Arctic Monkeys Ringtones
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Arctic Monkeys Ringtones Format : Digital Music (MP3)
Album : The Car [10 SONGS • 37 MINUTES • OCT 21 2022]
The Car, the seventh studio album by English rock group Arctic Monkeys, was made available by Domino Recording Company on October 21, 2022. Frontman Alex Turner wrote most of the album’s songs in his Los Angeles home and in Paris. It was arranged by Bridget Samuels and Turner and produced in Suffolk, Paris, and London by James Ford, a regular collaborator with the Arctic Monkeys, with assistance from frequent guests Tom Rowley, Loren Humphrey, and Tyler Parkford. The album cover photo, which features a white car in an otherwise deserted parking lot, was taken by drummer Matt Helders. The title alludes to that particular cover as well as the song’s numerous automotive allusions.
Album : Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino [11 SONGS • 40 MINUTES • MAY 11 2018]
The sixth studio album by English rock group Arctic Monkeys, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino (stylized as Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino), was released on May 11, 2018, by Domino Recording Company. Frontman Alex Turner wrote the album in 2016 while sitting in front of a Steinway Vertegrand piano at his Los Angeles residence. James Ford and Turner, who frequently work with the Arctic Monkeys, produced it in Los Angeles, Paris, and London. A variety of guest musicians, such as Tom Rowley, Loren Humphrey, James Righton, Zach Dawes, Tyler Parkford, and Cam Avery, also contributed to the production. The album’s cover art, created by Turner himself, features cardboard cutouts of the resort’s name along with a tape recorder. Tranquility Base, the location of the 1969 Apollo 11 Moon landing, is mentioned in the title.
Arctic Monkeys Ringtones
English rock group Arctic Monkeys was founded in Sheffield in 2002. Lead singer Alex Turner, drummer Matt Helders, guitarist Jamie Cook, and bassist Nick O’Malley make up the group. Andy Nicholson, the band’s former bassist, left in 2006, not long after the release of their debut album.
As one of the first bands to gain widespread recognition through the Internet, Arctic Monkeys were hailed by observers as a potential shift in the way that up-and-coming bands are pushed and sold. Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not (2006), their debut album, was widely praised by critics when it was released and went on to become the fastest-selling debut album in British chart history, topping the UK Albums Chart. It has been praised as one of the best debut albums ever since winning Best British Album at the 2007 Brit Awards. Favorite Worst Nightmare (2007), the band’s second album, was also well-received by critics and took home the Best British Album trophy at the 2008 Brit Awards. After that, they put out two more albums, Humbug (2009) and Suck It and See (2011), both of which received positive reviews from critics but not as much as their first two.
The band achieved widespread international recognition following the release of their highly regarded fifth album, AM (2013), which was bolstered by the worldwide hit song “Do I Wanna Know?” In the US, it received three platinum certifications and peaked at four Billboard charts. The album became their third to win British Album of the Year at the 2014 Brit Awards. The band’s 2018 sixth album, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino, marked a significant shift from their earlier guitar-heavy work to a more piano-focused record. Their seventh album, The Car, came out in 2022 and was nominated for a 2023 Mercury Prize as well as an Ivor Novello Award. It was nominated for Best Alternative Music Album at the 66th Annual Grammy Awards, becoming their third consecutive nomination overall and their second after Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino.
With their first five albums, the band made history in the UK by being the first independent label act to debut at number one. The band has won seven Brit Awards, a Mercury Prize for Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not, an Ivor Novello Award, and twenty NME Awards. They have also won three times each for Best British Group and British Album of the Year, making them the first band to ever “do the double”—that is, win in both categories three times. They have also been nominated for nine Grammy Awards and have been nominated for the Mercury Prize in 2007, 2013, 2018, and 2023. Both AM and Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not are listed in Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time and NME lists.
Mainly, indie rock, garage rock, post-punk revival, psychedelic rock, alternative rock, lounge pop, post-Britpop, stoner rock, guitar pop, post-punk, punk rock, and hard rock have been used to characterize Arctic Monkeys’ sound. Turner’s complex and frequently fast-paced lyrics, which are sung in the characteristically strong Sheffield accent for which their music gained notoriety in its early years, are an essential component of their sound and are present throughout their entire discography. Turner was greatly influenced by the punk poet John Cooper Clarke; a song from his poem “I Wanna Be Yours” appeared on the group’s fifth album AM. Various genres have characterized their debut album, Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not, including punk rock, alternative rock, indie rock, garage rock revival, and post-Britpop. Turner’s incisive lyrics are the main attraction of Favourite Worst Nightmare, which has been compared to post-punk revival, indie rock, garage rock, alternative rock, psychedelic rock, and post-Britpop. Turner explored human behavior in nightclubs and in Sheffield, the band’s hometown, on the first album. “Dancing Shoes” is about “people always looking to pull when they go out, however much they mask it,” according to Turner.
