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Waited up Til It Was Light

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Download links and information about Waited up Til It Was Light by Johnny Foreigner. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 43:19 minutes.

Artist: Johnny Foreigner
Release date: 2008
Genre: Rock
Tracks: 13
Duration: 43:19
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Lea Room 2:23
2. Our Bipolar Friends 3:19
3. Eyes Wide Terrified 3:47
4. Cranes and Cranes and Cranes and Cranes 2:35
5. The End and Everything After 3:11
6. Henning's Favourite 3:23
7. Salt, Peppa and Spinderella 2:54
8. Yes! You Talk Too Fast 3:21
9. Dj's Get Doubts 2:36
10. Sometimes, In the Bullring 4:21
11. Yr All Just Jealous 2:50
12. Absolute Balance 4:59
13. The Hidden Song at the End of the Record 3:40

Details

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Johnny Foreigner are a Birmingham, England, band with an excess of energy. Their American debut blasts off with the kinetic, catchy opener "Lea Room," which sets the supercharged spirit that rides through the rest of disc. Alexi Berrow and Kelly Southern shout their boy-girl vocals over a frenetic punk-pop pace powered by Berrow's careening guitar playing and Junior Ladley's hyperactive drumming. The trio exudes a refreshing youthful exuberance that is instantly ingratiating. After barreling through the opening trio of tracks, the group really steps it up a level through the superb middle section. The hooks get a little sharper and the singing a little clearer, but the energy never flags. On "Eyes Wide Terrified," a trace of Pavement surfaces in Berrow's jagged vocal cadence; however, Johnny Foreigner boast a bigger beat, as they are more interested in getting listeners jumping around, not just shuffling their feet. The revved-up "The End and Everything After" has almost an anthemic quality, although the lyrics remain a bit too obscure to create an effective rallying cry. This is one of those albums where a lyric sheet comes in handy to get a better sense of what Berrow and Southern are shouting about. One of the disc's entertaining qualities is the singers' lively verbal interplay. They are like two twenty-somethings walking home from a pub. Sometimes their words are like witty little pearls and other times they are slightly boozy ramblings that are hard to understand (one tune is even named "Yes! You Talk Too Fast"); however, it's typically all fun to listen to. In "Salt, Peppa and Spinderella" — a disc highlight and probably their best-crafted tune here — they evocatively observe, "We like to watch the fights break out and end in grief from these cheap plastic seats." Another charming track, "D.J. Get Doubts," a rare quiet number, contains its share of clever couplets, like "These little white lies rip you in two/Like a Christmas cracker." While Johnny Foreigner's manic enthusiasm gives their music an ADD quality at times, it also is what helps to make this delightfully cheeky disc such an exhilarating listening experience.