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Life Thru a Lens
 
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Life Thru a Lens [Import]

Robbie WilliamsAudio CD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)


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Audio CD, Import, Extra tracks, 1999 $12.88  
Audio CD, Import, 2000 --  

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Music

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Biography

Entertainer, showman, hit machine. At the age of only 32, Robbie Williams has already been a household name for 15 years, transforming from boy-band pin-up to the nation’s favourite entertainer.
For five years in Take That and the last ten years as a solo performer, he has produced a constant stream hit singles (24 top ten hits, six number ones in the U.K.). Robbie’s solo songs soundtrack the soap… Read more in Amazon's Robbie Williams Store

Visit Amazon's Robbie Williams Store
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (December 6, 2000)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Toshiba EMI
  • ASIN: B00007M8U2
  • In-Print Editions: Audio CD
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,749,991 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

Robbies debut album from Japan. This Japanese pressingnot only features entirely different artwork to other press-ings, but adds two rare bonus tracks, 'Teenage Millionaire' & 'She Makes Me High'. Of the 13 tracks, this multi-plati-num debut album also fe

 

Customer Reviews

31 Reviews
5 star:
 (25)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars All we dared hope for, and much much more., June 6, 2001
This review is from: Life Thru a Lens (Audio CD)
Robbie may have gone on to make better (or at least more consistently satisfying) albums, but 'Life thru a lens' will always retain pride of place in the hearts of us Robbiephiles, when, what could have been a self-pitying play for sympathy (especially after that misjudged first single, the cover of 'Freedom'), turned out not to need any excuses whatsoever.

At the time, cred-building Robbie was finding succour in then-popular Oasis, and their baleful influence can be seen on songs like 'Lazy Days' and 'South of the Border', although he brings his own alchemical ingredients, like 'imagination' and 'wit', though, sadly, not 'melody'. There are a couple of lovely ballads here ('One of God's better people', 'Baby Girl Window'), and 'Clean' is an amusingly self-mocking take on the pop star misbehaving in public (Robbie's lyrics are so endearingly naive in their confessional literalism they frequently become clever and truthful).

It is, of course, the magnificent singles that sustain 'Lens', all using Robbie's 60s/70s/showbiz fascinations with intelligence: the speedpop ranting title track; the pubrock humility of 'Old Before I die'; the simultaneously arrogant and gracious 'Let me entertain you', a Kiss-tribute rock dazzler that easily out-pummells its source. Oh, and a trifle called 'Angels', a song of staggering (emotional) maturity, a ballad whose poignancy arises from the recognition that happiness, never mind perfection, is an ungraspable dream: it is, quite simply, one of the ten best songs ever written.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars IT'S ALL ROB AND YOU JUST GOTTA LOVE IT!, April 29, 2000
By 
Virginia (The Caribbean) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Life Thru a Lens (Audio CD)
I just got my copy of Life Thru a Lens. After wearing out I've Been Expecting You, I decided I had to hear some of Robbie's earlier stuff.

It took a bit of getting used to because I've grown accustomed to the more mature and sophisticated sound of Expecting You. But Lens is still all Robbie and in no time at all I was totally into it.

Angels, the classic is there in all its glory. The outrageous and totally infectious "Let Me Entertain You" makes you want to grab a hairbrush and pretend you have a crowd of thousands screaming at your feet.

But the real surprises here are the ones that weren't as popular. I love the groovy sound of "South of the Border" and "Killing Me" is so haunting but grabbing that sometimes I just play that track on repeat. And as someone who has lost a parent, I find the ballad "Baby Girl Window" comforting and reassuring.

"Ego a Go Go" is hilarious especially when you know the story behind it and the rivalry between Robbie and his former bandmate, Gary Barlow. It's a preview of the harder and more vindictive "Karma Killer" (on Expecting You) which was an angry memo from Robbie to his former manager the now notorious Nigel Martin Smith.

On a whole, Lens is but a preview of the extrodinary artist Robbie Williams has become and I can't wait to see what he comes up with next.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Powerhouse Debut Album by a Pop Genius, December 10, 2002
By 
S. Sarhan "matured reviewer" (Dearborn, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Life Thru a Lens (Audio CD)
I remember when I first heard of Take That. It was in a video for a song called "It Only Takes A Minute". They were still a brand new boy band in the footsteps of New Kids On The Block but they were british. Out of the five members, Robbie Williams stood out. He was the funniest, cheekiest member and he seemed to have more personality than the others. At the end of the video, there was Robbie pointing his finger up and crooning the line 'Just one minute...'. It was funny. 4 years later, Robbie left Take That and the future didn't seem too bright for the lad. He made several public appearances afterwards, one being as a host of the MTV Europe Awards in the fall of 1996. Prior to that Robbie had done a cover version of George Michael's Freedom. Not too impressing work there and more of a mockery of his boy band image. But Robbie struggled to change that. He hung out with Oasis, grew a goatie for a brief time, and began venturing into Rock music.
Old Before I Die was the first non-pop song Robbie came out with that was an original song that he wrote along with an unknown, Guy Chambers. Highly influenced by Britain's biggest rock band, Oasis, Robbie wanted if not needed to get into the new mainstream since boy band music became a joke. After months of slacking, but not really slacking, Robbie returned with a full length album titled 'Life Thru A Lens' in September of 1997. I think i was the only guy who bought that CD at a Music store in downtown Beirut, Lebanon. And for some crazy reason, i felt like i really wanted to love this album since it felt weird just to hear Robbie on his own and see what he can prove. I was impressed, no...more, I was taken completely by every song on the CD!

The opener struck a chord with me, 'Lazy Days' is a song about depression. A very Oasis-esque tune with the right lyrics. 'Life Thru A Lens' the title track is a fun tune about life in the public eye. 'Ego A Go-Go' is a personal attack from Robbie to his rival and former bandmate Gary Barlow, and manager. 'Angels' is the biggest ballad ever heard or written since Wonderwall. Not only did it spark the light of Robbie in the british conscience, but it had people take Robbie extremely seriously. This is a fine love song. The chorus, each verse, the music all speak for themselves. To this day, Robbie's best song. 'South Of The Border' is another rocker in the influencial direction of Oasis. 'Let Me Entertain You' can easily be viewed as Robbie's signature song. He is here to entertain us. He's good at it. He's been doing it since 1992, the difference is that he used to do it along with four other guys, now he's entertaining on his own but outweighing the entire Take That installment.
'Killing Me' is the most open Robbie song. It's an essential song about Robbie most intimate feelings of insecurity and unhappiness. The depression he began having as a member of Take That and how he escaped it through pretending to be the joker of the group. Reminds you a lot of the way John Lennon was with the Beatles. In fact, Killing Me is in the same league as Isolation from Lennon's debut album 'Plastic Ono Band'. 'Clean' is another fun track where you hear Robbie rhyming 'I'm Clean' with 'Charlie Sheen' and talking about kicking his addictions to the evil substances. 'Baby Girl Window' is a touching song and a beautiful album closer.

Robbie became much bigger, musically and artistically only a year later when he released I've Been Expecting You and finally getting praise in America.

Highly Recommended.

A

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