... This one, Made Of Bricks -- And it's NOT like Lily Allen.
It's a rush-job, sadly, so for now we don't truly know how Kate Nash is going to sound as she progresses as an artist. However, based on the better songs here, she could very well become the English Regina Spektor. Made Of Bricks ... Read review
Kate Nash is the perfect pop starlet. She sounds enough like one existing star to make her ... more
an already snug fit for your tastes (if it needs spelling out for you--L.I.L.Y.A.L.L.E.N--theres no getting away from the thematic and elocutionary parallels, no...
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Kate Nash is the perfect pop starlet. She sounds enough like one existing star to make her ... more
an already snug fit for your tastes (if it needs spelling out for you--L.I.L.Y.A.L.L.E.N--theres no getting away from the thematic and elocutionary parallels, no...
Postage & Packaging: £1.21 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Kate Nash is the perfect pop starlet. She sounds enough like one existing star to make her ... more
an already snug fit for your tastes (if it needs spelling out for you--L.I.L.Y.A.L.L.E.N--theres no getting away from the thematic and elocutionary parallels, no...
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Kate Nash is the perfect pop starlet. She sounds enough like one existing star to make her ... more
an already snug fit for your tastes (if it needs spelling out for you--L.I.L.Y.A.L.L.E.N--theres no getting away from the thematic and elocutionary parallels, no...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 2 to 4 weeks...
Kate Nash is the perfect pop starlet. She sounds enough like one existing star to make her ... more
an already snug fit for your tastes (if it needs spelling out for you--L.I.L.Y.A.L.L.E.N--theres no getting away from the thematic and elocutionary parallels, no matter how much the lady doth protest). Shes ordinary-ish. Shes you, your girlfriend, that girl over there you adore/admire, only clearly cuter and packed with a sharper tongue. She sings of nothing much, but sings it with juicy vim and bright expressions through a deliciously theatrical voice-box, a hangover from her stage school background that faltered, leading her to channel her wit and personality into writing songs. A sprinkling of anarchy too--something for the parents to disapprove of? Well, shes got a filthy mouth and a frankly blasé grasp of the Queens English. Its a shame really that shes not quite made the perfect pop debut to match, but Made of Bricks is a damn fine first run, when it gets it right. The jerky prelude to the album proper, "Play" reminds briefly of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Bis, segueing into the Lily Allen plays Carter USM playfulness of "Foundations". "Dickhead" is a silly, smoky blues ditty, the massive, gyrating "Pumpkin Song" is Sugababes with their hair pulled behind the bike sheds, key-hammering highlight "Mariella" reminds of expressive vaudeville New Yorkers the Dresden Dolls and "We Get On" could be a Grease outtake, though nothing the innocent Olivia Newton John would ever wrap her lips around. Like Lily Allen then, but not that much. --James Berry
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Kate Nash is the perfect pop starlet. She sounds enough like one existing star to make her ... more
an already snug fit for your tastes (if it needs spelling out for you--L.I.L.Y.A.L.L.E.N--theres no getting away from the thematic and elocutionary parallels, no matter how much the lady doth protest). Shes ordinary-ish. Shes you, your girlfriend, that girl over there you adore/admire, only clearly cuter and packed with a sharper tongue. She sings of nothing much, but sings it with juicy vim and bright expressions through a deliciously theatrical voice-box, a hangover from her stage school background that faltered, leading her to channel her wit and personality into writing songs. A sprinkling of anarchy too--something for the parents to disapprove of? Well, shes got a filthy mouth and a frankly blasé grasp of the Queens English. Its a shame really that shes not quite made the perfect pop debut to match, butMade of Bricksis a damn fine first run, when it gets it right. The jerky prelude to the album proper, "Play" reminds briefly of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Bis, segueing into the Lily Allen plays Carter USM playfulness of "Foundations". "Dickhead" is a silly, smoky blues ditty, the massive, gyrating "Pumpkin Song" is Sugababes with their hair pulled behind the bike sheds, key-hammering highlight "Mariella" reminds of expressive vaudeville New Yorkers the Dresden Dolls and "We Get On" could be a Grease outtake, though nothing the innocent Olivia Newton John would ever wrap her lips around. Like Lily Allen then, but not that much. --James Berry
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Advantages: Great bursts of creativity and fun; entertaining overall Disadvantages: Underproduced, rushed through by the record company, seriously patchy
...barely any connection to be made apart from the fact that both of them are from London.
Nash was working at River Island when she fell down some stairs and broke her foot. In the three weeks she had to spend recovering, she picked up a bass guitar and started playing. By the time she had recovered enough to start working again, she had a few songs written and ready for performance, and she… didn't need to start working again. She ... ...very quickly afterwards. This one, Made Of Bricks -- And it's NOT like Lily Allen.
