Stealing of a Nation [Enhanced]

Editorial Reviews

NME
"The New York punk-funkers return with a dancefloor manifesto: political ranting and proper tunes."

Product Description
The sound of insurgency comes to life as Brooklyn's Radio 4 return with their unmatched blend of post-punk thunder, bass-&-percussion driven grooves and politically charged lyrics.

Stealing of a Nation,Radio 4,Astralwerks,Dance,Pop,Rock,Rock/Pop
Stealing of a Nation
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • "Good" in places, but very uneven/generic dance rock (the songs all sound the same!)
  • Vague Politics; Good Groove
  • Answer...
  • Think for yourself
  • disappointing?
Stealing of a Nation
Radio 4
Manufacturer: Astralwerks
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Indie RockIndie Rock | Indie & Lo-Fi | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance Pop | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Enemies Like This
  2. Gotham!
  3. The New Song and Dance
  4. Red Bedroom
  5. Dangerous Dreams

ASIN: B0002NRMO2
Release Date: 2004-09-20

Tracks:

  1. Party Crashers
  2. Transmission
  3. State Of Alert
  4. Fra Type 1 & 2
  5. The Death Of American Radio
  6. Nation
  7. No Reaction
  8. Absolute Affirmation
  9. (Give Me All Your) Money
  10. Shake The Foundation
  11. Dismiss The Sound
  12. Coming Up Empty

Album Description

The sound of insurgency comes to life as Brooklyn's Radio 4 return with their unmatched blend of post-punk thunder, bass-&-percussion driven grooves and politically charged lyrics.

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars "Good" in places, but very uneven/generic dance rock (the songs all sound the same!).......2005-06-25

At first I loved this CD, but then I realized that it didn't contain much depth and that the songs all sounded very similar. There are definitely highlights, but the ones that aren't are noticably worse. "Party Crashers", "State Of Alert", and "Absolute Affirmation", for example, are pretty good mindless songs, but really you wouldn't mind not having them either. It's one of those situations where if you have the songs, cool, but if you don't you wouldn't care much. Not an entirely unsatisfying purchase, but I couldn't really recommend this album when there are so many better ones out there to get first.

Highlights include:
"Party Crashers"
"State Of Alert"
"The Death Of American Radio"
"Nation"
"Absolute Affirmation"

3 out of 5 stars Vague Politics; Good Groove.......2004-10-20

More consistent than Gotham!, Radio 4's major-label debut Stealing of a Nation is too much a good thing or, in the case of this dance-inducing CD, too much of the same thing. Their Gang-of-4-at-the-afterhours-disco riffs are fun and, on a song-by-song basis, motivating, but the beat doesn't let up on this 12 song CD until the last track, "Coming Up Empty", which becomes the most interesting piece here by dint of its novelty (a faux-Eastern melody line and a tempo that isn't defined by BMP's). And their politics are vague, other than that they seem against it, whatever "it" is. Still, Stealing is a beautifully engineered CD with thick beats and pounding guitars. At this point, content would be nice, but isn't necessary.

5 out of 5 stars Answer..........2004-09-30

I don't know what to think when I read something bad about this album... if this is not one of the greatest albuns of this year, I don't know what to think... personal taste??? I don't know...
I just know one thing, I'm listening this since I got it, and, after Gotham, I was anxious... this is not what I was expecting, but, MUCH BETTER THAN THAT, this guys are GREAT, MARVELLOUS, I am always searching for new bands and is getting really difficult to find something that touch me like this guys did... I could put it in Gang of 4 and Clash matters, but, believe me, it's beyond... simply the best...

4 out of 5 stars Think for yourself.......2004-09-23

The problem with having your name bandied about exclusively by hipsters and indie geeks is that eventually they turn on you. Radio 4 were loosely affiliated with the DFA production team for about 5 minutes and because of this, hordes of Rapture fans and casual alternative types who liked "Dance to the Underground" (on the car commercial) flocked to Gotham! like it was the second coming of the Strokes. Critics weren't much better -- they dismissed the band for retreading Gang of Four and the Clash as if it wasn't bands like this, who carry such a torch, that exposed them to Gang of Four in the first place. Now Radio 4 have moved on beyond the indie labels and the hipsterdom and the Go4 retreads, and they're still being lambasted. The sad thing is that this record is actually quite strong; there isn't a lot of variation from song to song, but the choruses groove themselves into your head and the busy, slick dance production exalts Anthony Roman's bass to give the whole thing a mighty wallop. "Party Crashers" makes a great intro single, despite what Pitchfork may want you to think, mainly because it is recognizably *Radio 4* and probably the first song of theirs to override the derivation; it sounds wholly like themselves. "Absolute Affirmation" and "Transmission" both house tremendous central guitar-based hooks, while "FRA Type I & II" pumps up the bassline to unveil a healthy dub influence and "Shake the Foundation" throbs along at a post-modern funk/disco tempo. Lyrically, the band are still about political sloganeering and anthemic calls to action, but are thankfully never heavy enough to distract from the rhythms. In fact, the gloss, the beat, the good times -- all of these things seem to anticipate a resurgence of late 80s values (the INXS comparisons are really quite appropriate) that will come back into vogue as soon as the kids today get just a little bit older, and if they play their cards right, Radio 4 may just ride the crest of that wave all the way to the top.

