Jake Bugg

by 
AlbumJan 01 / 201314 songs, 39m 22s95%
Singer-Songwriter Contemporary Folk
Popular Highly Rated

Before the debut LP from British folk-rock sensation Jake Bugg was even released in the U.S., discerning ears (and nascent fans) may have noticed his music in a Gatorade commercial. The driving, rebellious, Dylan-in-his-youth tune \"Lightning Bolt\" may at first seem like an odd choice for a soundtrack to 60 seconds of Gatorade history, but it works. The song\'s fiery guitar and racing melody electrify like, well, a lightning bolt. Bugg topped the British charts in 2012, at the tender age of 18. This young musician sounds like an old soul, with influences from Johnny Cash to The Everly Brothers and Donovan coloring his work; he\'s been known to cover Jimi Hendrix (his guitar work is astonishing for someone who only started playing at 12). This long-awaited debut is solid from start to end. Among the record\'s many delights are ballads imbued with pop references from the Merseybeat sound to Oasis (\"Note to Self,\" \"Slide\"), barn-burners, quiet fingerpicked gems à la early Dylan (\"Someone Told Me,\" \"Trouble Town\"), and swaggering country-pop (\"Two Fingers\"). He even pays homage to blues icon Robert Johnson on the closing track, \"Fire.\" Smart boy.

8.2 / 10

The “new Dylan” designation is as trodden and well-known now as the “wunderkind” label thrown at any tuneful musician under…

Check out our album review of Artist's Jake Bugg on Rolling Stone.com.

As far as debut albums go, this eponymous release is a surprisingly accomplished effort from the Nottingham-born teenager Jake Bugg.

8 / 10

ClashMusic: Read an album review of Jake Bugg's self-titled debut album featuring the singles 'Lightning Bolt', 'Two Fingers' and 'Taste It'.

The debut album by Nottingham teenager Jake Bugg is a collection of Dylanesque songs beautifully pitched between youth and experience, says <strong>Ally Carnwath</strong>

Young Jake Bugg writes about what he knows, and does it well – when he knows a bit more, maybe he'll come up with something special, writes <strong>Michael Hann</strong>

8 / 10