Amazon.com
The debut album from The Subways proves that for a man approaching his seventies, Glastonburys (UK music festival) Michael Eavis has excellent taste. Eavis plucked The Subways demo from a pile of demos and pushed this young trio--frontman Billy Lunn, his girlfriend, bassist Mary-Charlotte Cooper, and his brother, drummer Josh Morgan--onto the 2004 festival stage.
A long, hot summer on, Young For Eternity fulfils all their early potential: "I Want To Hear What You Have Got To Say" and "Oh Yeah" barrel along with the raw, adrenalised energy of Nirvana or The White Stripes--full-bodied, powerful anthems that lose none of their live passion in the studio setting. Lunns oft-stated admiration for Oasis surfaces on "Mary", a sort of amped-up "Shes Electric" thats actually, rather sweetly, a love song from singer to bassist. Ms Cooper, too, however, has a pretty great voice: more grit-edged rock bitch than cooing indie-waif, it invests the likes of "Oh Yeah" and "City Pavement" with a smouldering--nay, flat-out roaring--chemistry thats all the more engaging because its actually 100% genuine. --Louis Pattison
Product Description
Young For Eternity is the debut from the hotly tipped Subways. Produced by Ian Broudie (The Zutons and The Coral), Young For Eternity finds The Subways writing material of the quality you'd expect from seasoned songwriters but performing it with the heart and soul that only youth can truly provide. Billy Lunn (guitars + vocals), Mary-Charlotte Cooper (bass + guitars), Josh Morgan (drums) are all from London and despite the obviously differing surnames, Billy and Josh are actually brothers. With their pin-up good looks and fireball energy The Subways are the 'sexiest thing to sweep rocknroll off its feet in years' (NME). Infectious. 2005.