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Love Is a Basic Need
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Love Is a Basic Need
Current price: $32.99
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Barnes and Noble
Love Is a Basic Need
Current price: $32.99
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The seventh studio long-player from the stalwart English alt-rock outfit, the aptly named
Love Is a Basic Need
serves up ten expertly crafted specimens of
Coldplay
-era Brit-pop that invoke the highs and lows of devotion. Leaving behind the electronic flourishes of their eponymous 2014 reboot, it's tempting to call the album a return to
Embrace
's late-'90s roots. While there's no denying the stadium-sized grandiosity of midtempo, butane lighter-ready power ballads like "Wake Up Call," "Never," and the soaring, "Hey Jude"-aping title track,
has more in common with the band's 2004 comeback LP
Out of Nothing
, which featured the slow-burning
Chris Martin
(
)-penned hit "Gravity," than it does the nosebleed seat-bating, guitar-driven
U2
-isms that propelled their 1998 debut into the stratosphere. Still, it's good to hear
playing to their strengths again, and despite its architectural and lyrical mundanity,
succeeds, more than a few times, in sonically replicating the arm-hair-raising rush of amour. ~ James Christopher Monger
Love Is a Basic Need
serves up ten expertly crafted specimens of
Coldplay
-era Brit-pop that invoke the highs and lows of devotion. Leaving behind the electronic flourishes of their eponymous 2014 reboot, it's tempting to call the album a return to
Embrace
's late-'90s roots. While there's no denying the stadium-sized grandiosity of midtempo, butane lighter-ready power ballads like "Wake Up Call," "Never," and the soaring, "Hey Jude"-aping title track,
has more in common with the band's 2004 comeback LP
Out of Nothing
, which featured the slow-burning
Chris Martin
(
)-penned hit "Gravity," than it does the nosebleed seat-bating, guitar-driven
U2
-isms that propelled their 1998 debut into the stratosphere. Still, it's good to hear
playing to their strengths again, and despite its architectural and lyrical mundanity,
succeeds, more than a few times, in sonically replicating the arm-hair-raising rush of amour. ~ James Christopher Monger