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Jan 19, 2016 · Adore Life is arguably the band’s first full-length that defines what Savages sound like on their own terms. Everything is streamlined into a concise, ten-song statement, veering from the oppressive swallow-you-whole guitar noise on death disco stomper “Surrender” to the dazzling balladry of its almost-title-track.
- Alex Wisgard
The all-lady post-punk quartet Savages return with their anticipated sophomore LP, Adore Life. It is another striking sonic assault from the UK-based group, that once again deliver a ten-track work full of blazing riffs, hammering percussion, and solid performances from the whole collective.
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Reviews of Adore Life by Savages, Second album from the London-based post-punk quartet
Aug 28, 2007 · Adore Life is as intense, stylistically more varied and complex with a bigger sound, stronger choruses and plenty of melody. Most of the tracks are powerful enough to stand alone such as Sad Person, a mini epic of shimmering percussive intro, chugging, Wire-like bass and a neatly explosive refrain that fixes itself in your head.
Jan 25, 2016 · With Adore Life, the group expands and magnifies that intense, visceral roar. Listen closely through the ear-shredding distortion, and you'll hear the sound of a band that got good in a...
The minimalist vibrancy is facilitated by consistently unique and swampy basslines, visceral drumming, especially on the raucous ‘I Need Something New’, and Jenny Beth helming the soul of the record. What stops the musicality of ‘Adore Life’ from being Savages at their deftest is the tiresome Bernard Sumner guitar lines.
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Feb 10, 2016 · “Is it human to adore life?” asks “Adore”, a track about shucking off sexual guilt inspired by the poet Minnie Bruce Pratt, who lost custody of her sons after coming out as a lesbian in 1975.