- Record Label: Atlantic
- Release Date: May 15, 2007
User Score
Generally favorable reviews- based on 23 Ratings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 13 out of 23
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Mixed: 3 out of 23
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Negative: 7 out of 23
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BenA.Oct 4, 2008Incredible album; my favourite ever. Nearly everything on here is good, with such epic songs as The Sweetest Wave and One for the Road making it an amazing album. It's a great step forward for the band, moving away from the heavy, screamy sound of their previous work.
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tarnia.Aug 13, 2007F*cking Wonderbar...
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willm.Aug 1, 2007While the story isn't great , the songs are enjoyable catchy and incredibly good.
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Jan 22, 2011This is what a great album should be: a story. I don't remember how exactly I ended up listening to this entire album. I was expecting something more similar to their previous work, but boy was I wrong and for the better. Nothing captures the imagination quite like a story and this what albums gives you. A chance to let your mind wander.
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IvanT.May 1, 2008Average.. Needs a few times hearing to make you addicted. The bad side is at the vocals, sometimes they just ruin the music.
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elmo.Aug 12, 2007with a desire to make a thinking mans album FFAF have ditched everything that made them listenable in favor for a middle of the road sound which lacks passion and drive. This album sees FFAF trying to walk away from the emo scene but they trip every step of the way.
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KackerbercackisMar 16, 2008Everything that made them popular, they've ditched. Songs are bland, theres no edge to any of them, except for "out of reach" , and I dearly hope that they realize they made a catastrophic error of judgment in the entire framework of this album.
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GregL.Jul 3, 2007Awful album.
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Jul 13, 2012Don't listen to the heaters, this is their opus.
You think a great albums peaked then 'walk away' storms in and makes your scalp tingle.
This should be on the all time top 100, so very good..
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Funeral for a Friend not only displays an increased sense of ambition on this sweeping great leap forward, they also display a greater sense of accomplishment, as writers and musicians.
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Aside from grand moments like "All Hands on Deck - Part 1: Raise the Sail" and the orchestral wall that builds on "The Sweetest Wave," you don't get the feeling that a continuous story binds the album together.
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The 10 tracks that make up Tales Don't Tell Themselves brief-though-engaging narrative are deeper, more accessible offerings that need those vital extra two or three listens to really sink in.