Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Franz Ferdinand|Darts of Pleasure

Darts of Pleasure

Franz Ferdinand

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Although Franz Ferdinand has been hailed as "Scotland's answer to Interpol," their debut EP, Darts of Pleasure, reveals the band as much weirder and wider-ranging than their impeccably dressed American counterparts. Admittedly, the chunky, angular guitars that propel the EP's opening track, "Darts of Pleasure," do sound akin to those on Interpol's "PDA," and Franz Ferdinand's singer, Alex Kapranos, has an insistent baritone voice that recalls both Paul Banks and Ian Curtis. However, it's not likely that Interpol would finish a song with a galloping coda sung in German, as Franz Ferdinand does. The song's surreal sensuality -- displayed in lyrics like "You can feel my lips undress your eyes" -- further separates the band from their contemporaries, as do the rest of the songs on Darts of Pleasure. "Van Tango" celebrates the "king of the night" with a strangely bouncy strut that's part glam rock and part art school, and overall much geekier (in the best possible way) than anything that most of the bands Franz Ferdinand are compared to would create. That goes double for the theatrical, political "Shopping for Blood," which decries the encroachment of English ways and tastes on Scottish culture. Kapranos takes on a posh, clenched-jaw, faux-English accent to sing about "the New Scottish Gentry/Anglified vowels, sub-London thoughts" as a rolling bassline and spiky little keyboard stabs complete the song's sardonic air. Equally funny and dour, the song has such a uniquely Scottish air and so much personality that perhaps the country isn't at much risk of Anglification after all. Darts of Pleasure is rounded out by two demos that are very nearly as good as Franz Ferdinand's finished tracks: a rougher version of the title track that doesn't swing and crash as much as the more polished take, and "Tell Her Tonight," a curious cross of punk-disco verses and garage-y choruses with sharp riffs, slurred and shouted vocals, and sludgy production. Even though they're just as heavily indebted to their forebears (the Fall springs immediately to mind) as the rest of the bands involved in the post-punk/garage rock revival, Franz Ferdinand still stands out as being both artier and more down to earth than the band's New York and London-based peers. Darts of Pleasure is a fine opening salvo from a very promising group.
© Heather Phares /TiVo

More info

Darts of Pleasure

Franz Ferdinand

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From £10.83/month

1
Darts of Pleasure
00:03:01

Alex kapranos, Composer, Lyricist - Nick McCarthy, Composer, Lyricist - Franz Ferdinand, MainArtist - Paul Thomson, Composer, Lyricist - Universal Music, MusicPublisher

2003 Domino Recording Co Ltd 2003 Domino Recording Co Ltd

2
Van Tango
00:03:25

Alex kapranos, Composer, Lyricist - Nick McCarthy, Composer, Lyricist - Franz Ferdinand, MainArtist - Paul Thomson, Composer, Lyricist - Universal Music, MusicPublisher

2003 Domino Recording Co Ltd 2003 Domino Recording Co Ltd

3
Shopping for Blood
00:03:34

Alex kapranos, Composer, Lyricist - Nick McCarthy, Composer, Lyricist - Franz Ferdinand, MainArtist - Paul Thomson, Composer, Lyricist - Universal Music, MusicPublisher

2003 Domino Recording Co Ltd 2003 Domino Recording Co Ltd

Album review

Although Franz Ferdinand has been hailed as "Scotland's answer to Interpol," their debut EP, Darts of Pleasure, reveals the band as much weirder and wider-ranging than their impeccably dressed American counterparts. Admittedly, the chunky, angular guitars that propel the EP's opening track, "Darts of Pleasure," do sound akin to those on Interpol's "PDA," and Franz Ferdinand's singer, Alex Kapranos, has an insistent baritone voice that recalls both Paul Banks and Ian Curtis. However, it's not likely that Interpol would finish a song with a galloping coda sung in German, as Franz Ferdinand does. The song's surreal sensuality -- displayed in lyrics like "You can feel my lips undress your eyes" -- further separates the band from their contemporaries, as do the rest of the songs on Darts of Pleasure. "Van Tango" celebrates the "king of the night" with a strangely bouncy strut that's part glam rock and part art school, and overall much geekier (in the best possible way) than anything that most of the bands Franz Ferdinand are compared to would create. That goes double for the theatrical, political "Shopping for Blood," which decries the encroachment of English ways and tastes on Scottish culture. Kapranos takes on a posh, clenched-jaw, faux-English accent to sing about "the New Scottish Gentry/Anglified vowels, sub-London thoughts" as a rolling bassline and spiky little keyboard stabs complete the song's sardonic air. Equally funny and dour, the song has such a uniquely Scottish air and so much personality that perhaps the country isn't at much risk of Anglification after all. Darts of Pleasure is rounded out by two demos that are very nearly as good as Franz Ferdinand's finished tracks: a rougher version of the title track that doesn't swing and crash as much as the more polished take, and "Tell Her Tonight," a curious cross of punk-disco verses and garage-y choruses with sharp riffs, slurred and shouted vocals, and sludgy production. Even though they're just as heavily indebted to their forebears (the Fall springs immediately to mind) as the rest of the bands involved in the post-punk/garage rock revival, Franz Ferdinand still stands out as being both artier and more down to earth than the band's New York and London-based peers. Darts of Pleasure is a fine opening salvo from a very promising group.
© Heather Phares /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

It's Time

Michael Bublé

It's Time Michael Bublé

Sultans Of Swing - The Very Best Of Dire Straits

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits

Sailing To Philadelphia

Mark Knopfler

Sailing To Philadelphia Mark Knopfler
More on Qobuz
By Franz Ferdinand

Always Ascending

Franz Ferdinand

Always Ascending Franz Ferdinand

Tonight

Franz Ferdinand

Tonight Franz Ferdinand

You Could Have It So Much Better

Franz Ferdinand

Hits To The Head

Franz Ferdinand

Hits To The Head Franz Ferdinand

Franz Ferdinand

Franz Ferdinand

Franz Ferdinand Franz Ferdinand

Playlists

You may also like...

Come Away With Me

Norah Jones

Come Away With Me Norah Jones

Crime Of The Century [2014 - HD Remaster]

Supertramp

Tubular Bells

Mike Oldfield

Tubular Bells Mike Oldfield

30

Adele

30 Adele

THE TORTURED POETS DEPARTMENT: THE ANTHOLOGY

Taylor Swift