The Commoners Live

  Montreux Fest British Dedication

  Joanna Shaw Taylor UK Tour

  Within Temptation Ukraine Film

  Gaza - Too Little, Too Late

  Robert Jon & The Wreck Live

  Mike Peters Remembered

  Elliot Minor Live Manchester

  The Swell Season LP & Tour

  Robert Jon & The Wreck ‘24 Tour

  EARTH DAY 2025

  Montreux Lineup 2025

  The Omen (Has Arrived)

  Divine Comedy Back in ‘25!

  DOWNLOAD 2025

  The Damn Truth UK Tour

  David Gray’s New LP & Tour

  On Freelance Photography

  Trump’s Winning Ways…?

  Martha Wainwright’s Debut LP

  Roger Waters on Amused To Death

  Trump, Drunk On Power

  Apartheid and Beyond…

  David Ford Live in ‘25

  My Favourite Records

  In Dreams…

  Coheed & Cambria New LP & Tour

  Young Knives New LP & UK Tour

  Elliot Minor Back In 2025

  Emily Barker LP & 2025 UK Tour

  Political Inhumanity

  Record Reviews

  Ani DiFranco 2025 Tour

  “Let Right Be Done”

  Farah Nabulsi Filmmaker

  G3 Reunion Live LP in ‘25

  IS THIS IT?

  Larkin Poe Live in ‘25 + New LP

  Laura Marling New Record Out Now

  Rise Against 2025 Tour

  Rag ‘N’ Bone Man New LP & Tour

  The Middle East Crisis

  Ezra Collective New LP & Tour

  Leif Vollebekk New, Great LP

  Stick In The Wheel Returns

  SO, WHAT’S CHANGED?

  “They’re American Planes…”

  Olive Tree By Olive Tree…

  Ani Di Franco In Conversation

  Gemma Hayes Returns

  Remembering Thomas Hoepker

  Joe Bonamassa Live in 25

  On Misinformation

  Joan As Police Woman LP

  Politics - Who To Trust?

  The 76 Year Catastrophe

  Black Country Communion Back!

  Within Temptation Live Recordings

  Beth Gibbons New Solo LP

  Politics Is Failing

  Ani DiFranco New LP

  Pink Floyd’s Animals Remix

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  Seasick Steve Alive & Kickin’

  “My country, right or wrong…”

  Heart Announce Live Tours

  Anais Mitchell HADESTOWN Returns

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  Gaza Nightmare Continues

  Princess Goes COME OF AGE

  Philip ‘Seth’ Campbell Live

  This Troubled World

  Dark Side Of The Moon 50th

  The More I Hear The Less I Know

  Great Albums: Fresh New Life

  Hozier’s New Album

  Nicole Atkins Jim Sclavunos Live

  SBT (Sarabeth Tucek) Live

  I’m As Angry As Hell!

  Magnum - A Year in Ukraine

  Alessandra Sanguinetti Interview

  The Damn Truth Live

  Newton Faulkner Live

  The Handsome Family Live

  The State We’re In Pt II

  Eric Gales Live

  The Cavalry Never Arrived

  Chvrches Live

  Andrés Peña Flamenco Star Live

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  A Fly-Free Zone

  Liverpool Jazz Festival

  The Charlatans Live

  UK Democracy Threatened

  Rag’n'Bone Man Live

  Sea Girls Live

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  Lucy Kruger TRANSIT TAPES

  Joe Bonamassa Live!

  Rodrigo Y Gabriela Interview

  Music & Brexit

  Happy New Year?

  On Barbra Streisand

  The State We’re In…

  Welcome Back! But To What?

  What Have We Done?

  A RISK TOO FAR

  Photojournalism Hero

  Samantha Fish Live

  Gill Landry Live in Chester

  Noah Gundersen Live

  David Gilmour’s Interview

  Snow Patrol Live in Manchester

  New Model Army Live

  Shakespears Sister Live

  Lamb Live in Manchester

  The Struts Live

  Sting & Shaggy Live

  David Gray Live in Liverpool

  John Lennon Interview


The Enemy WE’LL LIVE AND DIE IN THESE TOWNS. WEA

In my recent live review of The Enemy I concluded that they are a band of youth playing for the youth, and what impact they will have on the wider audience is debatable. After spending some time with their debut album I would like to say what a load of bollocks those comments were, and that this is a band of right now with something that most of their contemporaries forget to do – write tunes – absolutely brutal, mind-bending, glorious tunes – and by the bloody truck load.

The music is very simple and passionate rock, with a very deliberate focus on the songs and the melodies. The vocals are delivered with a very honest aggressiveness, with open imperfection a sure sign of the band’s confidence. The whole record sounds like you would hope a group of young men would sound in their natural state; without the often over-invasive touch of a renowned producer to sharpen and commercialise the sound.

There are so many highlights here, in fact I won’t exclude a single track from the highest of praise. These are songs of utter frustration at the England that teenagers see before them and although there is hope in the songs, I think the raw honesty of being really hacked off with things is far more striking. Lyrically it should strike a chord with everyone, and it’s astonishing that these teenagers have managed to figure out what it takes most of us a lifetime to realise. The starter is appropriately titled ‘Aggro’, which has a very dark undertone to keep the vocals from being taken too lightly. The brilliant opening is followed by ‘Away From Here’, which in my opinion is the best single released in any genre of music since System of A Down destroyed all before them with ‘Chop Suey’. It is THE anthem of the last five years, maybe not as accomplished musically, or as instantly appealing as most of the other great songs released at that time, but it is just everything that is great about music in its most simple form. The album then moves from dark songs about what causes the problems for kids today on ‘Pressure’, to more uplifting escape routes such as ‘Had Enough.’ I am reluctant to focus on individual songs because every one of the eleven tracks just comes at you and pins you down with nothing more than the brute force of the tune and its delivery. But the title track along with ‘You’re not Alone’ and ‘40 Days and 40 Nights’ are particularly special. The only minor quibble would be that the final two tracks, ‘This Song’ and ‘Happy Birthday Jane’ which should have been split up rather than both conclude the album on a quiet note. But they are still fantastic in the way they show how these guys can reel in the noise and show their sensitive sides.

The Enemy have in a kind of odd way managed to probably take the biggest risk of all the new bands to have emerged in the last couple of years; they haven’t got any tricks, no new sounds, no gimmicks, no new genre, nothing, absolutely nothing but their tunes. And to deliver something so pure and simple and still be so breathtaking really is something to truly cherish. The best conclusion I can come up with is this, if the Arctic Monkeys are the youth, The Enemy are the yoof. And who really wants their rock to be to perfect anyway?

4/5


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