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You Gotta Go There to Come Back

 
Album Review: You Gotta Go There to Come Back

  • Artist: Stereophonics
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: June 02, 2003
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album, Enhanced CD-ROM
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Stereophonics frontman Kelly Jones was still licking some serious wounds due to the breakup of his 12-year relationship with his girlfriend and a fallout with a best mate. The band's 2001 release, Just Enough Education to Perform, briefly touched upon his broken heart; however, Jones' darkest period came later as the band played countless sold-out gigs across Europe throughout late 2001 and 2002. Jones found himself personally and professionally isolated -- emotionally distant from his bandmates and best friends, drummer Stuart Cable and bassist Richard Jones, and creatively exhausted. However the fire that had made this band a major force in the post-grunge English rock scene still burned. Stereophonics' fourth album, You Gotta Go There to Come Back captures Jones' soulful journey, and the band's classic rowdy rock style is as sultry as ever. While their three previous albums exuded cockiness just for the sake of being cocky, You Gotta Go There to Come Back doesn't care to be so snide. Sure, the band's classic swagger remains an integral part of its overall appeal, but moving beyond that silly behavior has somehow affected Jones and his band. Cable became a father during the recording of this album while Richard Jones settled down and got married. Perhaps Jones craves a bit of stability as well? His confidence is on par throughout these 13 blues-rock-tinged songs as his life unfolds through words. "Jealousy" and "You Stole My Money Honey" are the album's more vexed moments. "Climbing the Wall," layered in acoustic guitars and horn and string arrangements, and "Nothing Is Precious at All" continue Stereophonics' psychological sifting with warmth. "Madame Helga" is the punch in the face Jones has been waiting to deliver. Heart-pounding musicianship from the band itself makes this swanky gospel number an album standout and a career staple. It's a song that Stereophonics have been wanting to make for years, and the overall fierce presentation finds the band at its best. Stereophonics are consistent with their craft, and You Gotta Go There to Come Back highlights the band's growing talent as musicians, but the fact is that they've only made good records up to this point. They have yet to make a really great record, but that's not to say Stereophonics don't have what it takes. You Gotta Go There to Come Back is a solid rock effort, and in due time, the band will have its epic. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Help Me (She's Out of Her Mind) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (6:55)
Maybe Tomorrow (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:33)
Madame Helga (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (3:55)
You Stole My Money Honey (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:18)
Getaway (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:08)
Climbing the Wall (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:55)
Jealousy (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:26)
I'm Alright (You Gotta Go There to Come Back) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:36)
Nothing Precious at All (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:20)
Rainbows and Pots of Gold (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:11)
I Miss You Now (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:50)
High as the Ceiling (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (3:19)
Since I Told You It's Over (Lyrics) Kelly Jones Stereophonics (4:43)

