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Good Shoes - Think Before You Speak (CD)

Think Before You Speak
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Album Details: Think Before You Speak

Release Date:03/26/2007
Label:Universal Japan
UPC:4546082300035

Other Available Formats: Think Before You Speak

Pro Reviews: Think Before You Speak

  • All Music Guide

    On their singles and EPs, Good Shoes seemed like the scrappy kid brothers of similarly bouncy, angular bands like Maxïmo Park and the Futureheads, but on their debut album, the Shoes come into their own: Think Before You Speak is a set of cheeky, vulnerable songs with all the sugarrush immediacy, and addictiveness, of a crush. The band's singles still exemplify their economic yet jampacked style. "All in My Head" pairs giddy riffs and a breathless melody with selfaggrandizing and selfdeprecating lyrics about doing nothing; on the fantastic "Never Meant to Hurt You," Rhys Jones sings "you never knew that I didn't love you" with such a light touch that it just sounds honest instead of cruel. Think Before You Speak boasts production that's cleaner than Good Shoes' earlier releases, but the more polished sound gives their sprightly music the fullness it needs to make a bigger impact, especially on springloaded songs like "Nazanin" and "We Are Not the Same," where riffs and melodies pop up ...in all directions, chase each other, and occasionally fall into lockstep. The band tries for a ballad with the lovely "Blue Eyes," but gets carried away; "Sophia" goes for a slyer and sadder approach, mixing vignettes of going out to shows with threats and regrets like "If you go back to where we first met/It will only break your heart" over sparkling guitars. Most of the album deals with relationships that feel like arguments, and vice versa, but the band has a social conscience too. If they're not classic angry young men, they're at least cranky young men on "Morden," a bittersweet theme song to Good Shoes' London neighborhood; "Things to Make and Do" is jaded and idealistic at the same time, one moment lamenting "private education makes me sick" and the next scoffing, "I got a tan from my TV." Though the first half of Think Before You Speak is a little more striking than what follows, these songs are never less than remarkably smart and catchy. In fact, the jawdropping amount of indelible melodies and insightful lyrics on Think Before You Speak could very well make it a classic. - Heather Phares, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Good Shoes

Hailing from London's Morden neighborhood, Good Shoes specialize in speedy, tightly written guitar pop that draws comparisons not only to contemporaries like the Futureheads, but past masters of that sound such as Gang of Four and the Buzzcocks. Featuring guitarist/vocalist Rhys Jones, his brother Tom on drums, bassist Joel Cox, and guitarist Steve Leach, the justbarely... Read more