.

edit: it sounds like the previous record, but with less energy, less good choruses, less good songwriting, less anything. my god this is one awful record. they just missed the boat in every regard with this one. it isn't poppy enough to sell units. it's not artsy enough or technical enough to work. it's not rocking enough to be rocking out to. it just floats in between everything in some niche and fails horribly.This Message Edited On 11.10.08

Digging: Katatonia - Night Is The New Day

Mikesn
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 3495
11.10.08


I didn't mind Eyes Open, but the first single from this was really boring.

Digging: Tegan and Sara - Sainthood

AtavanHalen


Comments: 8530
11.10.08


Kind of like your hyphens Atavan...?

Lol, as if they're worth worrying about- seriously, I looked that up and it was the most pathetic thing I'd ever seen. "ooh that was an em dash not an en dash", pussies.

ConorMichaelJoseph


Comments: 1870
11.11.08


If anyone saw my comment before I edited it here,forget about it,I was having a bad day lol.This Message Edited On 11.12.08

Digging: Dream Theater - Black Clouds and Silver Linings



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





FAQ // STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // SITE FORUM // CONTACT US

Site Copyright 2005-2009 Sputnikmusic.com
All Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Privacy Policy