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Released: August 5, 2003


Rating: 3.704 (average of 17 ratings)


Genre: rock > rock > hard rock


Quotable: --


Album Tracks:

  1. Black Shuck
  2. Get Your Hands Off My Woman
  3. Growing on Me
  4. I Believe in a Thing Called Love
  5. Love Is Only a Feeling
  6. Givin’ Up
  7. Stuck in a Rut
  8. Friday Night
  9. Love on the Rocks with No Ice
  10. Holding My Own


Sales:

sales in U.S. only ½ million
sales in U.K. only - estimated 1.2 million
sales in all of Europe as determined by IFPI – click here to go to their site. 1 million
sales worldwide - estimated 2.7 million


Peak:

peak on U.S. Billboard album chart 36
peak on U.K. album chart 1 4


Singles/Hit Songs:

  • I Believe in a Thing Called Love (8/12/02) #2 UK, #23 AR, #9 MR. Sales: ½ million
  • Love Is Only a Feeling (8/12/02) #5 UK
  • Get Your Hands Off My Woman (2/24/03) --
  • Growing on Me (6/03) #11 UK, #40 AR, #31 MR


Awards:

Brits Award for Album of the Year. Click to go to awards page.


Permission to Land
The Darkness
Review:
“Upon its U.K. release in summer 2003, Permission to Land, the debut album from spandex-clad retro metalheads the Darkness, was a surprise success, hitting the British charts at number two (behind only Beyoncé’s Dangerously in Love). After hearing Permission to Land, it’s easier to understand why the British public went crazy for it, and for the Darkness. The album is more or less straightforward pop/rock with some ‘80s metal window-dressing, and the Darkness themselves live up to traditional notions of what a rock band should be: louche, decadent, and harboring a don’t-bore-us-get-to-the-chorus mentality” (Phares).

“While the band is far from ironic in its homages to Kiss, Judas Priest, and Queen, the Darkness certainly are campy (and with a list of influences like that, they’d almost have to be), with a uniquely British sensibility, personified by singer Justin Hawkins. A one-man campaign to bring back the unitard as fashionable rock gear, Hawkins sings about sex, drugs, and Satan with the voice of a castrato, backed by arena-sized riffs and rhythms” (Phares).

“The Darkness would be an utter failure if the band didn’t write good songs, but miracle of miracles, they do. The first two-thirds of Permission to Land is nearly flawless, an eerily realistic simulation of ‘80s metal and ‘70s glam that manages to sound familiar but not rehashed. Black Shuck revels in pseudomystic gobbledygook like ‘Flames licked round the sacred spire’; on the great single Get Your Hands off My Woman, Hawkins sings ‘woooomaaan’ higher than most women probably could. Growing on Me (which includes the great lyric ‘I want to banish you from whence you came’) and I Believe in a Thing Called Love are tightly crafted songs that would sound good in almost any style, while Givin’ Up is one of the jauntiest songs about heroin ever written. Even the prerequisite power ballad, Love Is Only a Feeling, stays on the fun side of cheesy, adrift on clouds of strummed guitars and gooey backing harmonies” (Phares).

“The album has such a strong beginning and middle that it’s not entirely surprising that Permission to Land runs out of steam near the end, although Stuck in a Rut is a crazed enough rocker – complete with demonic laughter – to nearly rival the album’s earlier songs. Softer songs like Friday Night and Holding My Own make the collection unusually ballad-heavy; if anything, the Darkness could stand to rock a little harder” (Phares).

“Even though Permission to Land isn’t quite as metal as its singles suggested it might be, the album is surprisingly good, especially considering how bad the band’s ‘80s metal revival could have been. It’s hard to say whether or not the Darkness will take off in the States the way they did in their homeland; Hawkins’ over-the-top vocals aside, the band may be hurt by the fact that most metal and hard rock popular in the U.S. is more concerned with brooding and angst than with having fun. But having fun is what Permission to Land is all about, even if it’s just a guilty pleasure” (Phares).


Review Source(s):


Last updated July 20, 2008.