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The Subways, Young for Eternity CD cover artwork

The Subways, Young for Eternity

Audio CD

Disk ID: 1309378

Disk length: 58m 7s (17 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2005

Label: Unknown

View all albums by The Subways...

Tracks & Durations

1. Oh yeah 3:00
2. Take me away 3:48
3. At 1 a.m. 2:51
4. I want to hear what you got to say 2:32
5. You got me 2:55
6. S.4 3:27
7. Hiliday 1:54
8. Rock 'n' Roll Queen 2:53
9. Mary 3:01
10. Young for eternity 2:10
11. Lines of light 2:14
12. Oh yeah 3:00
13. City pavement 2:46
14. No goodbyes 3:34
15. With you 3:04
16. She sun 3:23
17. Somewhere at 1 a.m.11:22

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

The debut album from The Subways proves that for a man approaching his seventies, Glastonbury's (UK music festival) Michael Eavis has excellent taste. Eavis plucked The Subways' demo from a pile of demos and pushed this young trio--frontman Billy Lunn, his girlfriend, bassist Mary-Charlotte Cooper, and his brother, drummer Josh Morgan--onto the 2004 festival stage.

A long, hot summer on, Young For Eternity fulfils all their early potential: "I Want To Hear What You Have Got To Say" and "Oh Yeah" barrel along with the raw, adrenalised energy of Nirvana or The White Stripes--full-bodied, powerful anthems that lose none of their live passion in the studio setting. Lunn's oft-stated admiration for Oasis surfaces on "Mary", a sort of amped-up "She's Electric" that's actually, rather sweetly, a love song from singer to bassist. Ms Cooper, too, however, has a pretty great voice: more grit-edged rock bitch than cooing indie-waif, it invests the likes of "Oh Yeah" and "City Pavement" with a smouldering--nay, flat-out roaring--chemistry that's all the more engaging because it's actually 100% genuine. --Louis PattisonThe Subways have quickly established themselves as one of Britain's most exciting new bands. Young For Eternity, the London-based trio's major label debut, produced by Lightning Seeds' Ian Broudie, roars with love and lust, fear and frustration, veering from rambunctious punk thrash to tender acoustic pop. Jump on board because The Subways are on the move.

Other Versions

Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.

Young for Eternity

Tracks: 13 (-4 tracks), Disk length: 54m 30s (-4m 23s)

Young for Eternity

Tracks: 15 (-2 tracks), Disk length: 53m 23s (-5m 16s)

Young for Eternity

Tracks: 13 (-4 tracks), Disk length: 37m 47s (-21m 40s)

Young for Eternity

Tracks: 12 (-5 tracks), Disk length: 35m 58s (-23m 51s)

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