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Mojim Lyrics > Americas singers > The Darkness( 黑暗旋風樂團 ) > One Way Ticket to Hell...And Back

The Darkness (band)( The Darkness )


Album songs
Album Intro
Album list
Singer Intro

 
 
 
 

【 One Way Ticket to Hell...And Back 】【 2005-11-28 】

Album songs:
1.One Way Ticket

2.Knockers

3.Is It Just Me?

4.Dinner Lady Arms

5.Seemed Like A Good Idea At The Time

6.Hazel Eyes

7.Bald

8.Girlfriend

9.English Country Garden

10.Blind Man



Album Intro:

Everything you've heard is true. All of it. The exhaustion and the fear, the pressure, paranoia and pan pipes, the breakdowns and break-ups, the sackings, sitar solos and endless studio sessions, and now ultimately--with this, their second album--the rebirth and redemption of The Darkness.

One Way Ticket To Hell… And Back is the conclusion of a year-long journey from Lowestoft to London and from Monmouth to LA to prove to everyone (and themselves) just how utterly irrelevant every other band is right now. To create the album they simply had no choice but to make. To prove The Darkness are still the world's greatest band.

So, when it came to making a second album, the stakes were high. This meant finding an extraordinary producer that could realise their ambitions. Enter Roy Thomas Baker, affectionately know as RTB, responsible for crafting some of the most impressive and influential records of all time with a CV that includes Queen, David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, Free and The Who.

RTB isn't an ordinary producer in the same way that The Darkness aren't an ordinary band. He and the band were introduced in Los Angeles, instantly bonded over a mutual love of rock and were able to start assembling the album together. 'Roy Thomas Baker is a genius, that's all there is to say about it'. Justin declares, 'It's been a privilege to watch that man work, his ear is perfect, his instinct fabulous'.

One Way Ticket To Hell… And Back is a big rock album about faith lost and restored, and about love lost and found. The Darkness really didn't have any choice but to make a record this good. The stakes were too high and the sheer, superhuman feat of pulling it back from the edge (an effort that would most likely kill any lesser band stone-dead) has done nothing but steel their resolve and drive them to make what had to be--and is--the finest rock album of the past twenty years.