Think Tank (Blur album)

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"Blur have reinvented themselves as boldly postcolonial popsters. Think Tank's songs aren't merely multicultural, they're multilateral, recorded partly in Morocco and sung in a musical polyglot Hoovered up from stray corners of the empire: aspects of Afrobeat, bits of bhangra, images of Islam. With guitarist Graham Coxon missing in action, the rhythm section of Alex James and Dave Rowntree steps up, and the album shuffles and grooves like Fela Kuti sloshed on gin and tonics."

Andy Greenwald – Spin [36]

Despite Albarn stating that he originally wanted to return to their more commercial sound, Think Tank continues the jam-based studio constructions of previous album 13 . The album expanded on the use of sampled rhythm loops and brooding, heavy electronic sounds. Almost entirely written by Albarn, Think Tank placed more emphasis on lush backing vocals, simple acoustic guitar, drums, bass guitar, and a variety of other instruments.

"We knew we had to come back with the best thing we'd ever done," observed James. "I think it is. It's next level shit!" [34]

Like many of Blur's previous albums, Think Tank is a loose concept album. Albarn has stated that it is an album about "love and politics", [5] [37] stating that "[Unease] forces people to value what they've got. And that, hopefully, will pay dividends and help change the world to a better place. Hopefully. Touch wood." [37] Albarn also stated that the album is about "what are you supposed to do as an artist other than express what is going on around you." [38] Some of the songs are concerned with a sense of paranoia and alienation in British club culture.[ citation needed ] Damon also cited punk rock music, particularly the Clash, as an inspiration. [28]

The album's opening track, "Ambulance", starts off with a complex drum beat. Sam Bloch of Stylus Magazine praised the song's intro, describing the beat as "an offbeat rhythmic synapse that nearly collapses into itself [...] Heavy electronic drums. A flash. A kick. At first, it's really hard to believe that this is a song, functioning on its own. The beat needs crutches to stand upright." [40] Devon Powers of PopMatters wrote that "the first bars [...] are stricken with throbbing beats that sound simultaneously futuristic and primitive." [39] Bloch went on to write: "as a low, thunderous bass enters [the listener's] speakers, the whole thing slowly grows. Distinctive African percussion is leisurely incorporated into the bass overtone—it's the darkness in a thunderstorm, the pure, simple fury that comes before a glorious lightning streak." [40]

At 0:52 Albarn's lead vocals come in, repeating the lyrics "I ain't got nothin' to be scared of" in a "gauzy" falsetto. This is accompanied by a "languid" bass groove and backing vocals described by Bloch as "gospel-twinged", as well as a baritone sax line described by Powers as "[cutting] underneath the back-up singers, at an angle—so quirky it feels like Morphine could have played it." As Albarn delivers the next line ("'cause I love you"), a synthesizer kicks in, described by stylus as "illustrious", "otherworldly" and "flooding the song's deathly stomp. But within this death there is love. Albarn makes this clear in the structure of this song." In Albarn's next vocal lines, he drops out of falsetto into "his low swinging monotone". Powers stated that he "croons, carelessly, almost as if he's freestyling. Things change again. They keep changing." Powers speculated that the song was about love but said "it's also a fitting introduction to a record that's such an extreme departure from their past work, and so drastically left field from the garage and post-punk and easily accessible poprock currently drenching the airwaves". [39]

In an XFM radio interview, Albarn spoke on the composition of the track, stating, "I try to do a lot of stuff once I've got the melody and the chord structure. I try to just sing it in one go without thinking about it too much. It comes out a sort of partially formed song and sometimes you're lucky and it comes out almost kind of sort of perfect and sometimes it's just a mess." He stated that this was a case of the former. James said that "Ambulance" was "the first song that I thought, right this is Blur again. Like I'm in the right place again. I suppose the lyrics have something to do with that, you know, having nothing to be scared of anymore." [41]

Greenwald claimed that "Out of Time" was "the album's highlight". Describing the song as "failure-soaked" and "heart-stoppingly lovely", Greenwald went on to say that it "perfectly captures the jumble of beauty and dread that defines life under orange alert. "Are we out of time?" Albarn asks, desperate for one last peace march or one last snog." Powers described the song as "a much more straightforward, apace ballad [compared to the previous song]. Dominant in the track are Albarn's unadulterated vocals and steady, simplistic drums, but beyond that are ethereal, hard-to-identify noises. In the middle of the track, an Andalucian string group rears its head, as does a tambourine." [36]