It's a rush-job, sadly, so for now we don't truly know how Kate Nash is going to sound as she progresses as an artist. However, based on the better songs here, she could very well become the English Regina Spektor. Made Of Bricks is a scrappy, messy affair; a series of art-school doodlings backed up with cool sounding music and some clever lyrics, all ... more
EDIT:; After reading Soho's review of the album I went onto iTunes and it turns out my version sounds very different - iTunes features a very overproduced Merry Happy, whilst We Get On and The Nicest Thing have been buffed up and sound better for it. I can't explain why this is, but you should know that my copy was bought on preorder, so it could be it's out-of-date now. I have honestly no idea what's happened there. ***Seresecros - the more you know. ***
If you ever find yourself wanting to read a review about Kate Nash and find that within the first paragraph she gets compared to Lily Allen; do yourself a favour and throw away the review, burn it, and then stamp on any little fluttery charred bits that remain. Whilst Lily Allen may have been a little responsible for helping to properly kick off Kate's career, there is barely any connection to be made apart from the fact that both of them are from London.
Nash was working at River Island when she fell down some stairs and broke her foot. In the three weeks she had to spend recovering, she picked up a bass guitar and started playing. By the time she had recovered enough to start working again, she had a few songs written and ready for performance, and she… didn't need to start working again. She quit her job, released her first single "Caroline's A Victim" and started her new career as a musician. Allen, hearing the single, put Nash in her Myspace friends list and from there; she went stellar. After the success of second single Foundations, she got picked up by a record company and an album followed very quickly afterwards. This one, Made Of Bricks -- And it's NOT like Lily Allen.
It's a rush-job, sadly, so for now we don't truly know how Kate Nash is going to sound as she progresses as an artist. However, based on the better songs here, she could very well become the English Regina Spektor. Made Of Bricks is a scrappy, messy affair; a series of art-school doodlings backed up with cool sounding music and some clever lyrics, all held together by Nash's distinctive voice. She's got the same kind of strong, powerful intonation that Spektor has, as well as a passion for singing songs with weird pronunciations, dotty vocal tics and unexpected shrieks and yells. What's not to love?
The album starts off with a brief moment of strangeness. "Play". A buffed up drumkit starts slamming on a basic drumbeat, whilst Kate sings variations of the phrase "I like to play" in a deep, slightly creepy voice. It's not creepy in a scary sort of way, mind, but when she finishes by saying "I play all day in my room", you start to wonder how innocent the song is meant to be. Then again, that may just be me. There's a little riff on a guitar and some old-style music hall keyboards, but it's just an into for "Foundations", by far her most well known song. Foundations is all about the feeling of entrapment felt when you release a relationship is on the rocks. Even though you don't love each other anymore, it's hard to give up on what was once a relationship, and you can't bring yourself to break up. Nash's songwriting on the album flits around, but on occasion she can nail a feeling perfectly, and during the chorus when she says "my fingertips are holding on to the cracks in our foundations" she's onto a winner. The song itself seems bright and breezy, with a chipper piano and handclaps lighting the song forward, but the downbeat tone of the lyrics make the song something to work on several different levels. During the song she does drift into cockney vocal mannerisms, but it's generally for effect - Nash doesn't live through her songs, she instead creates stories (like Spektor - see, they really are similar! I don't make these comparisons up at random!) and her characters "act" them. Seeing as she's from London, it's no great leap for her characters to also be from the capital either, okay? I'm glad that's cleared up.
At several points the stories are what distinguish the songs. "Birds", for example, features some staggeringly poor lyrical bits, but the overall story the song tells means that it works overall. It's a simple lament where a boyfriend tries to tell his girl how much he fancies her, and goes into some torturous poetry which she can't understand. The music could do with a little more polish and build-up, although the low-key nature makes it a song I can go back to and enjoy without getting too tired of it. However, some of the trackss don't' last beyond the first few listens. "The Shit Song" is designed to be a kiss-off to a cheating lover, but instead seems pretty bitter and nasty, which doesn't do Nash any favours. It's still quirky and a little fun, but there's a lack of inspiration at work here, and it's obviously a piece of (possibly improvised) filler. I also think that "Little Red" the bonus track, is pretty boring. It's just Nash and a piano, going nowhere in particular, and it isn't the best ending for the album by any means due to it's chronic dullness.
There are two songs which are singled out as ballads on the main part of the album, being "We Get On" and "The Nicest Thing". You can tell they're the ballads because they only have piano and no bouncy drumbeats or flouncy weird bits. Of the two, We Get On easily stands up as the best, because it doesn't take itself seriously. Musically there's little to put between them, being two piano ballads, but The Nicest Thing has a forced vocal that highlights too much yelping for my taste. Again, this may just be my opinion, but there's a time and a place for yelping, as Regina has previously taught us (seriously guys - it's an amazing comparison I've made here, you should give me an award for it or something). Both songs have the same message, that of a girl trying to get noticed by her crush, and it's strange that both made the cut here. If Nash had been given more time to make her album, perhaps she could've written something different, but as it is… we'll have to wait for album 2.
