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Hours

 

  • Artist: Funeral for a Friend
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: June 14, 2005
  • Type: Contains explicit content, Lyrics are included with the album, Enhanced CD-ROM
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Hours strengthens most of the Funeral for a Friend sound, the one they had so much success with on the 2003 debut, Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation. The Welsh combo still doesn't do anything that different from its peers, adhering to the post-hardcore/emo formula of self-righteous vocals, hooky dynamics, impassioned screaming, and underpinnings of time spent listening to Deftones and Get Up Kids records. But Hours gives the kids what they want right out of the gate, and has flashes of brilliance in its more upbeat material. "Who was it that said that great things come to great men?" Matt Davies asks at the outset of "All the Rage." "Well that fucker lied to us/There's nothing here but a wasteland." The sentiment recasts the teenage wasteland of yore, replacing hope for redemption with the blank stare of apathy. "How many times can I say I'm sorry and really mean it?" Musically it's a melodic hardcore rager, full of flinty guitar runs and anxious hitches in the percussion. It sounds similar to what listeners have heard before, but runs deeper than most. Unfortunately, Funeral for a Friend are less unique in the ballad department. "Hospitality"'s plaintive crying isn't distinctive, and its arrangement recycles Def Leppard for a generation just discovering how much love bites. "Drive," too, is the height of melodrama with its "This could be a movie" centerpiece. But the single "Streetcar" has a nagging urgency in its melody, and "Monsters" and the metal redux "End of Nothing" are equally strong. Funeral for a Friend never lose their youthful vigor, their wonder about the promise of life as well as its bad places. This helps them, because you believe that they aren't just going through the motions. Hours falters when it slows. But when it kicks up a racket the album screams like the conscience of a kid finally given a voice. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
All the Rage (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (3:37)
Streetcar (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (3:39)
Roses for the Dead (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (4:06)
Hospitality (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (4:44)
Drive (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (5:06)
Monsters (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (3:29)
History (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (4:08)
Recovery (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (3:30)
The End of Nothing Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (3:19)
Alvarez (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (4:16)
Sonny (Lyrics) Funeral for a Friend Funeral for a Friend (3:14)

Credits

Brian Valentino (Engineer), Ted Jensen (Mastering), Kris Coombs Roberts (Group Member), Darran Smith (Group Member), Paul Dando (Assistant), Conor O'Mahony (A&R), Terry Date (Producer), Gareth Davies (Group Member), Floyd Reitsman (Assistant Engineer), Kevin Carvel (A&R), Joel Death (A&R), Matthew Davies (Group Member), John Mitchell (Engineer), Terry Date (Mixing), John D Mitchell (Engineer), Terry Date (Engineer), Ryan Richards (Group Member), Brian Valentino (Vocals (Background)), Jeff Gros (Photography), Sam Hofstedt (Assistant Engineer), Matthew Davies (Group Member), Brian Valentino (Digital Editing)
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Wikipedia: Hours (album)
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Hours
Studio album by Funeral for a Friend
Released June 14, 2005
Recorded Studio X and Studio Litho (Seattle, WA) from January 12 to March 8, 2005
Genre Post-hardcore, emo
Length 43:15
50:55 (JP Edition)
1:05:55 (Ltd JP Edition)
Label Atlantic, Ferret
Producer Terry Date, Funeral for a Friend
Professional reviews
Funeral for a Friend chronology
Seven Ways to Scream Your Name
(2003)
Hours
(2005)
Tales Don't Tell Themselves
(2007)
Singles from Hours
  1. "Streetcar"
    Released: 2005
  2. "Monsters"
    Released: 2005
  3. "History"
    Released: 2005
  4. "Roses for the Dead"
    Released: 2006
Special edition cover.
The cover for the special edition version of Hours.

Hours is the second album by Welsh rock band Funeral for a Friend. The album was released on June 14, 2005 through Atlantic and Ferret Records.[1] The album was produced, recorded and mixed by Terry Date, with co-production by the band. Hours is notable for finding Funeral for a Friend showcase its more melodic side, as there is noticeably less screaming on the album as a whole. This album produced four singles, which were "Streetcar", "Monsters", "History" and "Roses For The Dead". The album made #12 in the UK charts going Gold in exactly the same number of weeks "Casually Dressed and Deep In Conversation" took, but spent more weeks on the top 75. It was their first album to appear on the US Billboard 200.

The album has been released in four versions so far:

  • Normal Edition
  • Special Edition (with bonus DVD and different cover)
  • Japanese Edition (with two bonus tracks)
  • Limited Japanese Edition (with six bonus tracks)

Contents

Track listing

  1. "All the Rage" – 3:37
  2. "Streetcar" – 3:37
  3. "Roses for the Dead" – 4:06
  4. "Hospitality" – 4:44
  5. "Drive" – 5:06
  6. "Monsters" – 3:29
  7. "History" – 4:08
  8. "Recovery" – 3:31
  9. "The End of Nothing" – 3:19
  10. "Alvarez" – 4:16
  11. "Sonny" – 3:15
Japanese bonus tracks
  1. "Lazarus (In The Wilderness) - 2:50
  2. "I am the Arsonist" - 4:55
Limited edition Japanese bonus tracks
  1. "Babylon's Burning" - 2:31
  2. "Sunday Bloody Sunday" - 4:23
  3. "The Boys are Back in Town" - 4:19
  4. "Pirate Song" - 3:46

Bonus DVD

A special edition of the album was released with a bonus DVD containing interviews of the band and fans before the band's gig at the Give It A Name festival.

  1. "Streetcar"
  2. "Roses for the Dead"
  3. "Juneau"

Personnel

Funeral for a Friend
Details
  • Written and performed by Funeral for a Friend
  • Produced, recorded and mixed by Terry Date
  • Co-produced by Funeral for a Friend
  • Recorded at Studio X and Studio Litho (Seattle, WA)
  • Assisted engineering by Sam Hofstedt at Studio X and Floyd Reitsma at Studio Litho
  • Mixed by Junichi Murakawa at Bay 7 (Los Angeles, CA)
  • Mastered by Ted Jensen at Sterling Sound (New York City, NY)
  • Phone vocals on "Streetcar" by Kate Hamilton
  • Phone vocals recorded by John Mitchell at Outhouse Studios (Reading, Berkshire)
  • Additional vocals on "Streetcar" by Storme, Lisa and Joel
  • Additional vocals on "History" by Brian Valentino and Josh Evans
  • Managed by Craig Jennings for Sanctuary Artist Management
  • Assisted management by Paul Dando
  • A&R by Joel De'Ath and Kevin Carvel
  • A&R coordination by Conor O'Mahony
  • Art direction and design by Asterik Studio, Inc.
  • Photography by Jeff Gros
  • Booked by Jeremy Holgersen for the Agency Group
  • Legal representation by Sarah Waddington for the Simkins Partnership
  • Assistant mixing by Eric Bribeaux at Bay 7 (Los Angeles, CA)

Singles

Year Song title Chart positions
US Hot 100 US Modern Rock US Mainstream Rock UK Singles
2005 "Streetcar" 15
"Monsters" 36
"History" 21
2006 "Roses for the Dead" 39

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hours (album)" Read more