Tellin' Stories - The Charlatans
Despite their name the Charlatans are legit. You listen to them and they just scream elite band material. Every player is great and although Tim Burgess gets mixed reviews I think he's got the perfect voice to give this an air of authenticity. If he was a better vocalist it would sound like he was just singing over a bunch of seasoned session players - no one with such an ordinary voice could afford that band if they were paying by the hour.
I hadn't heard the whole album before but do remember the singles. They are all significantly better than I remember. How High is probably the most "brit-poppy" but still has enough of a classic rock tone that it doesn't date it. The whole album actually has a pretty classic rock style which keeps it very listenable nearly 30 years later.
Get On It sounds like a Bob Dylan track and is probably my favourite. Closely followed by Tellin' Stories. Only Teethin' and You're A Big Girl Now were my least favourites but I didn't actively dislike them.
So it's an 8 for the album but a recognition that the Charlatans are a band I'd struggle to say I was a fan of.
In 1992 The Charlatans released Weirdo. It's got a lovely bit of cover art which feels like it's taking strong inspiration from The Smiths with the inherent retroness of what those are referencing. It's got a super 90's vaguely retro wide font spelling the name of the band and then the name of the single in a different font that I guess is kind of weird but not really. It's a really decent single. I danced to it plenty probably at 42's and the Venue.
In 1992 Radiohead released Creep. It too has classic 90's fontery but the cover art is a little darker. I'll make a huge assumption and say it reminds me of the JFK assassination with the arrows point to JFK's head indicating bullet entry holes. Both singles were big in America and both are vaguely referencing the same nostalgic point in history.
In 1997 The Charlatans release Tellin' Stories which has some of the dance groove of Weirdo but the whole thing is kind of refined and largely sounds similar to the 1992 release. Because The Charlatans are a great responsible band deserving of respect.
In 1997 Radiohead release OK Computer. Because Radiohead are a pretentious, disrespectful and awkward band deserving of veneration.
Because they are responsible adults The Charlatans will never release anything like the first half of The King Of Limbs. It would be beneath them. But because they are responsible adults they'll never write anything close to the second half of The King Of Limbs. They'll never be mocked and derided and so there is nothing to defend, nurture and love.
So the album is an 8 but even though some of the tunes will return to my memory every now and then I will probably never return to this. It neither requires or expects any effort - it's dependable, respectable and excellent. It's Coldplay for people
who like music.