| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 3847 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 11/25/2008 11:08:47 PM MST |
| Price Used: | $1.96 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 1997-09-30 |
| Label: | Virgin Records Us |
| UPC: | 724384491321 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Publication Date: | 1997 |
| Published By: | Virgin Records Us |
| ASIN: | B000000WF0 |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on Urban Hymns by Virgin Records Us
- Bitter Sweet Symphony
- Sonnet
- The Rolling People - The Verve, Verve
- The Drugs Don't Work
- Catching the Butterfly - The Verve, Verve
- Neon Wilderness - The Verve, McCabe, Nick
- Space and Time
- Weeping Willow
- Lucky Man
- One Day
- This Time
- Velvet Morning
- Come On - The Verve, Verve
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Album Description
Japanese edition of their highly acclaimed 1997 album with the unmarked bonus track 'Lord, I Guess I'll Never Know'. 15tracks total, also featuring the hit 'Bitter Sweet Symphony' and singles 'The Drugs Don't Work' & 'Lucky Man', plus 'Deep Freeze', a hidden bonus track on the U.S. edition. Black & white picture CD with a group shot of the band. A Virgin release.
Amazon.com
Perhaps you weren't convinced of the Verve's staying power until recently. Before the release of Urban Hymns, skeptics wondered if they could ever match the explosive power of their earlier dedications. In 1995, most critics dismissed their offerings of the time as vapid, romantic excursions. To their credit, the Verve have sustained their shadow rock legitimacy while introducing string arrangements, piano fills, and slide guitar. Nowhere are these stirring traits more obvious than in the epic single "Bitter Sweet Symphony." Laying it on thick throughout the rest of the album with painfully engaging ballads, the Verve have crafted their most accomplished album to date, proving the longevity of their cultural resonance. --Lucas Hilbert
Customer Reviews
get Storm in Heaven or the Verve EP, - Reviewed on 2008-01-29
I don't think people normally are compelled to write 3 star reviews, normally they only write when the really are blown away or really dont like something. However as a huge Verve fan, this album, although huge, is much more mainstream and doesn't reflect the sonic beauty reflected on their earlier and unappreciated albums. As other reviews had said, Storm in Heaven (and the Verve EP), is not just the best Verve albums, but one of the best albums period. It is sonic and similar to 'shoegazer' music but somehow a warmer, lusher, gentler take on the genre than say My Bloody Valentine (i know, heresy).
Urban Hymns isn't an album in the same sense, but more a discrete collection of songs, individual, composed and mainstream. If you like Urban Hymns work your way backwards to the earlier stuff, you might be blown away. If you don't like Urban Hymns or think "bittersweet Symphony" is the Verve's highpoint, it's not, don't write them off on this forgettable offering.
Great opening, falters a little at the end - Reviewed on 2008-01-23
"Bitter Sweet Symphony" and "Lucky Man" drew me to this album, and I think it is a good album. However, while the CD starts out really strong, it wanes towards the end. The first 6 or so cuts from the CD are very vocally driven and traditionally "modern rock band sounding," however, the last few tracks are more instrumentally driven, with unique guitar effects, almost with a modern psychedelic vibe. Not really my thing, but if you like a combination of the two, then this CD is definitely for you. Maybe I will grow to like the latter tracks and appreciate them more. I definitely think that it is worth the buy for the first half of the CD. There are some really good tracks there.
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Book Subjects
- Alternative Pop/Rock
- Britpop
- Dream Pop
- England
- Indie Pop
- Indie Rock
- Pop
- Pop/Rock Music
- Popular Music
- Post-Grunge
- Rock
- Rock/Pop
- Shoegaze
- Space Rock