I'm over here storkin' it... and by it I mean. Well, my peanits.
Is This It is the debut studio album by American rock band the Strokes. It was first released on July 30, 2001, in Australia, with RCA Records handling the release internationally and Rough Trade Records handling the United Kingdom release. It was recorded at Transporterraum in New York City with producer Gordon Raphael during March and April 2001. For their debut, the band strived to capture a simple sound that was not significantly enhanced in the studio. Building on their 2001 EP The Modern Age, the band members molded compositions largely through live takes during recording sessions, while songwriter and lead singer Julian Casablancas continued to detail the lives and relationships of urban youth. Following its completion, the Strokes embarked on a promotional world tour before its release. The album was released gradually in different countries as their tour continued, with it being released in Japan on August 22 and the United Kingdom on August 27. The album's original cover photograph caused controversy for being too sexually explicit, and was replaced for the US market. Following the September 11 attacks in New York City, the American compact disc release was delayed from September 25 to October 9 and had its track list amended, with the song "New York City Cops" being removed and replaced with the newly written track "When It Started"; however, the American vinyl release still includes the track as a result of its release falling on September 11. Three singles were released from the album: "Hard to Explain", "Last Nite", and "Someday". Promoted by the music press for its twin-guitar interplay and melodic, pop-influenced sound, Is This It peaked at number 33 on the US Billboard 200 and number two on the UK Albums Chart, going on to achieve platinum status in several countries. It received critical acclaim, with many praising it for its charisma and rhythm, which often referenced the works of 1970s garage rock bands. The release of the album is widely considered to be a watershed moment, and crucial in the reinvention of post-millennium guitar music. It has featured in several publications' lists of the best albums of the 2000s and of all time.
I'm over here storkin' it... and by it I mean. Well, my peanits.
Blessed and cursed with an enormous amount of hype from the British press, the Strokes prove to be one of the few groups deserving of their glowing reviews. Granted, their high-fashion appeal and faultless influences -- Television, the Stooges, and especially Lou Reed and the Velvets -- have "critics' darlings" written all over them. But like the similarly lauded Elastica and Supergrass before them, the Strokes don't rehash the sounds that inspire them -- they remake them in their own image. On the Modern Age EP, singles like Hard to Explain, and their full-length debut, Is This It, the N.Y.C. group presents a pop-inflected, second-generation take on late-'70s New York punk, complete with raw, world-weary vocals, spiky guitars, and an insistently chugging backbeat. However, their songs also reflected their own early-twenties lust for life; singer/songwriter/guitarist Julian Casablancas and the rest of the band mix swaggering self-assurance with barely concealed insecurity on "The Modern Age" and reveal something akin to earnestness on "Barely Legal" -- a phrase that could apply to the Strokes themselves -- in the song's soaring choruses. The group revamps "Lust for Life" on "New York City Cops" and combines their raw power and infectious melodies on "Hard to Explain," arguably the finest song they've written in their career. Nearly half of Is This It consists of their previously released material, but that's not really a disappointment since those songs are so strong. What makes their debut impressive, however, is that the new material more than holds its own with the tried-and-true songs. "Is This It" sets the joys of being young, jaded, and yearning to a wonderfully bouncy bassline; "Alone Together" and "Trying Your Luck" develop the group's brooding, coming-down side, while "Soma," "Someday," and "Take It or Leave It" capture the Strokes at their most sneeringly exuberant. Able to make the timeworn themes of sex, drugs, and rock & roll and the basic guitars-drum-bass lineup seem new and vital again, the Strokes may or may not be completely arty and calculated, but that doesn't prevent Is This It from being an exciting, compulsively listenable debut. [In light of the World Trade Center disaster, the track "New York City Cops" was pulled from the U.S. release].
I'm in the minority here for sure but... what's the appeal here? Tonally it's quite monotonous. Sonically, nothing new. Lyrically, hard to tell. The vocals are mixed so far back and the slight distortion on them makes the words just blend into the rest of the instrumentation. Pretty meh. I recognize a few of the tracks, but that doesn't mean they're good, just that they're played on the radio.
