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  • Humbug
    By admin on August 26th, 2009 | No Comments Comments
    Album Name: Humbug
    Artist Name: Arctic Monkeys
    Genre: pop,rock
    Release Date: August 25, 2009
    Humbug Tracks:
    1. My Propeller
    2. Crying Lightning
    3. Dangerous Animals
    4. Secret Door
    5. Potion Approaching
    6. Fire and the Thud
    7. Cornerstone
    8. Dance Little Liar
    9. Pretty Visitors
    10. The Jeweller’s Hands
    If you have the lyrics of any songs of this album or if you want to write a review of the album, please click here.
    More Information: Humbug is the third album by the British band Arctic Monkeys.[3] Like their last release – 2007’s Favourite Worst Nightmare – Humbug was released first in Japan, on 19 August 2009, followed by Australia, Brazil, Ireland and Germany, on 21 August 2009. It was then released in the UK on 24 August 2009, in the US the following day and in Greece on 31 August The release precedes the band’s headline performances at the Reading and Leeds Festivals at the end of that week. The album’s cover was revealed on the band’s website on 22 June 2009.
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    Review 1: It’s hard to believe that the Arctic Monkeys are less than a decade old… or that their first album came out just over three years ago… or that this is only the third album for one of the biggest names in new music……
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    Review 2:………………………………Arctic Monkeys have always been a springy unit, but Humbug takes their playing to a whole new level. “Potion Approaching” and “Pretty Visitors” crackle with a controlled ferocity, providing a showcase for Matt Helders’ fearsome drumming.
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    Review 3: …………………releasing their challenging third record, Humbug, which finds the band distancing themselves from the short bursts of post-punk and aggressive attitudes of the first two albums for the sake of a more experimental, darker sound and even bleaker subject matter. The band also traveled to the desert of California to record with Queens of the Stone Age’s Josh Homme, as well as the gritty streets of New York to finish recording with James Ford (Simian Mobile Disco), and those disparate surroundings permeate the work, as does the musical styles of the men manning the dials………..
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