Credits

Patrick Kiernan (Strings), Tony Kirkham (Mellotron), James Lowe (Engineer), Sid Gauld (Trumpet), Mary Scully (Strings), Rachel Bolt (Strings), Paul Spong (Cornet), Kelly Jones (Fender Rhodes), Stephen Papworth (Percussion), Kelly Jones (Harmonica), Gustav Clarkson (Strings), Chris Steffenl (Engineer), Kelly Jones (Vocals), Kelly Jones (Mellotron), Melanie Marcus (Vocals (Background)), Satellite & Kelly (Artwork), Tony Kirkham (Piano), James Lowe (Piano), Gavyn Wright (Strings), Kelly Jones (Producer), Kelly Jones (Guitar), Tony Kirkham (Organ (Hammond)), Andy Burden (Engineer), Andy Hamilton (Sax (Tenor)), James Lowe (Mellotron), Stephen Papworth (Kettle Drums), Chris Tobling (Strings), Mark Berrow (Strings), David Daniel (Strings), Anna Ross (Vocals (Background)), Bruce White (Strings), Perry Mason (Strings), Chris Cameron (Arranger), Kelly Jones (Keyboards), Rita Manning (Strings), Aileen McLaughlin (Vocals (Background)), Paddy Lannigan (Strings), Kelly Jones (Wurlitzer), Max Dingle (Assistant), Sam Leigh Brown (Vocals (Background)), Boguslaw Kostecki (Strings), Andy Davies (Assistant), Naomi Wright (Strings), Mac Hine (Drums), Peter Lale (Strings), Paul Spong (Flugelhorn), Sam Brown (Vocals (Background)), Angie Brown (Vocals (Background)), Javier Weyler (Percussion), Chris Bolster (Assistant), Kelly Jones (Clavinet), Steve McNichol (Engineer), Richard Jones (Harmonica), Stuart Cable (Percussion), Steve McNichol (Digital Editing), Stephen Papworth (Handclapping), Chris Blair (Mastering), Gail Jones (Handclapping), Katherine Shave (Strings), J. Neil Sidwell (Trombone), Stuart Cable (Kettle Drums), James Lowe (Noise), Stuart Cable (Drums), Tony Kirkham (Fender Rhodes), J. Neil Sidwell (Sax (Alto)), Javier Weyler (Assistant), Brian Vibberts (Engineer), Steve Hamilton (Sax (Alto)), Anthony Pleeth (Strings), David Daniels (Strings), Tony Kirkham (Wurlitzer), James Lowe (Mixing), Julian Leaper (Strings), Ben Chappell (Strings), Jack Joseph Puig (Mixing), Javier Weyler (Handclapping), Richard Jones (Bass)
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Wikipedia: You Gotta Go There to Come Back
Top
You Gotta Go There to Come Back
Studio album by Stereophonics
Released June 2, 2003
Recorded January 2002 – December 2002 (at Real World Studios)
Genre Rock
Britpop
Length 59:12
Label V2
Producer Kelly Jones
Professional reviews
Stereophonics chronology
Just Enough Education to Perform
(2001)
You Gotta Go There to Come Back
(2003)
Language. Sex. Violence. Other?
(2005)
Limited edition cover
This cover wrapped around the CD case
Singles from You Gotta Go There to Come Back
  1. "Madame Helga"
    Released: May 19, 2003
  2. "Maybe Tomorrow"
    Released: July 21, 2003
  3. "Since I Told You It's Over"
    Released: November 10, 2003
  4. "Moviestar"
    Released: February 9, 2004

You Gotta Go There to Come Back is Stereophonics' fourth album, released on V2 in 2003. It became their third consecutive album to top the UK chart.

The album shows a newly found maturity compared to the brazenness of the previous three. After this mature and soulful album they returned to the sound of their previous albums with their next album. The title can also be explained by this statement: they had to go here, and record this album, to come back and return to their old sound.

The track "Maybe Tomorrow" was played over the credits of the Academy Award-winning movie Crash (2004) and also during the opening scene of the movie Wicker Park (2004). It was also used in a season one episode of One Tree Hill and featured on the first Charmed soundtrack.

Track listing

  1. "Help Me (She's Out of Her Mind)" – 6:55
  2. "Maybe Tomorrow" – 4:33
  3. "Madame Helga" – 3:55
  4. "You Stole My Money Honey" – 4:18
  5. "Getaway" – 4:08
  6. "Climbing the Wall" – 4:55
  7. "Jealousy" – 4:26
  8. "I'm Alright (You Gotta Go There to Come Back)" – 4:36
  9. "Nothing Precious at All" – 4:20
  10. "Rainbows and Pots of Gold" – 4:11
  11. "I Miss You Now" – 4:50
  12. "High as the Ceiling" – 3:19
  13. "Since I Told You It's Over" – 4:43

OTHER SONGS

  1. "Royal Flush"
  2. "Have Wheels Will Travel"
  3. "Change Changes Things"
  4. "Moviestar"
  5. "Lying to Myself Again"

Bonus tracks

The track "Moviestar" appears on later editions of the album as track 4 and was released with a DVD containing the videos for the singles. The Japanese bonus track was "Lying to Myself Again".

Vinyl editions

The album was released in gatefold sleeve at first, containing two records. When "Moviestar" was included on the album the gatefold sleeve contained three records.

Preceded by
Justified by Justin Timberlake
UK number one album
May 20, 2003 – June 14, 2003
Succeeded by
Hail to the Thief by Radiohead

 
 

 

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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 "You Gotta Go There to Come Back" Read more