2001 was mega wasn't it? A whole world of possibilities for a 16/17 year old me who's just discovered that pubs (remember them?) would serve him and some particularly unfussy girls would go out with him. One of the best album covers of all time, one of the coolest bands of all time released this. The album itself is perfect. I wanted to be them but somehow failed to pull off the skinny jean, leather jacket, stoner look. I would pick out highlights; but I adore every song for different reasons. If you pushed me "Someday" is probably my favorite. Fun Fact- At a fundraiser recently for Bernie Sanders The strokes fans had gone past the curfew time and the fans rushed the stage durign the last song "New York City Cops". The Front man, Julian Casablancas, turns around and bumps into huge cop trying to control the situation just as hes singing 'they ain't too smart!' Chaos ensued (plenty of videos on youtube). Anyway This is the best album of the noughties, hand down, and I'll fight anyone who says otherwise! I'd give this 6 if i could. Easiest 5/5 ever.
I wanted to hate this album so much when it came out. Rich little prep-school boys trying to make vintage music sounds like such a turnoff. Nope. One listen and I was in love. Perfect album.
Release the butt cover in the US
Album sounds the exact same throughout. Not much diversity. Liked a couple of their famous songs. 1/5
Props to this website for using the ass cover
Effortlessly cool, this band played a huge part in my life music wise in my twenties and still do today. As fresh now as it was then even though it wears every influence on its sleeve. An absolute joy to listen to from start to finish - how many tracks are just nailed on killer songs ? Tore up my rule book in 2001 in the same way Nirvana did ten years before. Utterly brilliant โญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธ
5 star cover art. 3 star music.
A very tight and tidy wee album. The Strokes know how to keep it simple and just write good songs. I always likes the band but they never made a big impression on me first time around and re-listening to this album now I pretty much still feel same way. I donโt dislike any of it, but I donโt love it. Cool band though.
Last night is the stand out track here. The album is not offensive, some of the baselines are catchy, but the relentlessly strummy guitar coupled with showboat electrics gets dull real fast. Strum strum strum. Yawn.
Julian Casablancas is said to have wanted Is This It to sound like a pair of favourite jeans, worn but familiar and comfortable. Whoever engineered this record did such a good job with that brief that Is This It really does feel as if itโs been around forever. Ground Zero for Rock in the new millennium, The Strokes feel like something new, a turning point away from the bloated and incoherent mess Alternative had become since Grunge fizzled out, a move towards an unkempt urban hipster cool image, thatโs been so successful as marketing that itโs still what I imagine cool young people listen to in downtown Manhattan apartments over 20 years later. What I feel is often undervalued is how interesting it is as music. It all slots together in a very intricate way, with parts stopping and starting, the guitars playing off each other, the metronomic drums giving a tribal motorik performance that is weirdly danceable. I can slip this album on like a favourite pair of jeans at any time of day, at any point in the year and it fits. As a piece of art it is flawless, as a social document it is fascinating, and as an instruction manual in cool it is still functional. I love this album
After the yearlong "end of the century" content from MTV, the nostalgia was there for another full year and along came "last nite" whose video exploited a nostalgia that we were actually too young to remember that of which it was a remembrance of. The rest is history as Is This It came to change the landscape of popular music in a more successful way than Kid A if not a longer one. Now 20 years after all of that I could say that the album is not as good as everyone thought it was, it actually drags I a couple of long moments, and it does not hold to the end after achieving its highest highs, maybe it could even be said that Room On Fire is more consistent even if not as soulful as this one. but what can be said against such perfect songs as Someday or Last Nite? I could try to give it a 2 or a 3 but the truth is that Iโm still that 14 year old singing โwhen we was young oh man did we have funโ with all the honesty of the one who was never younger and did never became so again. To me, the jewel of the crown is Hard to Explain which is one of the most perfect songs Iโve ever heard, I still stop and surrender to it every time I hear it, and consider myself so lucky to have heard it live a couple of times. Hard To Explain is the reason why Iโm giving this one a 5.
One of the best albums of all time. Rediscovered NYC Cops on this listen. So good.
The Strokeโs 2001 magnum opus โIs This Itโ, was a prime example of being in the right place at the right time. Rock music was ready to undergo a change it hadnโt done so since the early 90s with the grunge era. The New York group quickly rose to prominence and gave way to the indie music revolution. It was a return to the fundamentals and the basics of what made rejecting main stream so cool. The strokes were able to make amazing melodies with fairly simple progressions and that in itself is what lens does band its signature sound. Overall I would give this album a 9.1 out of 10, โIs This Itโ is an album that I still play regularly on vinyl front to back.