But hey, there are a lot of positives to draw from the album. "Mouthwash" happens to be one of the better pop singles to get commercial airplay this year, being a jumpy piano song which unexpectedly leaps up just before the chorus to elevate everything into a sense of otherworldly…ness. People complain the lyrics are a little simplistic, but seeing as the song is about Nash trying to downplay herself to the general public, that would kinda be the point, really. (Look at me, all judgy and stuff. I've become my mother - more on that another time, though) It's tremendous good fun, and is a little like Nash's version of Spektor's 'Poor Little Rich Boy'. She verses are a little annoying, but the chorus is as good as any, with a sense of urgency strolling across Nash's piano and some cool trumpets (if that's what they are) blaring out. "Dickhead" is actually quite a cool mock-blues session. It's really, really sweary though, so be careful with it. If you can get past that though, it actually makes me laugh whenever I hear it. Whether that's deliberate on Nash's part or because the song is so out of place is something I'll never know, unless Channel 4 finally give me a TV show and I can interview her - you know you wanna see that happen. Another fantastic pop tune is "Pumpkin Soup", where Nash shamelessly declares "I just want your kiss, boy" over some outrageously OTT drums and brass. It's an in-your-face tune that you'll probably turn to more than any other here.
Unless you're me, in which case "Merry Happy" will be your most frequent point of call. It's a song that I very much like because it's dippy and upbeat and has a lot of creativity. The opening lyrics "watching me like you never watched no-one/don't tell me you didn't try and check out my bum" don't give much hope at the start, but the persistent piano roll and the slow drum beat give the song a strength that means it gets over this initial struggle. The song actually gets more rewarding with each new listen to it, with the repetitive mantra of the chorus becoming more and more memorable and enjoyable. She even manages to get the great line "Chatting on the phone/You can't take back those hours/But I won't regret 'cos you can grow flowers/from where dirt used to be" which is pretty wonderful, really. The optimism that shines out from this actually quite sombre-sounding number is also present in "Mariella" and "Skeleton Song", both of which share the trait of being as mad as a hatter. In the latter, Nash talks to an imaginary childhood friend - the skeleton - against a backdrop of some schizophrenic piano (can I describe it like that?) It's loopy, but has a surprisingly heartfelt chorus which even has some violins in it and stuff. It's a pretty epic song too, lasting a long while and running the length of different feelings. Like Mariella, it's about being a child at heart. Both songs are upbeat but mental, and Mariella in particular features some great vocal ticks and oddball phrases and is highly enjoyable.
There's a few people who have gained a lot of buzz this year, and of them Kate Nash seems to be one of the people with the most potential. Whilst she's let down here by her record company pushing the album forward before it was properly ready, and the poor off-kilter production that plagues some of the songs such as The Nicest Thing, there is a lot here that suggests in the future Kate Nash could very well become an important figure in modern British music. This album is, generally, worth it, I'd say, although just be wary that it is a collection of songs rather than a record. Some are better than others, but most of the songs are decent fun. This album sets up Kate Nash to be someone to watch in the future, a good-but-not great collection that shows enough creative spark to show a real talent in the making. Yes, just like Regina Spektor.
Advantages: good case styling, foundations is a really good popular track Disadvantages: lots of un-needed swearing and lack of constructivism
==Kate Nash - Made Of Bricks Album==
About Kate Nash …
Kate Nash was born in London, England she had an interest in music from when she was at school where she learnt to play music and very soon started writing song lyrics, after leaving school she decided she would like to start a career in the music industry and after uploading songs to the internet became very popular with the help of Lily Allen. Eventually she signed up to a record company ... ...her first ever album - Made of Bricks.
About Kate Nash - Made of Bricks Album
This first album came out on the 6th of August 2007 two months after the very successful foundations single was released.
Made of Bricks was produced by Paul Epworth and included tracks that Kate Nash had been performing on her two nationwide tours.
The album was leaked out onto file sharing networks a day before it was due to be released gaining mixed reviews and opinions ...
almarsden 14.04.2008
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Made Of Bricks - Kate Nash
Advantages: Musically, it's not a bad album Disadvantages: Lyrically, it can be quite awful!
...look pretty shaky. However, given more time to work at things, her second album could well be a little more impressive than this. This is an album that may well be made of bricks, but the mortar is crumbling and the foundations are looking more than just a little shaky. ...