The band continued to develop as musicians on the next album, Favorite Worst Nightmare, which featured similar themes. The band’s sound became more aggressive and upbeat, while songs like “Do Me a Favour” and “Fluorescent Adolescent” explored growing older, nostalgia, and failed relationships.
Due to the influence of Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme, who also served as the album’s producer, their third album Humbug represented a change in sound and was characterized as psychedelic rock, hard rock, stoner rock, alternative rock, post-punk revival, indie rock, garage rock, and desert rock. The band actively searched for a fresh sound for Humbug. The statement “They came to me: ‘Will you take us to the weird and the strange?'” was attributed to Homme. According to the Brooklyn Vegan, “they were no longer pulling mostly from rowdy garage rock, but from tripped-out psychedelia, lumbering doom metal, hypnotic stoner rock, and darker songwriters like Nick Cave.”
The band explores styles in their fourth album, Suck It and See, fusing them with their newly acquired maturity. “I think the new album is a balance between our first three,” Turner stated. There’s no reference to taxi ranks or anything of the sort, but there is a hint of my perspective on those early songs and my sense of humor, along with some ‘Humbug’ material that is a little off in the corners.” Guitar pop, indie rock, pop rock, garage rock, psychedelic pop, alternative rock, and pop were the genres assigned to the album. The Smiths and British rock bands from the 1960s were mentioned by critics as influences, and the album had more slower, love-themed ballads than the band’s signature fast-paced, rockier tracks. Turner used an acoustic guitar to write a large portion of the album in his apartment, which further contributed to the album’s overall ballad-style.
Turner reminisced about his love for Oasis and how his mother “would always play the Eagles too, so I’m word-perfect on s***loads of Eagles tunes” in a 2012 interview with Pitchfork. He also enjoyed listening to hip-hop artists like Wu-Tang Clan, Eminem, Outkast, and Roots Manuva, among others. Lyrically, he named Ray Davies, Nick Cave, John Lennon, and Method Man as his main influences. “I remember when I first started writing songs, and writing lyrics, I really wanted to be able to write a “I Am the Walrus” type song, and I found it very difficult,” Turner remarked about Lennon in an interview with NME. It sounds ridiculous when you listen to it, but it’s hard to write something like that and have it read well. Undoubtedly, Lennon possessed a talent for that.
The band claims that hip-hop-influenced hard rock, indie rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, and hard rock have all been influenced by their fifth album, AM. Turner described it as “like a Dr. Dre beat, but we’ve given it an Ike Turner bowl-cut and sent it galloping across the desert on a Stratocaster” in an interview with NME. In addition, he mentioned Black Sabbath, Outkast, and Aaliyah as influences on the album’s song “Arabella”.
Their sixth album, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino, changed course from their earlier albums’ guitar-heavy sound to a more intricate, piano-based compositional approach. The record was characterized as lounge pop, space pop, glam rock, and psychedelic pop. In 2018, Turner revealed in an interview with BBC Radio 1 that he composed the album’s songs on a piano rather than a guitar because “the guitar had lost its ability to give me ideas.” I was never sure where a guitar I was sitting with would end up. In stark contrast to how I felt when I was sitting at the piano, I had a pretty good idea of what I might be.” In addition, Alex mentioned that Spirits of the Dead, the movie that was adapted from Edgar Allan Poe’s short stories, and three Jean-Pierre Melville films—Un flic, Le Cercle Rouge, and Le Samouraï—were sources of inspiration.
Their seventh album, The Car, has been characterized as a cozy middle ground, given the stark contrast between the slower sound of Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino and the rock sound of AM. The album features elements of jazz as well as a wide range of genres, including lounge pop, orchestral rock, art rock, baroque pop, and funk. Turner says, “Every time I’ve thought about attempting to go in a direction that you’ve been before, it sort of feels – quite quickly – sounds like a spoof or something,” during an interview with ABC in 2022. I believe that we have just been going with our initial instincts ever since. That is essentially unchanged.