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Kaiser Chiefs - Employment [Bonus CD] (CD)

Employment [Bonus CD]
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Album Details: Employment [Bonus CD]

Release Date:05/31/2005
Label:B-unique
UPC:5055052813325

Track List: Employment [Bonus CD]

Disk 1

  1. Everyday I Love You Less and Less
  2. I Predict a Riot
  3. Modern Way
  4. Na Na Na Na Naa
  5. You Can Have It All
  6. Oh My God
  1. Born to Be a Dancer
  2. Saturday Night
  3. What Did I Ever Give You?
  4. Time Honoured Tradition
  5. Caroline, Yes
  6. Team Mate

Disk 2

  1. Hard Times Send Me [Live][*]
  2. Modern Way [Live][*]
  3. I Predict a Riot [Live][*]
  1. Time Honoured Tradition [Live][*]
  2. Na Na Na Na Naa [Live][*]
  3. Oh My God [Live][*]

Pro Reviews: Employment [Bonus CD]

  • All Music Guide

    Inspired by that moment sometime in the late '70s when punk gave birth to new wave (and looked back to the heyday of '60s mod for inspiration), the Kaiser Chiefs' debut, Employment, expands on the sharp, sussed sound of their singles in surprising ways. A look at London life and its discontents, Employment is a remarkably ambitious debut album that aspires, right down to its cheeky liner notes and graphics, to be the Parklife or All Mod Cons of the 2000s. While it doesn't quite reach those heights, it does have its fair share of memorable songs. Chief among them is the onetwo punch of "Everyday I Love You Less and Less," a tightly wound "get lost" song that seamlessly mixes the band's punky guitarbassdrums attack with synths and drum machines, and their signature single, "I Predict a Riot," another prime example of the band's barbed, pissedoff pop. "Saturday Night" is another standout; with its brassy stomp and lyrics like "watching the boys on their motorbikes/I want to be like those ...guys," it's a Quadrophenialike understanding of what it is to be lonely in a crowd. On songs like moodyyetstylish "Modern Way" and the cheeky, contradictory "Na Na Na Naa," the Kaiser Chiefs sound so effortlessly "on" that it's something of a surprise when Employment begins to lose momentum. Despite its pretty '60s pop melody, "You Can Have It All" drags a bit, while the vaudevilletinged "Time Honoured Tradition" and "Born to Be a Dancer" are too precious and theatrical for their own good. Although it's not among their best songs musically, and its Beach Boys pisstake title is a little annoying, "Caroline, Yes" is one of the Kaiser Chiefs' more interesting bits of songwriting: on the surface, the narrator is upset because the other guy took Caroline away from him, but what really gets him is that the other guy is "everything I want to be in my life." Likewise, Employment ends with "Team Mate," a tantalizingly short character sketch that is also the band's best ballad. The Kaiser Chiefs' ambition is a doubleedged sword: it's admirable that they wanted to branch out in so many directions on their first fulllength, but it might have been a better or safer, at least move to stick to the amazing rockers that made their name in the first place. Employment is an uneven but still very promising debut that suggests that one day the Kaiser Chiefs will pull off something even more ambitious. [The bonus CD version features six live tracks.] - Heather Phares, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Kaiser Chiefs

When Tears for Fears sang, “Kick out the Style/Bring back the Jam," in “Sowing the Seeds of Love", one can imagine the lads in Kaiser Chiefs raising their mugs of ale in agreement. Comprised of vocalist Ricky Wilson, guitarist Andrew White, bassist Simon Rix, keyboardist Nick Baines, and drummer Nick Hodgson, Kaiser Chiefs resurrected the mod spirit of the Jam in “I ... Read more