Love it! Classic with many hits, including the title track, "last nite", "selfless". Love the slightly distorted voice
Banger
Before listening i felt as though i wouldnt like it though i did it was very fun to listen to would most likely listen to again i really liked his voice and the guitar in songs is very good too overall 5/5
There It Is
This album is great and I had been wanting to listen to it for a while so I'm glad I finally did. I liked it better on the second listen and it's at least a top 50 album for me. It's just full of good songs and no filler. I don't have too many thoughts on it other than that. It's 35 minutes of good music that I will definitely be coming back to. As far as negatives, there aren't many. I don't like the guitar solo on Last Nite but it doesn't ruin the song for me. Also. the US version is definitely worse. I guess I understand why they replaced it but New York City Cops is better than When It Started. Favorite Songs: Is This It; The Modern Age; Barely Legal; Someday; Alone, Together; Last Nite; Hard To Explain; Trying Your Luck; Take It Or Leave It Decent 9/10
Really bland and monotonous. All style, no hooks.
Well. Another album of rock and roll that is just the same song over and over, same vocal effect, same guitar tones, same beat, chords, and "melodies." I get that this is basically an album recorded live, but then make a live album. When you have the time and space available to you in a studio, just setting everything up the same way and pressing "record" seems like a waste. Is this is the most important Strokes album? I hope not, for their sake. The most interesting bits? The bass line in the verse in Is This It? is fantastic and had me hoping for more, but alas the rest of the album is just dododododadadada, eight to the bar with a few variations here and there The feedback at the beginning of New York City Cops was probably the most interesting thing on the album. Lo and behold it even had a guitar solo for a second there. So does Take It Or Leave It, but I generally consider a guitar solo something exceeding five different notes. Maybe a phrase or two. And speaking of strokes, they should have called this "The Stroke" because, with the exception of the syncopated rhythm on The Modern Age, it's all just the same driving downstroke. Am I generalizing? Yes. But I'm not going to spend a full 35 minutes trying to find tiny pieces of interesting minutae on an album of sameness. It's all white noise after a while. As they say in "Take It Or Leave It," enough is enough.
Ahhh the saviour of music. Back in 2001, when we were swiftly sinking into a bland quicksand of Travis, Coldplay and Osama Bin Laden, in stepped a deliberately scuffed pair of Converse high tops to save the day. The landmark album of our generation. It's knowingly nonchalant, but somehow through that apathy, true brilliance manifests. With youthful exuberance and effervescent energy the album quakes with more stompers than an elephant stampede through an unsuspecting african village. It's my favourite album.
Listening to this record, it is obvious just how much of a formative moment it was, how influential it was for rock music coming into the 2000s. I love the throwback to garage rock and post-punk sounds, the the live atmosphere in the production makes you feel like you are seeing them at a small club. Not to mention the great presence Casablancas has on the mic, and the fun guitar interplay. Ultimately, I think I like a lot of the stuff that this album broke ground for even more, and the album can get a bit โsameyโ by the end, but the undeniable influence here puts it squarely into a 5 star rating for me.
Effortlessly cool, this band played a huge part in my life music wise in my twenties and still do today. As fresh now as it was then even though it wears every influence on its sleeve. An absolute joy to listen to from start to finish - how many tracks are just nailed on killer songs ? Tore up my rule book in 2001 in the same way Nirvana did ten years before. Utterly brilliant โญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธ
Love this album as much today as I did when I bought it 20 years ago.
An album that never gets old. This was so refreshing when it droppedโฆ. New, exciting and created its own zeitgeist. Love it!!!
I'm not sure I've ever listened to this album all the way through but I knew almost every song. That speaks to how strong the album is, 8 out of the 11 songs are single worthy.
An all-time great album. Incredible for a debut, too. Every song is fantastic. Great guitar work and personable and relatable/smart lyrics.
This was a seminal album for me. Came at a very important time in my life when I met my later-to-be wife. Iโd play this all the time when she came around. We found that groove.
Really enjoyed - didnโt listen much when I was younger but this still provides me nostalgia for a time haha
Absolute banger!
