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A Grand Don't Come for Free

The Streets

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from The Streets

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 It Was Supposed to Be So Easy The Streets 3:53 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Could Well Be In The Streets 4:23 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Not Addicted The Streets 3:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Blinded By the Lights The Streets 4:45 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Wouldn't Have It Any Other Way The Streets 4:34 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Get Out of My House The Streets 3:52 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Fit But You Know It The Streets 4:13 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Such a T**t The Streets 3:47 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 What Is He Thinking? The Streets 4:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Dry Your Eyes The Streets 4:29 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Empty Cans The Streets 8:15 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Mike Skinner has a problem, and from the sound of it, it's life-threatening. He opens his second Streets full-length by moaning "It was supposed to be so easy..." as though he's about to deliver his deathbed confession, the classic tale of a crime gone wrong. Instead, three minutes later, it's clear what the "it" was: walking down to bring back a DVD rental, taking some money out of the machine, and calling his mother, who he'd just left at home, to tell her he wouldn't be back for tea. Believe it or not, but that's just another day in the life of Britain's favorite bedsit producer c*m singer/songwriter. Although listeners may not wonder where he finds his material, they'll quickly realize that A Grand Don't Come for Free is just as immediately striking as Skinner's career-making full-length debut, Original Pirate Material. It succeeds, despite a clear lack of comparable singles, because of its paradoxical concept (and yes, it is a concept album) that a record can be tremendously ambitious even though it charts a very unambitious personality. Skinner's urban British youth persona is even more fully drawn than before, and this time he delivers a complete narrative in LP form, with characters, conflicts, themes, and post-modern resolution on the closer. He's sheepish about his utter lack of knowledge about football (and the heavy gambling losses that result from it), unreservedly enthusiastic about his girlfriend early on but later totally disgusted with her (in a blow-up that rivals Dizzee Rascal's "I Luv U"), not so easily dismissive of a gorgeous show-off in front of him at the kebab shop, and willing to confront anyone who criticizes him for drinking at home until he can set up a row of empty Tennent's Super cans. Fortunately, he hasn't reduced the Streets to a comedy act in the process. There is as much tragedy and heartbreak here as there is slapstick comedy. "Blinded by the Lights," driven at half-speed by a shadowy trance line and Skinner's disoriented delivery, transmits perfectly the intense loneliness that can flood you in a club full of people and the utter disenchantment of being stranded in the middle of euphoria. Skinner drives these tracks with a mere skeleton of productions and delivers some cruelly off-key harmonies on the choruses; only the single, a rockabilly buster named "Fit but You Know It," makes any attempt to connect the dots from beats to melody to production. Confronting doubts about his seriousness and squashing whispers about his talent, Skinner has made a sophomore record that expands on what distinguishes the Streets from any other act in music.

Recent Customer Reviews

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by taylorpamplin

this album is one of my favorites! but for some reason itunes deemed it "electronica / dance" haha what the eff

Local Genius
     
by phcool

I kid you not, this is probably one of the top 3 popular-genre albums of the young century. It's that brilliant. The replay value on Skinner's second album is incredible. Do not be swayed by the catagory of "Hip-Hop/Rap." This is plodding two-step, like the rest of The Streets' albums. This is poetry with incredible hooks. The entire album essentially unfolds in singular narrative fashion. Each track stands alone well enough, but together they create an urban opera unlike anything R. Kelly could ever hope to create. Skinner's vulnerablility, anger, paranoia, and youthful mood swings all provide a dynamic arrangement of styles and moods, but the best part of it all is the absolute accuracy of it all. Even his cliches come across as profound thanks to plot he develops.

The incredible feat here is that the album is a giant but somehow deeply personal. You'll have to spin this to best understand. Further support: Allmusic: 4.5 stars. Blender: 4 stars. NME: 9/10. Pitchfork Media: 9.1/10 QMag: 5 stars. Slant Mag: 4.5 stars. And the best evidence of all? Rolling Ston gave it 3 out of 5 stars. When Rolling Stone hates something, you know it's good, and vice-versa. Jessica Simpson got more stars the same year. Of course, now that The Streets is a big deal, RS gave him 4 stars for his latest album to make amends, despite his latest being likely the weakest.

Great Album
     
by Sephinroth Mcloud

Music From The Heart

Biography

Born: Birmingham, England

Genre: Alternative Rap

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Mike Skinner's recordings as the Streets marked the first attempt to add a degree of social commentary to Britain's party-hearty garage/2-step (and later grime) movement. Skinner, a Birmingham native who later ventured to the capital, was an outsider in the garage scene, though his initial recordings...
Full Bio
A Grand Don't Come for Free, The Streets
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  • $10.89
  • Genres: Hip-Hop/Rap, Music
  • Released: May 03, 2004

Customer Ratings

     
15 Ratings

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