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stapleton rest and be thankful
13 votes
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by Mike Diver
  • Type: Album
  • Release date: 12/05/2008
  • Label: Xtramile

The return of Scottish quartet Stapleton is a welcome one. Over three previous LPs the group have developed a very special indie-rock sound, one surely indebted to forefathers from across the sea in its melodious immediacy but one that enjoys its own place in the domestic scene. Admired by too many once-peers to mention here, bands who’ve seen their own profiles grow while their high-rated favourites’ fortunes have stalled, Stapleton are due their time in the sun. So the release of Rest And Be Thankful couldn’t be better timed.

With our closest star shining bright – if not today then soon enough – there are few better ways to spend a slow Sunday afternoon than a couple of garden beers with Pinback drifting out the rear windows. Substitute the San Diego indie darlings for this ensemble and the effect remains the same: no-frills though this music is, its subtleties infect the listener with great stealth, one man’s strum-and-plod pieces actually far more affecting than the sum of their constituent parts. Some of the band’s appeal lies in Al Paxton’s imperfect vocals – never the strongest singer, nor is occasional co-vocalist Andrew Cook, his so-so technique allows genuine emotion to shine through, making every lyrical turn that little sharper of bite.

Initial impressions of Rest… are meek at best, high-impact hardly the band’s attitude; instead their intricate guitar work creeps into the crevices of the heart over repeat exposures, no one track of these eleven truly standing head and shoulders over what is, again, a consistently pleasing pack. Shuffle them and the experience doesn’t overly differ – Stapleton are masters of their chosen arrangement style, their Braid-recalling layers shifting enough over the course of a single song to satisfy the appetite without needing to indulge in cohesive album structures and threads. Sure, there might be a lyrical underbelly to Rest… which, when analysed at length, suggests some conceptual framework. But to subject these sometimes-fragile songs to such scrutiny is to peer well beyond their surface elegance, and to overlook the warm charm they exude.

Burrow deep as you like, by all means, but even if you only enjoy Rest… passively while supping a cool brew this summer, you’ll be hearing one of the best examples of its kind released in 2008. That toe’s not tapping itself, y’know – Stapleton, somehow, truly do have a hold on the listener that no critical summary can ever absolutely explain. Just accept it, and be thankful.

  • Stapleton 8 / 10
Words: Mike Diver

A very good review.

I am so glad this got a review here. I wish more for this band but I feel that they might be at breaking point y'know. *sigh*

It is a very good record. Very very good.


if they'd missed out the guff reworking of chez chef

this would have been a 9/10 or 10/10 for sure.

spoils the middle of the album for me slightly.

stand out is Dear Dusk, awesome riffs.


I really don't mind..

the new chez chef. I think it fits in really nicely and if they had just stuck the old one on there it might of felt...I dunno, out of place. The new version works for me.


ditto

Ditto, really glad to see this getting reviewed. Stapleton have in my opinion always been massively overlooked. Whilst this (I think) is partly down to their lack of self promotion, its a massive shame. They have released 4 fucking excellent albums now (if you havent heard them buy on the enjoyment of unpleasant places and rebuild the pier now) but are still largely unknown.

Lets hope this one gets them some exposure, though like the review says I doubt it will.

Ramble, ramble, ramble, basically ace album, ace band.


yeah, the promotion for albums and tours

has always been horrendous, they should be much bigger than they are.


capleton what?


Never come across the name before....

So is this their best record or is the other stuff better? Great sounds.


nah. not the best album

get Rebuilt the Pier or On The Enjoyment of Unpleasant Places

Chez Chef is my favourite CD of theirs, but it's only 4 tracks.

the last album Hug the Coast and this album aren't quite on par with the 3 i just mentioned, but they're still amazing.


*rebuild

obviously.


Order:

1 - Rebuild the Peir
2 - Hug the Coast
3 - On The Enjoyment of Unpleasant Places + Icy You
4 - This Album
5 - On The Enjoyment of Unpleasant Places


for me

1. Chez Chef EP
2. Rebuild the Pier
3. On The Enjoyment of Unpleasant Places
4. Hug the Coast
5. Rest and Be Thankful
6. Icy You EP


Splitting the Icy You and OTEOUP LP

is funny, I don't have either on their own. The Chez Chef EP is good though. I don't own it...


Need to get this album

Heard good things about this band and this confirms it.


Petition time

Please reissue Chez Chef ep as it rules!


i've got both on their own

and the combo cd.

chez chef, icy you, rebuild the pier and orignal on the enjoyment are all oop as far as i know.


Could you do me a cd copy of

Chez Chef? pleeeeeeeeeeease? ;)


Chez chef

Chez chef is possibly the best ep ever. Party potential is up there with my favourite stapleton songs.


party potential IS my favourite stapleton song

seeing that live the other year was life-affirming for me.

the quiet bit in the middle, the whole crowd shouted "TOO POLITE TO SPOIL THE PARTY" before it kicks back in heavy, and the band looked stunned that everyone knew the words.


:D


just picked up

the Icy You EP off eBay.
£2.99
YUS!


didn't realise they were still going

Saw them once with Econoline, planquez some other non descript post-rock clobber. They were quite good.

Planquez were never non descript they were great.





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