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We Started Nothing
We Started Nothing
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Artist: The Ting Tings
Label: Columbia/ Red Ink
Category: Music

List Price: $12.98
Buy New: $6.00
You Save: $6.98 (54%)
Buy New/Used from $6.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(13 reviews)
Sales Rank: 121

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 28925
UPC: 886972892528
EAN: 0886972892528
ASIN: B0018OAPI4

Release Date: June 3, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Great DJ
  • That's Not My Name
  • Fruit Machine
  • Traffic Light
  • Shut Up And Let Me Go
  • Keep Your Head
  • We Walk
  • Be The One
  • Impacilla Carpisung
  • We Started Nothing

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
We Started Nothing is the debut album from The Ting Tings. Tipped in the top three of the BBC's Sound of 2008 poll at the beginning of the year, seemingly they have much to prove. However, The Ting Tings aren't about proving themselves; they are simply here to enjoy it. Making great British pop music - their way - is what they're about. Born of a desire to employ the DIY ethic from day one - Katie White and Jules De Martino escaped the industry trappings they once experienced in a previous band and went back to basics as a duo. They stripped back everything they thought they both knew about making music and the industry that revolved around every note.

We Started Nothing is a debut album brimming with intuitive pop noise. It's pure garage-pop and once heard will in-bed itself into your subconscious for many days, weeks, months to come. Snappy choruses trade off against angular gutar work, whip smart drumming and a succession of loops that they create live with the use of delay pedals.

Amazon.co.uk
The debut album by Salford's The Ting Tings comes hot on the heels of their No.1 single "That's Not My Name", a nugget of pop gold that comes on like a genetic splicing of Toni Basil's "Micky" and The Knack's "My Sharona". The bulk of We Started Nothing follows a similar formula, navigating a path between the smart, angular indie of CSS, Bonde Do Role, et al and the pop mainstream. Here and there, they pull it off perfectly: the stutter-rap of "Fruit Machine" sees vocalist Katie White leading on some poor sap with sultry charisma and lip-gloss sass, while the excellent "Shut Up and Let Me Go" is snappy dance-punk in the spirit of Blondie's "Rapture" or Tom Tom Club's "Genius of Love". Elsewhere, they branch out with mixed results. "We Walk" builds from quiet flourishes of piano into a surprisingly steely manifesto: "Smash the rest up/Burn it down/Put us in the corner cause we're into ideas", sneers White. Rather less good is "Traffic Light", a light, jazzy number that employs a number of somewhat forced driving metaphors to describe a relationship hit the skids. Still, it's a debut with promise, and a string of good singles is nothing to be sniffed at. -?Louis Pattison


Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars What a fun CD!   August 9, 2008
I love almost every song on this CD! The Ting Tings' music really makes me wanna sing along. The one song I didn't really like was Impacilla Carpisung, but that's just because I can't stand the little gulping noise that's in the background. Katie's voice is kind of nasal, but I like it, it sounds good with the music. My favorite songs were Traffic Light and Keep Your Head. I definitely recommend this CD!


5 out of 5 stars Bloody Brilliant   July 20, 2008
My new favorite album. Take the White Stripes and reverse the roles. Add in some Devo, electrified disco and Cibo Matto. This album is a blast.


5 out of 5 stars First Music CD I got in 25 years   July 12, 2008
Saw then on some late night TV show while switching channels, enjoy there music so much got there CD. Love the driving beat.


4 out of 5 stars I dig this album   June 29, 2008
I found these guys after hearing "Not My Name" on the Tulane college radio station in New Orleans. I bought the album immediately and I listened to it in the car home to Houston 4 times yesterday. I don't know anything about these guys and reviews have not always been good, but I love this album and highly recommend it.

A couple of song reviews:

Not My Name - Awesome song. Sounds like a mash up of Dixie Cups (not Chicks), Yo La Tengo and Luscious Jackson. This song is a 5 minute pop gem. A tiny little manifesto. A crazy mish-mash in all the best ways. Plus I already danced my butt off to it in my living room.

Shut Up and Let me Go - Very reminiscent of "Birthday Cake" from Viva La Woman. (An awesome album, BTW) I have to guess the Ting Tings grew up listening to and loving Cibo Matto.

Great DJ - will get you off your bottom and on the floor.

Traffic Light - takes me on a fun, whimsical, slightly scary car trip. Reminded me, for whatever reason, of Abra Moore from Poi Dog Pondering and her awesome solo album "Strangest Places."

I like this album a great deal and thank the Ting Tings for brightening up my life during a tough time. You guys rock!



4 out of 5 stars Fun album from start to finish   June 24, 2008
  3 out of 5 found this review helpful

The Ting Tings shot like a meteor onto the UK music scene in 2007, helped along by coverage from UK music rag NME. A year later, they reach to No. 1 in the UK singles chart and the debut album arrives.

"We Started Nothing" (10 tracks; 38 min.) starts off with the irresitable double blast of "Great DJ" and "That's Not My Name" (originaly released as a double-A single in 2007, and "That's Not My Name" re-released a year later, and reaching No.1 on the UK singles chart last month). But the fun doesn't stop there. The duo keeps things moving quite nicely, with "Shut Up and Let Me Go" (which reminds me of that song "Last Night a DJ Saved My Life" of yesteryear), and it sounds like another sure-fire single to me. The second half of the album is not as strong, but still features several great tracks like "Keep Your Head", "Be The One", and in particular the closer, the 6+ min. title track, a great way to sum up the album.

In all, these songs just flow by in no time and before you know it you'll find yourself playing this again and again. "We Started Nothing" is not a grand 'artistic' statement, just an album with great fun, dance-along songs. I'll be catching the Ting Tings at the Monolith Festival (at the Red Rocks) in September, where they'll be playing the intimate WOXY-curated stage, and I can't wait to see how these songs will translate in a live setting. Totally unrelated, the internet-only station WOXY ("BAM! The Future of Rock'n'Roll!") plays these guys regularly, and they are the best source for indie music in the US, bar none.



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