The Week Never Starts Round Here is the debut studio album by Scottish indie rock band Arab Strap. It was released on 25 November 1996 on Chemikal Underground. The album was reissued in 2010, with a bonus CD which includes the band's first session for John Peel, from March 1997 with guest appearances from Belle and Sebastian's Stuart Murdoch and Chris Geddes, and their first ever live gig, at King Tut's in Glasgow in October 1996, as recorded live for Peel's show.
Arab Strap included a song entitled "The Week Never Starts Round Here" on their 2003 album Monday at the Hug and Pint. In a 2009 interview, band member Malcolm Middleton stated that The Week Never Starts Round Here is his favourite Arab Strap release: "...it's completely undiluted and free from any self-expectations, which we later developed".[2]
The Independent wrote that the album suggests "Tricky's fractured interior monologues, the new folk of Palace and Smog and the infamous unreleased tapes of Irvine Welsh setting his diary to the music of Joy Division, while actually sounding like nothing but itself."[9]
"The First Big Peel Thing" (Peel Session 1 - version of "The First Big Weekend")
3:32
5.
"Intro" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
2:02
6.
"General Plea to a Girlfriend" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
1:22
7.
"The Clearing" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
2:27
8.
"Kate Moss" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
2:32
9.
"Gilded" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
2:50
10.
"Driving" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
1:50
11.
"I Work In A Saloon" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
2:40
12.
"Phone Me Tonight" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
3:18
13.
"Blood" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
3:52
14.
"The First Big Weekend" (Live at King Tut's, Glasgow 1996)
3:59
Total length:
42:42
References
^Stylus Staff (22 March 2004). "Top 101โ200 Favourite Albums Ever". Stylus Magazine. Archived from the original on 16 February 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2023. Fleshing out their palette from the extreme lo-fi sound of their The Week Never Starts Round Here debut...