Kasabian (album)

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Kasabian is the debut studio album by British rock<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> band Kasabian, released on 6 September 2004. The album's highest chart position on the UK Albums Chart was number 4, making it the band's only studio album not to reach number one. Five singles were released from Kasabian.

This is the only full album to feature the lead guitarist and lead songwriter Christopher Karloff, who left the band during the recording sessions of their next album, Empire. The album features a rotating cast of drummers, with full-time drummer Ian Matthews joining the band after the release of the album.

Release

Different geographical regions had different colours for their album cover. The British version is black and white, the European import is black and red, and the American version is black and blue. The Japanese "Ultimate Version" is silver and white. The UK limited edition version is a double-sided DualDisc and has a glow-in-the-dark cover. The DVD element contains a making-of documentary and several music videos.

This album has been released with the Copy Control protection system in some regions. In the United States and Canada it uses the MediaMax CD-3 system.

The Canadian version of the album does not contain the songs "Orange", "Pinch Roller" and "Ovary Stripe", with the exception of digital releases.

Composition

Tracks

The opening track "Club Foot" features a signature distorted bass riff, played by Christopher Karloff and features "a quilt of relentless beats, hissing electronic noises, buzzing guitar and Tom Meighan's breathless, menacing vocals", and lyrics inspired by the Iraq War.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> "Processed Beats", one of eventual drummer Ian Matthews' two contributions to the album has been compared to The Stone Roses with its "shambolic beat" and unison chorus from Meighan and Pizzorno.<ref name="Pitchfork"/> "Reason is Treason" was branded as an "indie rock seducer", with a sound resembling "Stereolab backing Ian Brown".<ref name="AM"/> 

"L.S.F (Lost Souls Forever)" features prominent use of the electronic instrument Omnichord, played by Karloff and was described as featuring "massive backswells of low-end punch overlaid with Tom Meighan's monotonic snarl and Sergio Pizzorno's swirling guitars and electronics."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> "Test Transmission", the first of two songs to feature Pizzorno on lead vocals was branded as "prog rock danced in baggy jeans"<ref name="AM"/> and "Chemical Brothers-esque psychedelic electronica".<ref name="NME"/> Noted for its opening lyric 'John was a scientist, he was hooked on LSD',<ref name="Guardian"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the fifth and final single "Cutt Off" "pitches space-age synths to the sort of psycho-babble only usually risked by Orb".<ref name="NME"/>

"Butcher Blues" was described as "cinematic"<ref name="AM"/> and featuring "hazy dissolves, tube station announcement vocals, and head-nodding electronic percussion".<ref name="Pitchfork"/> After the instrumental track "Ovary Stripe", "U Boat" closes out the album, featuring Pizzorno's vocals over "layered organic and electronic bliss",<ref name="Pitchfork"/> resulting in "space rock meeting angst rock".<ref name="AM"/> After a long gap, a hidden track plays, the Jacknife Lee remix of "Reason is Treason".

Critical reception

Template:Music ratings Kasabian received generally favourable reviews but music critics were mixed on the band's mixture of alternative rock and electronica. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 65, based on 21 reviews.<ref name="MC"/>

AllMusic's David Jeffries praised the album for its take on different rock genres and compared them favourably to The Stone Roses and Tangerine Dream, saying that "Painting them as rock's saviors just makes the overly ambitious moments of the album look all that much bigger."<ref name="AM"/> Paul Moody of NME praised the album for its aggressive instrumentals and space rock sound resembling that of The Libertines. He singled out "Test Transmission" as the standout track, calling it "an indication that once they've purged the violent tendencies, a future as space-rockers in the Spiritualized mould awaits."<ref name="NME"/> Betty Clarke of The Guardian praised the album's overall sound for resembling baggy music, saying that it "sums up Kasabian's affection for experimentation of every description."<ref name="Guardian"/>

Johnny Loftus, writing for Pitchfork, commended the album's high-energy tracks for containing production that will grab listeners' attention but felt that it loses steam in places and will send said listeners away to better records that inspired it, concluding that "Kasabian is brash, loutish, and seems liable at times to cut you; the consistent kick drum beat throughout it is like a great party's heartbeat. But like the roustabout in the corner, drinking all the lager and scratching up your old records, it can be more loudmouthed than substantial."<ref name="Pitchfork"/> Tom Edwards of Drowned in Sound criticized the album's songs for lacking any hooks and nuances to grab the listener's attention concluding with, "Sure this album may well sound awesome if you've just snorted a metre of charlie or recently breakfasted from a menu of 'shrooms and LSD, but for sober ears it's enough to drive anyone to drugs."<ref name="DiS">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Barry Walters of Rolling Stone criticized the band for filling the album with half-baked ideas based on influences from Happy Mondays and Primal Scream, saying that "Kasabian make the mistake of trying to be revolutionary by quoting revolutionaries."<ref name="RS"/>

Track listing

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Personnel

Adapted from the Kasabian liner notes.<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref>

Production

Charts and certifications

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Weekly charts

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Chart (2004–05) Peak
position
Japanese Albums (Oricon)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 17

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Year-end charts

Chart (2004) Position
UK Albums (OCC)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 77
Chart (2005) Position
UK Albums (OCC)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 44
Chart (2006) Position
UK Albums (OCC)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 164

Certifications

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References

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