"Crazy Beat" was compared to "Song 2" from the band's self-titled album. XFM described the song as "Fatboy Slim meets Middle Eastern Punk rock ... energetic, punked-out rocker. But as much as this song might appeal to the neo-DIY set—complete with its jumpy chorus and lively melody—Blur are anything but. If there's one thing Blur are known for, it's lots and lots and lots of production. Norman Cook (aka Fatboy Slim), builds this number with tons of sound, so there's always another active level to uncover." According to Albarn, the song "started off in such a different way. The nearest thing I could compare it to is a really bad version of Daft Punk. So, we got sick of it and then put in that descending guitar line over it to rough it up a bit." [42] He also stated "It had this sort of mad vocoder-ish vocal and the melody was over a real sort of skanky groove and just this almost descending semi tonal guitar. The melody worked over it and it was amazing coz it shouldn't have worked, another little magic moment for us." [41]

Powers claimed that "the best moments of this album are those when vintage Blur styles are evoked with new expertise. The meandering "Good Song" is a beautiful case in point. Acoustic guitar picking is matched with temperate drums and a sweet, steady bass countermelody. Albarn's singing is mostly in his mid-range, falling out as easily as breath. Signature background vocal harmonies are there to brighten up the track, but their muted nature doesn't descend into campiness. What's also new is the expert use of electronic noises and drumbeats to fatten the sound." Albarn said "well, that was originally called 'De La Soul' on our huge list of songs, half finished ideas. It was called 'De La Soul you know, right until the end. And I just always thought it was a good song and just called it 'Good Song'. I love that, I love the sort of intimacy of it and I just think everyone really played gently on it, the melodies. It was a good melody." [41]

"On the Way to the Club" was described by Albarn as "a hangover song which we sort of write from time to time." Albarn also said that "it's definitely got a very individual sound. Someone said that it's a sort of revived Screamadelica . Yeah, it's kind of the good intentions of which you participate in revelry and then actually the reality of it." [41]

"Brothers and Sisters" was one of the last additions to the album. "It was a kind of track that took quite a different direction for most of its life", said Rowntree. "...And then right at the end we switched about and took it in a different direction, it wasn't quite so dark." "It sounded more like The Velvet Underground when we started", claimed Albarn. "It was too overtly about one thing. It was too druggy, in a way, which is a kind of weird thing, 'cause the song is all about drugs so I think we just pushed ourselves a bit more with it and gave it a lot more space – countered by the list and the list was kind of sort of inspired by the life of JFK and his need to have 28 drugs everyday of his Presidency just to keep him functioning." [41]

Albarn described "Caravan" as "a kind of song that you could play anywhere. And I mean I remember we just finished it and when everyone left to go back to London, I went down to Mali for a couple of days 'cause Honest Jon's [were] still working with musicians and stuff. I was sitting in a mango grove with a wild turkey and had a little CD player and I put it on there. It was just nice seeing everyone sitting around getting stoned to it. It was nice, 'cause the guitar is very, much inspired by Afel; a great Malian tradition of blues guitar." [41] [ failed verification ] "I think this one's about the sun going down, for me", James claimed. "That was like a perfect studio moment; sitting on top of a strange barn in the Moroccan desert listening to Damon do a vocal and it a was a perfectly still time of day and the sun was perfectly red and there was just an immense sense of calm and this music." [41]

Albarn claimed that "Sweet Song" was inspired by Coxon. Explaining the habit of putting 'song' in the title, Albarn stated that it was "another African thing that I've picked up. They do call things like 'Tree Song'. You know what I mean; they give it something quite simple. It's not, it doesn't have an agenda so much, it's offered out as a nice bit of music to everyone and that's something that has changed massively in my life, I don't see the ownership of things quite so strongly anymore." [41]

There is a hidden track, "Me, White Noise" in the pregap before track 1 on some CD copies. The song guest features Phil Daniels, who previously appeared on "Parklife", on vocals. Japanese versions of the album feature the song at track 30, after silent tracks at index points 15–29. On the Blur 21 edition, the hidden track is placed after a few minutes of silence at the end of the last track.

The case contains a Parental Advisory logo in some regions, because "Brothers and Sisters" contains many drug references. Also, the hidden track "Me, White Noise" is one of the few Blur songs to contain an expletive.