Iโm just going to copy and paste my review of Televisionโs Marquee Moon below because it relates to The Strokes (and not because I think the Strokes sound like Television - they donโt. To be honest, they sound a lot more like Guided By Voices, but you all hated Alien Lanes, so that comparison will fall on deaf ears): โBack in early 2002, during the height of Strokes-mania in New York City, I was shopping for records in Greenwich Village after seeing a show at the Upright Citizens Brigade theatre on a Saturday night. The shop I was in - I forget the name now, sorry - was in the basement of a three story walk up and was packed to the gills with records. On the counter by the register, the shop owner had a record on display, Televisionโs Marquee Moon, with a Post-It note affixed to it with these exact words scrawled on it: โFuck The Strokes - This is the *real* sound of New York Cityโ โฆand that was all it took to sell me on Marquee Moon. Thank god for the curmudgeonly record store owners of the world.โ
good album but damn it gets repetitive at times. overall like the sound though so it's a 3/5
No, it isnโt.
'Last Night' is a great little song. It does however appear to be the only song The Strokes have. Everything else sounds exactly like it, like they wrote one good thing and decided to stick with the template as much as they could. They is no variety on this album at all, it's a real disappointment.
Wow, the album that system it all. And by all, I mean the indistinguishable sameness of early-2000s rock.
Good. That's it.
I wasn't a huge Strokes fan. I always kind of got the impression that Julian Casablancas was pretentious and full of himself. I have no idea if that impression was at all justified, I just thought he gave off a bit of a vibe in what little I saw of him early in The Strokesโ career. Not to make his head even bigger, but I think The Strokes may have saved rock music. The Strokes broke through with โIs This Itโ in 2001 (the same year as The White Stripes โWhite Blood Cellsโ at a time when mainstream rock was in a downward spiral. The post-grunge years had left a void that was being quickly filled by edgier and edgier nu-metal and rap rock, and it looked like a bleak future dominated by the likes of Limp Bizkits, Korns, Slipknots, Papa Roaches, and Stainds. But along came The Strokes and The White Stripes, and the influence they had over the next 10 years of rock music canโt be understated. I wasnโt a huge Strokes fan, but listening to โIs This Itโ I could hear their fingerprints on the next decade-plus of rock music. The garage rock elements gave space to the less flashy and commercial White Stripes, Black Keys, and Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. The jangly danceable guitars paved the way for Franz Ferdinand, Walk the Moon, Fun/Bleachers, and many more. The in-your-face old-school rocker stardom inspired The Libertines, Kings of Leon, and The Killers. I wasnโt a huge Strokes fan. But I knew this whole album. I didnโt follow them afterwards, but โIs This Itโ is undeniably catchy, pulsating, and well-crafted from start to finish. Iโm not quite sure I can get behind โBarely Legal,โ even when written by a 20-year-old, but every other song completely captures me and transports me back to the early 2000s, when in the midst of 9/11, Total Request Live, the Bush presidency, boy bands and Nickelback, The Strokes lit the way for rock bands in the 21st century. Iโm sorry I thought you were all-ego, Casablancas - you and Albert Hammond, Jr. deserve all the accolades you received. It sounds hyperbolic, but Iโm serious. Emerging rock artists may never again reach the commercial heights they did in the 90s, but great music abounds.
I'm not actually a huge Strokes fan. I wouldn't really choose to listen to them but this is a seminal album and has so many bangers
The album that started a generation of indie copy cats in UK.
One of the easiest 5s on the entire list. I love everything about this, especially the way it makes me feel.
I โค๏ธ J.C
love so many good songs iconicโค๏ธโค๏ธ
Damn near perfect indie rock. Everything is just so slick with some very tight guitar riffs. Indie classic. 9-10/10 1. Soma 2. Is This It 3. Take It or Leave It
Grateful for this one. Another certified classic. A band that sounds and feels years older than they were upon release but not because of some 'retro' sound. To this day, the weird attempts to make them out to be something closer to a classic rock revival on their debut is hard to truly wrap your head around now, but all the boomer rags wanted their new Led zep. They wanted to trumpet about how guitars were back, despite never ever leaving. Cringey shit. But the Strokes' age shone thru by way of their lyrical scope and seasoned tightness. Sonically it's such a cohesively considered record. A perfect album that could be played in any order to reach the appropriate conclusions. But moreover, an album of uncomfortable ennui. It's a sad album. It's realizing, too young, that hope is a blasted out crater while trying to consolidate that with a young life that's freewheeling but not so gleefly debauched as to turn full on edgy. Despite sounding deeply cool, it's never a jaded sound. If anything, it's the sound of not wanting to sound jaded.
