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darkness one way ticket LP sleeve

The Darkness: One Way Ticket To Hell...And Back

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by Stryker Gloom
  • Type: Album
  • Release date: 28/11/2005
  • Label: Atlantic

DiS' very own Stryker Gloom dissects the new Darkness LP and exclusively talks to ex-bassist Frankie to get his view on the record, however briefly he wanted to comment...

The dream is over. One Way Ticket To Hell...And Back is a sturdy rock album with some saucy titles and odd instruments, but sadly it is less than it could or should be. We craved something bolder and as gloriously out of kilter as the trillion-selling Permission to Land to keep us believing in this thing called The Darkness. Lest we forget, they rose from the ashes of a very strange place – back then nobody cared for their bombastic music or quite believed their inappropriate live shows. Many even said they were a joke. But through brute force, astounding hooks, hypnosis and spaceships they convinced us that tardy old rock music was a worthwhile cause. Extraordinary.

So what do they offer us here?

Title track ‘One Way Ticket’ kicks off with an Andean nose pipe pastiche of the theme to Aussie psycho-mystery flick Picnic at Hanging Rock which then grumbles into the sound of substantial nostrils snorting coke. Bosh bosh goes the cowbell and in come your crunchy Hawkins guitar chops and ...Ye-Frickin’ Gods we’re off on Darkness roller-coaster album jaunt numero two. Two lines in and a beyond ridiculous falsetto hoves into view flowing into a punch-yer-lights-out chorus peppered with distant whoops, hollers and screams. Yep, the old pre-solo Sitar routine is used to fine effect and there’s a big-ass Mercury treatment happening there on the voice. As an opener it says “Remember us, we’re The Darkness - but more so.”

Track two is named ‘Knockers’, a reference, no doubt, to their numerous critical foes and musical detractors. It builds up from a chugging start, with open-road guitar and bar-room piano that nods to Lynyrd Skynyrd and the southern rock fraternity. Too sensible, so the track then explodes like a banshee into a monumental spasm of a hook with the straightforward words “I just love what you do with your hair, oh Yeah!” So far, so good. At track three the LP takes the obvious path and errs too much towards the cautious. ‘Is It Just Me?’ has a workmanlike driving rock motif that apes Def Leppard and echoes countless middle brow US rock bands but in reality it’s a not so brilliant version of ‘Growing On Me’.

Starting with some damp eighties riffage, ‘Dinner Lady Arms’ feels like a twenty year old out-of-focus video shot at night in a petrol station forecourt. It seemed like a good idea at the time. Good title, admittedly. Whereas ‘Seemed Like A Good Idea At The Time’ is Hell’s ‘Love Is Only A Feeling’ and therefore nothing new and perhaps not a good idea at the time.

We’re back in the blockbuster business though with ‘Hazel Eyes’. It starts with a light, watery guitar melody – using a harmonic generator perhaps - but then breaks into a jigs ‘n reels type oriental smash hit chorus, Scottish pipes an’ all. Crazy, perplexing, maybe genius. ‘Black Shuck’ but better. Track 7 is a slow burn LA hair metal song about going bald, called ‘Bald’. The chorus is sung in the staccato tradition of oddball duo Sparks (whose ‘This Town etc’ Justin covered on his summer solo release) and the accompanying guitars are of the have-a-go-hero variety. Essentially love on the rocks with no hair.

Oh please. ‘Girlfriend’ is frustrating. Hawkins could knock this sort of thing out standing on his head, which he probably did. A faux-Quo stomper with fiddle-diddle strings in the mould of ‘Givin’ Up’. The same is true of ‘English Country Garden’, a pub-rocker, this time with the accent on Queen. Whatever. And so to the final hooray of this odyssey - ‘Blind Man’. It is the acoustic power pop outro to a Hollywood movie where The Darkness take over the planet. They got what they wanted but lost what they had.

As an exclusive aside: For those missing Frankie his favourite track is 'Hazel Eyes' of which he says "I defy anyone after a couple of beverages to listen to ‘Hazel Eyes’ standing up and NOT get the Michael Flatleys."