Artwork and packaging

The album cover was stenciled by the graffiti artist Banksy. [43] Despite Banksy stating that he normally avoids commercial work, [44] [45] he later defended his decision to do the cover, saying: "I've done a few things to pay the bills, and I did the Blur album. It was a good record and [the commission was] quite a lot of money. I think that's a really important distinction to make. If it's something you actually believe in, doing something commercial doesn't turn it to shit just because it's commercial. Otherwise you've got to be a socialist rejecting capitalism altogether, because the idea that you can marry a quality product with a quality visual and be a part of that even though it's capitalistic is sometimes a contradiction you can't live with. But sometimes it's pretty symbiotic, like the Blur situation." [45] The album's cover art sold at auction in 2007 for £75,000. [46] The fold out booklet of the album features the text "Celebrity Harvest", which was the working name for a proposed, but ultimately unmade Gorillaz film. The name of the album comes from Bassist Alex James who said in a 2003 Interview "It seemed to sum everything up." [47]

Release

Prior to the album's official release, it was leaked onto the internet. [48] Rowntree said "I'd rather it gushed" [49] and "I'm rabidly pro the internet and as many people hearing our albums as possible. If it hadn't been leaked by someone we probably would've leaked it ourselves". [50] Albarn speculated that the leak helped the reception of their live shows, due to the songs' lyrics being more familiar to the audience.

Commercial performance

The album debuted in the US at number 56 with first-week sales of 20,000, becoming the highest peak of any Blur album in the US at that time. [51] It has sold 94,000 copies in the US as of April 2015. [52]

In the UK, the album debuted at the top spot, becoming their fifth consecutive number one album. The album remained in the top 10 for three weeks and the top 75 for a total of eight weeks, lacking the longevity and sales success of their previous releases. [53]

Critical reception

Think Tank
Think tank album cover.jpg
Studio album by
Released5 May 2003 (details)
RecordedNovember 2001 – November 2002 in London, Morocco and Devon
Genre
Length56:04
Label Parlophone
Producer
Blur chronology
Blur: The Best Of
(2000)
Think Tank
(2003)
Midlife: A Beginner's Guide to Blur
(2009)
Damon Albarn chronology
Laika Come Home
(2002)
Think Tank
(2003)
Democrazy
(2003)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic 83/100 [54]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [55]
Entertainment Weekly C+ [56]
The Guardian Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [57]
Los Angeles Times Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [58]
NME 8/10 [59]
Pitchfork 9.0/10 (2003) [60]
8.5/10 (2012) [61]
Q Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [62]
Rolling Stone Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [63]
Spin A [36]
Uncut Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svg [64]

Think Tank received mostly positive reviews. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 83, which indicates "universal acclaim", based on 26 reviews. [54] Drowned in Sound writer Andrew Future deemed the album "a genuine pleasure to behold" and whilst stating that previous albums Blur and 13 were "full of jump-start arrangements and fractured experimentalism", he described Think Tank as being "lush in melody, flowing in windswept electronica with a myriad of bombastic orchestral backing one minute, before retracting into cocoons of melancholic and clustered acoustics the next." Playlouder called the album "an extraordinary record that pushes boundaries and sets new standards." "The beat-driven tracks," observed Steve Lowe in Q , "veer towards the arty, white-boy-with-beatbox line of Talking Heads and The Clash (actually, the low-slung hip-pop of 'Moroccan Peoples Revolutionary Bowls Club' even recalls Big Audio Dynamite). Only the trudging, tedious six-minute squib 'Jets' really needs taking back to the shops." [34] However, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic wrote that the album "is the sound of Albarn run amuck, a (perhaps inevitable) development that even voracious Blur supporters secretly feared could ruin the band — and it has." He also described Think Tank as a "lousy album" on which the few strong tracks are "severely hurt by Coxon's absence". [55]

Albarn became critical of the record over time. In 2015 he said: "It's... got some real stinkers on it – there's some bollocks on there." [65]

Accolades

Blur received a number of awards and nominations for Think Tank. At the 2003 Q Awards, Think Tank won the award for Best Album. [66] [67] This was the third time the band had received this award, previously winning in 1994 and 1995 for Parklife and The Great Escape respectively. [67] Blur also received nomination for Best Act in the World Today and, along with Ben Hillier, were nominated in the Best Producer category. [66] The album also won in the Best Album category at the South Bank Show Awards in 2004 [66] [68] and was nominated in a similarly titled category at the Danish Music Awards the same year. Think Tank was nominated for Best British Album at the 2004 Brit Awards. [69] The promo videos for "Out of Time" and "Good Song" also won several awards. [66]