Soho_Black 14.10.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Made Of Bricks - Kate Nash
Advantages: Foundations, Mouthwash, We Get On, Mariella, Pumpkin Soup, Nicest Thing Disadvantages: Play, Dickhead, Birds, Shit Song, Skeleton Song, Merry Happy
Kate Nash burst onto the scene in 2007 in every way imaginable. She was signed to a Polydor offshoot in March, had first single 'Foundations' released in June, had her album release hurriedly pushed forward to August after the unprecedented success of the single, performed non-stop through the Summer, and announced in December that she has already started writing songs for her second album.
However, in all this rush, could her first album 'Made ... ...of the album mean that the tracks on it were hastily pulled together without any real substance? And does the fact that she's already onto writing her second album with only a couple of songs off the first one released mean that there's not enough releasable material on here at all?
'Foundations' was an instantly popular song - it was added to both Radio 1 and Radio 2's playlists in its first week of release and reached number 2 in the singles chart. ...
heatherrr13 09.01.2008
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Made Of Bricks - Kate Nash
Advantages: Some of the tracks are catchy Disadvantages: An extremely irritating album packed full of fillers
...following month. How Kate Nash made the transition from an independent to a major label in one month is beyond me as in my opinion Kate Nash music has to be the most irritating to have graced the UK charts since Crazy Frog hit the number one spot in 2005 with 'Axel F'.
'Made Of Bricks' starts promisingly with the short musical opening of 'Play', however things quickly turn sour as 'Foundations' kicks in, quickly followed by the soon to be released ... ...be said that its catchy for all the wrong reasons. I think that with 'Foundations', Kate Nash was on a mission to write and release the most irritating track she possibly could. With lyrics such as 'You said I must eat so many lemons, cause I am so bitter/I said I'd rather be with your friends mate cause they are much fitter', it is clear that lyrical intelligence here is at a minimum. It's not just the lyrics to tell you the truth; it's also the ...
RazzaLazza 17.09.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Made Of Bricks - Kate Nash
Advantages: A decent Pop debut album, some very catchy tracks Disadvantages: Still room for improvement once she gets a bit of life experience
It would seem that the new way to launch your career really is through the medium of the internet. At the moment the music scene seems to be undergoing a growing wave of artists launching themselves on Myspace. One of the latest is Harrow's singer songwriter Kate Nash. Following in the footsteps of the likes of Lilly Allen, she uploaded a few tracks to myspace and from there was signed to a record label and has even been described by Allen as the ... ...from nowhere to take the singles and album charts by storm and it was her second single "Foundations" that convinced me to buy this album.
I wasn't really too sure what to expect from the album on the whole and although I did really like the second single it took me a while to actually put my hand in my pocket and buy it. One of the things that is clear from her sound is that she draws her influences from all sorts of different music genre's. In ...
Andy.mack 15.09.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Made Of Bricks - Kate Nash
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This is by far one of the most original albums I have listened to in a very long time. Very much of a 'Lily Allen' style and yet KateNash has still somehow managed to make it sound unique and different to anything else available on the market at the moment. A must have for for fans of Lily Allen and indeed anyone who has heard Kates hugely succesful debut single, 'Foundations'. I think this fantastic woman will continue to be hugely succesful for years to come and this album is yet another step in the great fairytale of someone coming from nothing to suddenly having everything. My personal favourites on this album are of course, Foundations, Mouthwash and We Get On which I think will prove to be yet another hit for this wonderful woman. ...
Advantages: Catchy, good melodies, funny lyrics Disadvantages: Bit like Marmite, you'll either love it or hate it.
If you're considering buying this album then I'm sure you will be in the same position I was, having heard the single "Foundations" and wondering whether the album will be of a similar standard. That is to say if you liked Foundations would the rest of the album live up or if you hated it would the album be much of the same?
I have to say I was quite pleasantly surprised when I got "Made of Bricks". I personally was on the side that loved Foundations, could not get it out of my head and was wooed by the certain charm it out across. For me the album as a whole succedes in doing the same. Ok maybe not all the songs are quite as good as the lead single but each one well written and sticks to a similar style, meaning if you liked Foundations you should enjoy the rest.
This album was never going to be hailed as one of the best ever ...
Advantages: A fantastic album which would cheer you up in an instant Disadvantages: 2/3 songs arent too good...
This album is the best album ive brought all year. Ever since i first heard Foundations ive been in love with KateNash's music. Its so different to everything that we hear nowadays. "emo" music, heavy metal etc. Katenash is what i like to call a breath of fresh air. Its like Lily Allen except better. When i first heard the album the whole way through, i wasn't too sure what i had brought! But after several listens, its just become one of my favourite and most listened to albums. With random lyrics such as "i use mouthwash and sometimes i floss, i have a family and i drink cups of tea". Only KateNash would be able to pull off a song with that chorus and make it into a hit. Definatly one to buy! ...