Album artwork for Turn On The Bright Lights by Interpol

Vinyl Back In Stock Soon!

Combining the insistent drone of Joy Division with the dreamy melodies of the Chameleons, the fire of Mission of Burma, and an occasional jagged edge a la the Fall, the foursome inconceivably manage to defy anachronism on their debut full-length 'Turn on the Bright Lights'. Just how they do it is indefinable, perhaps it's just a trick of the light, or the life that breathes gloomily, radiantly throughout, but it's undeniable. Vocals which fall somewhere between Ian Curtis's plaintive, edge-of-oblivion wail and the winking, laconic drawl of James's Tim Booth, ripping uncompromisingly through unpredictable, unforgettable lamentations from the reflective ('nyc') to the imploring ('pda'). When the darkly etched, implosive, mournful lyrics poke out as they do on the unrelenting 'obstacle 1' ("She puts the weights into my little heart and she gets in my room and she tears it apart"), the hook is set for an important debut by a band that portends to be around a while

Interpol

Turn On The Bright Lights

Matador
Album artwork for Turn On The Bright Lights by Interpol
LP

$24.99

Black
Released 08/24/2022Catalog Number

LP-OLE-545

Learn more
Album artwork for Turn On The Bright Lights by Interpol
CD

$11.99

Released 08/20/2002Catalog Number

OLE-545-2

Learn more
Interpol

Turn On The Bright Lights

Matador
Album artwork for Turn On The Bright Lights by Interpol
LP

$24.99

Black
Released 08/24/2022Catalog Number

LP-OLE-545

Learn more
Album artwork for Turn On The Bright Lights by Interpol
CD

$11.99

Released 08/20/2002Catalog Number

OLE-545-2

Learn more

Vinyl Back In Stock Soon!

Combining the insistent drone of Joy Division with the dreamy melodies of the Chameleons, the fire of Mission of Burma, and an occasional jagged edge a la the Fall, the foursome inconceivably manage to defy anachronism on their debut full-length 'Turn on the Bright Lights'. Just how they do it is indefinable, perhaps it's just a trick of the light, or the life that breathes gloomily, radiantly throughout, but it's undeniable. Vocals which fall somewhere between Ian Curtis's plaintive, edge-of-oblivion wail and the winking, laconic drawl of James's Tim Booth, ripping uncompromisingly through unpredictable, unforgettable lamentations from the reflective ('nyc') to the imploring ('pda'). When the darkly etched, implosive, mournful lyrics poke out as they do on the unrelenting 'obstacle 1' ("She puts the weights into my little heart and she gets in my room and she tears it apart"), the hook is set for an important debut by a band that portends to be around a while