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Compare prices for A Weekend in the City

On this page you will find a list of prices for A Weekend in the City at UK online CD stores with the cheapest prices at the top.

The links next to the prices will take you to the relative stores, where you can place an order or browse for more information.

TitleA Weekend in the City
ArtistBloc Party
Release Date05 February 2007
PublisherWichita
R.R.P.£ 5.99
StoreItem PriceDelivery ChargeTotal Price 
Amazon (MP3)£ 2.99£ 0.00£ 2.99Go To Store
Amazon UK£ 3.49£ 0.00£ 3.49Go To Store
Play.com£ 3.49£ 0.00£ 3.49Go To Store
SendIt£ 3.89£ 0.00£ 3.89Go To Store
WH Smith£ 3.93£ 0.00£ 3.93Go To Store
Asda£ 3.93£ 0.00£ 3.93Go To Store
Zavvi£ 3.95£ 0.00£ 3.95Go To Store
The Hut£ 3.95£ 0.00£ 3.95Go To Store
Dixons Entertainment£ 3.97£ 0.00£ 3.97Go To Store
Currys Entertainment£ 3.97£ 0.00£ 3.97Go To Store
PC World£ 3.97£ 0.00£ 3.97Go To Store
Chipsworld£ 3.99£ 0.00£ 3.99Go To Store
iTunes (digital download)£ 4.99£ 0.00£ 4.99Go To Store
HMV£ 6.99£ 0.00£ 6.99Go To Store
PowerPlayDirect£ 7.99£ 0.00£ 7.99Go To Store
7digital (MP3)£ 7.99£ 0.00£ 7.99Go To Store
Tesco£ 11.47£ 0.00£ 11.47Go To Store
991.com£ 11.99£ 1.65£ 13.64Go To Store

The following stores were also checked when comparing prices for the A Weekend in the City, but they do not currently stock this CD: - Crotchet Music, Blackwell, SelectCheaper, ChoicesUK, CD WOW!, LoveFilm

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Critical adulation and commercial success hasn't changed Bloc Party. On A Weekend In The City, they're still rolling with the punches, frustrated by small minds, social inequality, and a world that reduces the life's wonderful possibilities to a grey routine. "East London is a vampire," sings Kele Okereke on the opening "Song For Clay (Disappear Here)", "it sucks the life right out of me." This, unmistakably, is Kele's album. Whereas the group's debut, 2005's Silent Alarm, felt powered primarily by the sturdy rhythm section of Gordon Moakes and Matt Tong, here the whooshing groove recedes slightly, allowing for more lyrical reflections: see "Waiting For The 7.18", which finds Okereke pondering the quiet hell of the daily commute, or "Where Is Home?" - a thoughtful, bruised song about racism given a special bite by stint of Kele's background as a second-generation Nigerian immigrant. Also notable is a move towards more synthetic, electronic textures, thanks in part to the presence of producer Jacknife Lee. If before, Bloc Party sometimes sounded like they were trying to be machine-like, now they actually do, drums arranged in dense loops, guitars gasping robotic feedback. All in all, it's a less gripping album than Silent Alarm - but it's definitely a growth, and in the long run, it may prove easier to love. --Louis Pattison Amazon.co.uk Review.

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