Cover of The Boo Radleys Everything's Alright Forever
Darkeve

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For fans of the boo radleys, lovers of shoegaze and 90s indie rock, and listeners intrigued by dreamy, reverb-laden music.
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THE REVIEW

Doing nothing... Ah, what a great thing doing nothing is.

Because, let's face it, wasting time is an art. Throwing hours of our life down the toilet requires imagination.

In this sense, DeBaser is a perfect tool: don't know what to do? You start browsing reviews, improbable dialogues, comments, and rankings. Then, maybe, you find a user who has tastes similar to yours, and you begin to practice obsessive voyeurism.

This is exactly how I discovered the Boo Radleys. By spying on rankings of those with similar tastes to mine.

Everything's Alright Forever (1992) I practically bought blindly. And it was a stunning surprise.

A few acoustic guitar chords and the journey begins. "Spaniard" is ethereal pop with Spanish-flavored melodies. The trumpet at the end could be the funeral dirge for a bullfighter who didn't fare well in the ring. A voice dense with reverbs. Distant. "Towards The Light" makes things clear: My Bloody Valentine. It's undeniable, the four Englishmen devoured Loveless, but it would be reductive and unfair to view them as mere copies of Bloody Valentine.

The Boo Radleys have class, they write beautiful pieces, and this album is a shoegaze masterpiece. "Skyscraper" is rarefied beauty. I hadn't heard a melody so seductive in a while. A mix of noise and languid guitars, that's the formula. And it works. Works to perfection.

"I Feel Nothing" opens with a fiercely distorted wall of sound that would fit perfectly on Psychocandy, then transforms into an alien-like bossa nova. Touches of originality in a genre often too stereotyped.

"Room at the Top" is hypnotic and roaring, in pure Loveless style (perhaps the most MBV of the album). It's sex inside a blender.

"Firesky" is a run into the void. It changes your way of breathing. Oxygen is no longer needed. And the distorted echoes are real waves crashing against your chills.

Ah, what a great thing doing nothing is.

How lovely to drown like this... in a bathtub as big as an ocean.

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Summary by Bot

The reviewer praises The Boo Radleys' 1992 album Everything's Alright Forever as a shoegaze masterpiece. They highlight the band's originality despite noticeable influences from My Bloody Valentine, emphasizing the album's blend of ethereal melodies and distorted guitars. The tracks evoke strong imagery and emotional resonance, making the album a stunning surprise beyond initial expectations.

Tracklist Lyrics Videos

01   Spaniard (04:02)

02   Towards the Light (01:41)

03   Losing It (Song for Abigail) (04:02)

04   Memory Babe (03:19)

05   Skyscraper (04:46)

06   I Feel Nothing (03:06)

07   Room at the Top (05:05)

08   Does This Hurt? (03:56)

Ca-rolin,
Ca-rolin,
You smashed your dreams and now you've taken mine

Ca-rolin,
Ca-rolin,
You talk so low and make out you're so kind

Ca-rolin,
Ca-rolin,
You trampled on the only one who cared

Ca-rolin,
Ca-rolin,
Don't walk off and pretend you haven't heard

Ca-rolin,
Ca-rolin,
If you're so high and clever where's your friends?
If you're so high and clever where's your friends?

09   Sparrow (01:51)

10   Smile Fades Fast (03:13)

11   Firesky (05:05)

12   Song for the Morning to Sing (02:30)

13   Lazy Day (01:34)

14   Paradise (05:50)

The Boo Radleys

The Boo Radleys are a British alternative rock band from Merseyside. Signed to Creation Records, they earned critical acclaim with Giant Steps (1993), named Album of the Year by NME and Select, and reached UK No. 1 with Wake Up! (1995) and the hit single Wake Up Boo!. They originally split in 1999 and reformed in 2021.
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