Logo
DiS Needs You: Save our site »
  • Logo_home2
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • In Photos
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Search
  • Community
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • Blog
  • Community

THIS SITE HAS BEEN ARCHIVED AND CLOSED.

Please join the conversation over on our new forums »

If you really want to read this, try using The Internet Archive.

Elbow

Build A Rocket Boys!

Label: Fiction Release Date: 07/03/2011

67093
michael_w by Michael Wheeler March 7th, 2011

In the introduction to his 2007 book, Teenage: The Creation Of Youth 1875-1945, Jon Savage explains the impact that discovering the work of American psychologist G. Stanley Hall had on his efforts to chart youth culture in its various guises. As Savage writes, Hall’s work ‘contained a prophetic manifesto for the post-war youth culture that was still half a century away when he wrote. His view of adolescence as a separate stage of life subject to enormous stresses and strains – and therefore to be treated with special care and attention – was grounded, for the very first time, in a very specific age definition’.

If Hall’s work to define youth as a completely distinct stage of life with an inimitable ebb and flow fit for close examination were looking for a succinct and poetic payoff, he could’ve done worse than the following line from Elbow's ‘Jesus is a Rochdale Girl’: “Nothing to be proud of and nothing to regret, all of that to make as yet”.

As Guy Garvey has stated in various interviews, that song, the first to be completed for Build a Rocket Boys!, acted as a blueprint for everything that followed on the new record. Against the soft bustle of acoustic guitar, Garvey’s lock-in whisper turns the world of his 20-year-old self into a list where salvation comes in the form of the aforementioned girl and a modest stack of cds, with everything ahead of him "a thousand boxes yet to tick". And it is this act of looking back that broadly shapes Build a Rocket Boys!, with many of the songs here a chance for Elbow to elegantly paint the colours of their youth.

In some instances, the form and style of Garvey’s reminisces bring to mind Phillip Larkin’s ‘I Remember, I Remember’, in which the poet passes through his Coventry birthplace on a train and sets about the task of sifting through the past. However, they appear to differ distinctly in tone. In the poem, Larkin is perfectly satisfied to speed past on the train and see his past recede into the distance, but Garvey was seemingly prompted to consider the album’s themes after choosing to move back to his childhood home of Prestwhich. Equally, as Larkin thinks about "the boys all biceps, the girls all chest" he condemns and refuses it as a childhood "unspent". But for Garvey on ‘Lippy Kids’, "walking on walls" and partaking in "hour-long hungry kisses", he wonders, "do they know those days are golden?". Which isn’t to say that this is an album that is ever in danger of embracing or proffering a limp sense of nostalgia.

It begins with ‘The Birds’, a brooding, squally biting winter-wind of a rhythm in which an old man considers a former love affair and the constant presence of the birds above that keep their eyes on every movement. Asking, "do they keep those final kisses in their tiny racing hearts?", his memories are cut short by an unsympathetic carer or relative as he is told patronisingly, "what are we going to do with you?". For an album all about the significance of memories and looking back, it is bleak indeed to begin with the image of a person’s most vivid thoughts being waved away and considered as worthless and withered as the failing body that shelters them. ‘Open Arms’, however, is as warm as ‘The Birds’ is bitter and races away with the sort of giddy defiance that makes it a safe bet for future set closer, the choir-chanted refrain of "we’ve got open arms for broken hearts" gradually mixing with Garvey’s soothing declaration that "everyone’s here, come home again".

Whilst it is still ultimately an album that, above all, celebrates enduring friendships and successfully fought-for dreams, it is the intelligent, eloquent and heartfelt balance of light and shade, as ever with Elbow, that gives the music its strength. In the final part of his introduction, Savage writes that a review of G. Stanley Hall’s work by J.M. Greenwood accused Hall of being too preoccupied with ‘what one may call “the freaks of the race”, without ever giving sufficient weight to the average steady-goers’. In an industry that so often seems dizzily preoccupied with a desire for the shock of the new, real or wilfully imagined, we should be grateful that a bunch of steady-goers like Elbow have continued to perfect their craft and simultaneously achieve such acclaim and recognition. The restless may point to a lingering sense of repetition in the music that Elbow make and question where they might go from here. But that would be a tiresome question relating to the future when for now this is a glance towards the past to cherish.

  • 8
    Michael Wheeler's Score
  • 7
    User Score
Log-in to rate this record out of 10
Share on
   
Love DiS? Become a Patron of the site here »


LATEST


  • Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024


  • Drowned in Sound is back!


  • Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Year: 2020


  • Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter


  • Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing


  • Glastonbury 2019 preview playlist + ten alternative must sees



Left-arrow

Wye Oak

Civilian

Mobback
67094
67084

Those Dancing Days

Daydreams & Nightmares

Mobforward
Right-arrow


LATEST

    news


    Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024

  • 106145
  • news


    Drowned in Sound is back!

  • 106143

    news


    Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Y...

  • 106141
  • news


    Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter

  • 106139

    Playlist


    Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing

  • 106138
  • Festival Preview


    Glastonbury 2019 preview playlist + ten alterna...

  • 106137

    Interview


    A Different Kind Of Weird: dEUS on The Ideal Crash

  • 106136
  • Festival Review


    Way Out East: DiS Does Sharpe Festival 2019

  • 106135
MORE


    news


    The Neptune Music Prize 2016 - Vote Now

  • 103918
  • Takeover


    The Winner Takes It All

  • 50972

    Takeover


    10 Things To Not Expect Your Record Producer To...

  • 93724
  • review


    The Mars Volta - Deloused In The Comatorium

  • 4317

    review


    Sonic Youth - Nurse

  • 6044
  • feature


    New Emo Goth Danger? My Chemical Romance confro...

  • 89578

    feature


    DiS meets Justice

  • 27270
  • news


    Our Independent music filled alternative to New...

  • 104374
MORE

Drowned in Sound
  • DROWNED IN SOUND
  • HOME
  • SITE MAP
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • IN PHOTOS
  • RECORDS
  • RECOMMENDED RECORDS
  • ALBUMS OF THE YEAR
  • FESTIVAL COVERAGE
  • COMMUNITY
  • MUSIC FORUM
  • SOCIAL BOARD
  • REPORT ERRORS
  • CONTACT US
  • JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
  • FOLLOW DiS
  • GOOGLE+
  • FACEBOOK
  • TWITTER
  • SHUFFLER
  • TUMBLR
  • YOUTUBE
  • RSS FEED
  • RSS EMAIL SUBSCRIBE
  • MISC
  • TERM OF USE
  • PRIVACY
  • ADVERTISING
  • OUR WIKIPEDIA
© 2000-2025 DROWNED IN SOUND