A fantastic album - and hugely influential. (Alex Turner agrees!)
One of the best
A personal favorite.
A classic album from the early aughts. Their hits somehow never get old.
This was a great album to get. I remember listening to it a lot when it came out and basically wrote them off in the last few years. I'm glad this came up so I could revisit.
Amazing. Dunno why I hadn't listened to them before.
Holy baselines, Batman! Alternative mood lifting and sophisticated. Definitely a hit with the modern rock crowd stuck listening to the classics. I actually went back and listened twice! Alone, Together and Trying Your Luck.
Its insanely fun and has so much energy, all with a undercurrent of tiredness and sadness
YES ICONIC
Excellent.
Absolutely brilliant album, one of my all time favourites
A top 5 album of the 21st century.
Good
New York.
fun!
YESSSS!! One of my favourite albums ever - easy 5/5 Best tracks: Is This It, New York City Cops, Take It Or Leave It, Hard To Explain
I was in the mood for this today.
Do i have nostalgia goggles? or is this the best album of the 2000s?
Classic
soooo good and such a solid ending
always like listening to this band
Some bangers on there. Loads of energy, Someday, Last Nite, New York City Cops all in my favs - don't think I appreciated the album as much at the time but they were a big part of the naughties indie revival. Love the cover was banned in the US too +1 star just for that.
Despite not being at all original it's flawless without a wasted note on the whole thing
Mรบsica oscura, con tono mas o menos desgarrado del vocalista; buena banda, sonido armรณnico o sorprendente, no estridente, intimista a veces. Arcade Fire; Blur; The Strokes
Great album
Love it! Definitely a classic alternative album of the early 2000s, and with their very distinctive sound
Hit de l'album: Someday Excellent album ร rรฉรฉcouter. Il me donne envie de marcher vite.
What can I say about this gem?! Has to be in my top 25 modern classic albums. All killer, no filler.
I forgot how great this album is.
Fantastic as always
Good chill listening
Right in the middle of uni - great.
Forgot how much I love this.
Oh my goodness... Let's goooooo! One.of my favorites
Easily in my top 10 favourite albums anyway. Thoroughly enjoyed the first re-listen of the year, certainly won't be the last.
2000-luvun rock-klassikko josta on vaikea lรถytรครค huonoja puolia. Varhainen Strokesin levy, jossa on vielรค mukana myรถhemmin hieman haalistunutta nuoruuden intoa. Vaikka tรคmรค varmasti on top 20:ssa eniten kuunnelluissa levyissรคni, ei se silti kuulosta lainkaan puhkikuunnellulta tai tylsรคltรค. Yhtรค selvรค vitonen kuin Oasikselle ja Sufjan Stevensille.
A very easy 5 stars from me, this is just the type of music that I really connect with. "Is This It", "Barely Legal", "Last Nite" among others
Fucking great.
Hard to think of many more influential albums of the past 20 years or so. Also, a personal favorite.
Get me a heiney
Love them. .
I donโt recognize this as the cover bc spotify This fucking album SLAPSSSSSSS
Great album. One of my favorite rock albums ever.
Fantastic debut album!
Hard to Explain รคr den bรคsta lรฅten.
I love this album. It's cohesive, incredibly catchy, and a defining moment in the 2000s. The flow of the album from song to song, fantastic guitar hooks, and distinctive singing all make this one of my favorite albums of the decade, if not all time.
classic
i love
The Strokes' debut album immediately perfects a garage rock sound with raw and gritty guitar-work.
a quintessential indie album. i always hear people talk about how this is the best strokes album and theyโve spent their whole career trying to replicate it. maybe itโs because weโre twenty years removed from it, but this is not the best strokes album. itโs still great, and massively influential for the indie scene at the time but they have definitely put out better music over the length of their career. this is a great album worth listening to, even if i think itโs overrated.
It's a really solid freshman album. The songs are put together well, the production is admirably transparent, and the performances are energetic and skillful. There's nothing to dislike here.
I bought this when first released but other than the singles from it & a couple of the album tracks, it never wowed me. I enjoyed revisiting it but it still leaves the same impression.
Quick, dirty, fun. Though it was all a bit sameysame, it was a good sound to hear over and over, especially since the entire album was less than 40 minutes long.