Things Are What They Used to Be

Things Are What They Used To Be
Studio album by Zoot Woman
Released 21 August 2009
Genre Alternative dance, electronica
Length 42:52
Label Zoot Woman Records (ZWR)
Producer Adam Blake, Johnny Blake, Stuart Price
Zoot Woman chronology
Zoot Woman
(2003)
Things Are What They Used To Be
(2009)
Star Climbing
(2014)
Singles from Things Are What They Used To Be
  1. "We Won't Break"
    Released: 5 December 2007
  2. "Live in My Head"
    Released: 19 March 2008
  3. "We Won't Break/Saturation"
    Released: 30 May 2009
  4. "Just a Friend of Mine"
    Released: 11 July 2009
  5. "Memory"
    Released: 18 September 2009
  6. "We Won't Break (Remixes EP)"
    Released: 18 December 2009
  7. "More Than Ever"
    Released: 30 April 2010
  8. "Just a Friend of Mine (EP)"
    Released: 31 May 2010

Things Are What They Used To Be is the third full-length studio album by British alternative rock / electronica band Zoot Woman. The album spawned five singles, videos were created for "We Won't Break", "Memory" and "Saturation".

Track listing

All tracks written by Adam Blake, Johnny Blake, and Stuart Price, except "Lonely By Your Side" written by Johnny Blake, Ingo Martens, Andre Winter and Sven Schumacher.[1]. 

No. Title Length
1. "Just A Friend Of Mine"   3:09
2. "Lonely By Your Side"   3:24
3. "More Than Ever"   3:26
4. "Saturation"   6:11
5. "Take You Higher"   3:17
6. "Witness"   3:34
7. "Lust Forever"   2:46
8. "Memory"   3:28
9. "We Won't Break"   3:03
10. "Things Are What They Used to Be"   4:15
11. "Blue Sea"   3:34
12. "Live in My Head"   4:05
Total length:
42:52
iTunes edition (bonus track)
No. Title Length
13. "Things Are What They Used to Be (Desire Mix)"   4:07

Personnel

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
BBC Music(mixed) [2]
The Guardian [3]
The Quietus(favourable) [4]
Clash (magazine) [5]

Things Are What They Used To Be was met with positive, yet mixed reviews. While Neil Condron from Clash magazine argued that "they've reworked their own template," others claimed the exact opposite, for example Tom Hocknell from BBC Music, who said that their music "remains platitudinal electro."

References

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