| Travis
-The Invisible Band (CD) |
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The Invisible Band marks no major change in direction
for Travis but this is no bad thing. That Travis are the
most simplistic of the post-Radiohead groups may not sound
like the heartiest of compliments but it undoubtedly accounts
for their massive appeal. |
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Track Listings
1. Sing
2. Dear Diary
3. Side
4. Pipe Dreams
5. Flowers In The Window
6. The Cage
7. Safe
8. Follow The Light
9. Last Train
10. Afterglow
11. Indefinitely
12. The Humpty Dumpty Love Song
Amazon.co.uk Review
The Invisible Band marks no major change in direction for
Travis but this is no bad thing. That Travis are the most
simplistic of the post-Radiohead groups may not sound like
the heartiest of compliments but it undoubtedly accounts for
their massive appeal. The Man Who became one of the most popular
indie-rock records of the 1990s by virtue of its cheery accessibility
and its way with a simple weather metaphor and judging by
the lyric to "Side"--"The grass is always greener
on the other side/The neighbour's got a new car that you wanna
drive"--it's immediately obvious that come their third
full-length album, Travis have twigged their fans are not
waiting for a brave sonic crusade. Which doesn't matter a
jot, because The Invisible Band is such a natural, instantly
lovable and thoroughly unforced record, it seems thoroughly
churlish to knock it. The opening "Sing" sounds
like since their inception, all Travis have been missing is
a banjo; the florid "Flowers In The Window" harks
back to McCartney's finest Beatles compositions; and the synth-led
"The Humpty Dumpty Love Song" lays Travis' sentimental
heart bare. "I'd pray to God if there were heaven,"
sings Fran Healy on "Pipe Dreams", "But heaven
sounds so very far from here..." And that's exactly why
Travis are so popular; they're the humble down-to-earth boys
from next door, still singing the simplest songs, still making
the mundane sound beautiful. --Louis Pattison
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