2 out of 5 stars disappointing?.......2004-09-08

"Sometimes all the blame for a disaster can be traced to a simple bad decision. In the case of Radio Four and their album Stealing a Nation that crucial moment was when they hired Max Heyes to produce the record. Maybe it was record company pressure, maybe it was the band's own choice but however it came down, the result is the same. Stealing of a Nation is a slick, calculated record that misses its target on all accounts. It aims to be a big statement, a political treatise detailing how corrupt and wrong "the system is" set to incendiary rhythms meant to get people boogying while they tear down the walls of injustice. Fair enough, it is good to have ambition. Unfortunately the smoothed out sound of the disc and bland, lifeless tunes won't do much to inspire people. If you want devotion you have to throw in some tunes that people can sing along to. Ask Billy Bragg. Ask the Clash. And if they aren't singing along at least get them out on the dance floor like !!! does on Louden Up Now. The worst thing you can do is inspire yawns as Radio 4 have done here. Perhaps they should have retained the services of the DFA again as producers and created an album as exciting, raw and alive as Gotham. Instead Heyes (who has worked with Ocean Colour Scene and Doves to give you some idea where he is coming from) loads the sound up with lots of modern bells and whistles like techno sequencers, guitar effects and keyboard doodles but in the process pretty much ruins everything. The guitars sound distant and processed, the drums and bass aren't heavy enough to inspire much dance floor action, the vocals are way out in front of the music (which considering the mostly pedestrian and empty lyrics does no one any favors) and most mystifyingly, every song seems to have the same rat-a-tat-tat conga line that the Clash used in "This is Radio Clash". Overall it sounds less like the work of a band getting together and coming up with a sound or a direction than it does the result of a computer program cooked up to replicate the current newest wave of new wave sounds. Not that computers are necessarily bad, it is just that Radio 4 made such a great record without relying on them so heavily, one wishes they had gone for a similar approach here. As it is songs like " (Give Me All Your) Money" and "State of Alert" call to mind the era of Jesus Jones and EMF, "Dismiss the Sound" sounds like Depeche Mode in their hard rocking days, at other times you get traces of INXS or Alabama 3. These are all names you have to be sure Radio 4 were not aiming to be linked to but again it is about choices. You can stay true to yourself and your sound and maybe make a good record or you can aim for the big time and take the risk of making a record that leaves behind all the things that made you great. Having said all that there are some flashes of excitement here and there; "Absolute Affirmation" has an organic Ted Leo meets New Order feel, "State of Alert" has a hook that sticks with you for awhile and "Nation" has some spiffy dub effects. That's not a lot to hang your hat on however, their track record surely led fans to expect more. To paraphrase Beach Boy Carl Wilson speaking about his band's Smiley Smile album, The Stealing of a Nation is a foul ball when we were hoping for a home run." - Tim Sendra - AllMusicGuide
Stealing of a Nation
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Good disc, and great remixes
Stealing of a Nation
Radio 4
Manufacturer: Astralwerks
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Indie RockIndie Rock | Indie & Lo-Fi | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Electrify
  2. Enemies Like This
  3. Gotham!
  4. Echoes

ASIN: B0002NRMOM
Release Date: 2004-09-07

Tracks:

  1. Party Crashers
  2. Transmission
  3. State Of Alert
  4. Fra Type 1 & 2
  5. The Death Of American Radio
  6. Nation
  7. No Reaction
  8. Absolute Affirmation
  9. (Give Me All Your) Money
  10. Shake The Foundation
  11. Dismiss The Sound
  12. Coming Up Empty

Tracks:

  1. Party Crashers (Ashley Beedle's NY After Dark Vocal Mix)
  2. Party Crashers (Headman Vocal Remix)
  3. Absolute Affirmation (Tom Middleton Cosmos Remix)
  4. Absolute Affirmation (Si Begg Vocal Remix)
  5. Party Crashers Video
  6. Absolute Affirmation Video

Album Description

The sound of insurgency comes to life as Brooklyn's Radio 4 return with their unmatched blend of post-punk thunder, bass-&-percussion driven grooves and politically charged lyrics. Limited-edition includes bonus CD with remixes, videos and the documentary film "The Making of Stealing Of A Nation."

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Good disc, and great remixes.......2006-03-29

Radio 4 decided to add a bit more electronic edge to their sounds for this album, and it works, making them sound less like the Clash or Gang of Four. This is something they needed, as this album sounds more focused. Other reviewers have complained that they all run together, and they do, but more in the style of how a good DJ's mix will blend in. You just remember certain riffs, the occasional outstanding track, and what you want to do is play it again. There really isn't a bad track here. However, while the main disc still retains most of their rock/punk sound, the bonus disc doesn't at all. I happened to like this, but if you don't like danceable electronic music, you're probably off sticking to the main album. The first track is the Headman Voc mix of Party Crashers, and gives a good edge to the song. The Ashley Beedle Instrumental (I should point out that the version on the Party Crashers single is the Vocal mix) is ok, but with all the strings and disco feel, it sounds more like someone trying to copy the early 90's wannabe-disco sound. The Absolute Affirmation mixes are much better. The Si Begg Vocal (it's the Instrumental mix on the Absolute Affirmation single) gives a nice stuttered feel to the song, and the Fragmented mix even more so. The Cosmos Dub is very poppy-clubby, and is good in it's own way. The disc also has the video for Party Crashers on it, and has a link to (not the actual video itself) the Absolute Affirmation video. If you like club-minded stuff and Radio 4, this would be ideal.
Stealing of a Nation
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Stealing of a Nation

    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    RockRock | Imports | Stores | Music
    ASIN: B0002FQMN2
    Release Date: 2004-08-31

    Album Description

    Japanese pressing of the indie rock act's eagerly anticipated 2004 album features one bonus track, 'Party Crashers' (Ashley Beedle's NY After Dark Vocal Mix) along with an enhanced video to 'Party Crashers'. Toshiba/Virgin.

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