At the end of the year, The Observer listed Think Tank as the best album of 2003, Miranda Sawyer writing that, "Think Tank is the band's first warm album. They have hopped genres in the past, from baggy to mod to pop to grunge to art-rock, but the sound has always stayed urban, Western, cool. Think Tank is none of these things. It's all over the place, and that place is foreign. Odd noises, strange instruments, keening vocals; its tunes wind themselves around your heart like drifting smoke. They waft in from faraway lands; trail and trickle their scent across your life. It is the most peculiar stuff that stays with you; "Ambulance"'s slurred symphony; "Caravan"'s star-speckled wonder." [70]

Accolades for Think Tank
PublicationCountryAccoladeYearRank
Bang UKAlbums of the Year [71] 20033
BBC UKAlbums of the Year [72] 2003*
Drowned in Sound UKAlbums of the Year [73] 200343
Eye Weekly CanadaAlbums of the Year (Critics Poll)200323
Albums of the Year (Writers)11
Fnac FranceThe 1000 Best Albums of All Time [74] 2008799
Les Inrockuptibles FranceThe 100 Albums of the 2000s20107
Mojo UKAlbums of the Year [75] 20033
NME UKAlbums of the Year [76] 200321
Top 100 Albums of the 2000s [77] 200920
The Observer UKAlbums of the Year [70] 20031
Playlouder UKAlbums of the Year200318
PopMatters USAlbums of the Year20037
Q UKAlbums of the Year [78] 20032
Top 100 Albums of the 2000s200959
Rolling Stone USAlbums of the Year2003*
Rolling Stone FranceThe 20 Albums of the 2000s2010*
Rough Trade UKAlbums of the Year200386
Slant Magazine USTop 250 Albums of the 2000s [79] 2010145
Spin USAlbums of the Year [80] 200316
Uncut UKAlbums of the Year [81] 200362
Top 150 Albums of the 2000s [82] 200922

Tour

After the album's release, Blur went on a world tour with former The Verve's guitarist and keyboardist Simon Tong filling in for Coxon on guitar, in both new and old songs. However, Albarn later said that he felt the live shows were "rubbish" and bassist Alex James admitted that touring was not the same without Coxon. [7] [25]

Since Blur's reunion with Coxon in 2009, the album has largely been absent from Blur's setlists, with the exception of "Out of Time" (in a new arrangement with additional guitar parts by Coxon) and occasional performances of "Battery in Your Leg" in 2009 and "Caravan" in 2015.

Track listing

All lyrics by Damon Albarn. All music by Damon Albarn/Alex James/Dave Rowntree except where noted.

Think Tank track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Ambulance" (includes pregap hidden track [note 1] ) 5:09
2."Out of Time" 3:52
3."Crazy Beat" 3:15
4."Good Song" 3:09
5."On the Way to the Club"Albarn, James Dring, James, Rowntree3:48
6."Brothers and Sisters" 3:47
7."Caravan" 4:36
8."We've Got a File on You" 1:03
9."Moroccan Peoples Revolutionary Bowls Club" 3:03
10."Sweet Song" 4:01
11."Jets"Albarn, James, Rowntree, Mike Smith 6:25
12."Gene by Gene" 3:49
13."Battery in Your Leg" ( [note 2] )Albarn, Graham Coxon, James, Rowntree3:20
Total length:56:04
Notes
  1. The song "Me, White Noise" is a spoken word hidden track with Phil Daniels. The track is placed in the compact disc pregap as "track 0" in the first release. [83]
  2. The streaming and deluxe editions include "Me, White Noise" as a hidden track after "Battery in Your Leg" and 90 seconds of silence.
Disc 2: 2012 special edition
No.TitleLength
1."Money Makes Me Crazy" (Marrakech mix)2:53
2."Tune 2"3:48
3."The Outsider"5:14
4."Don't Be"2:40
5."Morricone"4:50
6."Me, White Noise" (alternate version)6:44
7."Some Glad Morning"4:19
8."Don't Be" (acoustic mix)2:39
9."Sweet Song" (demo)3:50
10."Caravan" (XFM session)4:15
11."End of a Century" (XFM session)2:41
12."Good Song" (XFM session)3:31
13."Out of Time" (XFM session)3:36
14."Tender" (XFM session)6:21
Japanese bonus track
No.TitleLength
15."Crazy Beat" (Jo Whiley BBC session)3:12

Personnel

Blur

Additional musicians and production

Charts and certifications

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Further reading