  • The Darkness 5 / 10

this review

is rubbish


noooo....the darkness

are rubbish


not true

this album is fucking great
better than the last one in fact


i like the darkness

fuck knows why.


i think the review...

is really quite good. It beats alot of the reviews on DIS which dont seem to detail or analyse much about the music they are 'reviewing'.

The track-by-track approach always works for me.

Saying that the album still sounds like a bunch of shite peddled by the same unfunny wanking cock-knockers.


Oh, come on...

...they are a joke and always will be a joke. Whether you get that joke is up to you.

I don't get it anymore, and the new single just sounds like 'Growing On Me' (which is, actually, a brilliant song). This, is boring, predictable, and pretty unfunny.

As for the review, it actually gave me a decent idea what it sounds like. Not that I didn't already have an idea what it would sound like... that being the first album.


Regardless

I'm still grabbing this album tomorrow.


The Darkness

are misunderstood. And I like them and they're fun to play and listen to and they're good live and Hawkins is a looney. What's not to like?

This review is rubbish.

It's DiS whorage to the max but I can't say I'm suprised. The people that hate the Darkness seem to like Do Me Bad Things, possibly the most appalling band I've seen/heard in my life, (and that includes Rooster). Where is the justice?


If Stryker Gloom is a real name

Then I may have found my new favourite name

There's something suspicious afoot


I agree

I mean, the Darkness were quite entertaining until the joke kinda went all wrong and they ended up in stadiums, but Do Me Bad Things are just atrocious and for some reason seem to get more credibility...


it's true!!

what a LOL!


good review

This album is weak when compared to Permission to Land. For anyone STILL debating whether The Darkness are a "joke" or not, they're a band with a sense of humour. There's a difference. The Coldplay diss in the new video is a bit rich though, since most of the ballad fare on One Way Ticket is terrible - even in comparison to Chris Martin's worst effort on X and Y..


i'm not a masive

fan of either, so i cansay the darkness are awful with balance. they're a one joke band who i have bno respect for.

and ugmo is definately pushing 40.


oh shush

Do Me Bad Things are a lot of pop fun. Maybe they're not meant for you. I like how they're like the Commitments crashing into the MC5 and put on an actual show. Maybe they're only good for and refreshing for people like me who get to see the worst of the worst and nearly end up hating music because of it...


I reckon...

...that musically, this album isn't as well-executed as the début, and Justin, brilliant harmoniser that he is, seems to have gone overboard on the vocals here. The guitar solos aren't as catchy and singalong, but some of the new additions (bagpipes, strings, brass) are well-used and don't just sound like the result of leftover recording budget.

I think, currently, The Darkness' trump card is their lyrics (correct my grammar if you wish, pedant). If Stephen Fry wrote songs for Whitesnake, you might end up with this kind of album.


Why bother

I thought Justin Hawkins an his fellow gimps had accepted they were one album wonders and crawled back to wherever they came from never to return until they appear on some driving classics cd in a petrol station, in outer mongolia.


this band

are tripe.


in with a bullet

at No. 11.


All these negative comments....

All these negative comments have gotten me interested in the new album.

Yeah, backfire.


not as good as permission, but not that bad either!....

yeah, the negative comments on a band this popular at the moment just makes it better in the long run-lol :) I think Permission to Land is easily the best album, but whats going to make people agree or disagree is the fact that despite the songwriting quality on One Way Ticket, it sounds far less rock than before, and more like the experimental odds and ends left over from the first album studio sessions.

But whats average to one person, is probably fantastic to another.. the fact is that this album is getting mainly rave reviews elsewhere, most notably with the mainstream music press. The tracks on here have been well laid out, sound fairly different to one another, and its a short 10 track job as before, so its over before youve had a chance to get bored. Queen producer Roy Thomas Baker produces, and tracks like Blind Man sound so close to the *cough* Queen originals.. its uncanny- haha..

Favourite tracks: One Way, Knockers, Is it Just Me?, Dinner Lady Arms, English Country Garden. My rating: 7/10, definately worth a go!