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    • Fit But You Know It (2004) What happens: We’re not quite sure how well this track now rates on the woke-o-meter, but here Mike gives a dressing down to a lady he fancies.
    • Turn The Page (2002) What happens: Like, everything. The opening track of The Streets’ debut album is an epic statement of intent, pitching Mike Skinner as Birmingham’s very own Maximus Decimus Meridius.
    • Weak Become Heroes (2002) Advertisement. What happens: Mike sings the praises of acid house and 1990s ravers over a woozy electronic track. Best bit: The drop as Mike sings “Only one choice in the city/Done voicing my pity, now let’s get to the nitty–gritty.”
    • Could Well Be In (2004) What happens: Aww, Mike’s in love. With, according to the video, a young Alexa Chung, Best bit: Those plaintive, pensive keys, of course.
  1. 11 Best The Streets Songs - Songpier. Dive into the sonic world of The Streets, where gritty urban tales meet raw, poetic beats. This UK-based project, led by Mike Skinner, blends garage, grime, and hip-hop into something wholly unique. Skinner’s keen observations and storytelling prowess have made their music resonate deeply with fans.

    • Has It Come To This? (from ‘Original Pirate Material’, 2002) The UK welcomed its equivalent to a dub poet with this jazzy beatnik-garage single. Topping our list of the best Streets songs, the lyrically impressive Has It Come To This?
    • Let’s Push Things Forward (featuring Kevin Trail) (from ‘Original Pirate Material’, 2002) Largely responsible for the comparisons between The Streets and 2-Tone, Let’s Push Things Forward’s lazy ska trombone and skanking keys are joined by a hefty proto-dubstep bassline and a lyric which builds on Turn The Page’s new-music manifesto: “This ain’t a track/It’s a movement.”
    • It’s Too Late (from ‘Original Pirate Material’, 2002) Never given a proper single release (though High Contrast provided a complementary drum’n’bass remix), the lush Original Pirate Material track It’s Too Late remains the ultimate Streets deep cut.
    • Dry Your Eyes (from ‘A Grand Don’t Come For Free’, 2004) For a nation usually keen on a stiff upper lip, it’s notable the extent to which the UK took Dry Your Eyes to its heart.
    • ‘OMG’
    • ‘Going Through Hell’
    • ‘Prangin’ Out’
    • ‘Heaven For The Weather’
    • ‘The Escapist’
    • ‘could Well Be In’
    • ‘When You Wasn’T Famous’
    • ‘Never Went to Church’
    • ‘Don’t Mug Yourself’
    • ‘Everything Is Borrowed’

    Look, none of these tracks are bad, but there has to be one bring up the rear and, OMG, it’s this one. There’s nothing wrong with it at all but it sees Mike just seeming quite, well, content really, as he has a little look at social media while assessing a relationship. It was a perfectly fine track at the end of his final album Computers and Blues...

    Likewise, I feel bad putting this - the only other single from Computers and Blues, which I absolutely assure you is a really good album - second last. Its chopped-up rock feel, complete with chorus sung by The Music’s Rob Harvey, who he would later collaborate with on The Dot, showed that Mike was still up for playing with new sonic landscapes. An...

    Third album The Hardest Way to Make an Easy Livingsaw Skinner take the cliched banana skin of a third record - where the temptation is to make an album about life on the road and your new pop star existence with no relevance to your audience - and jump on it enthusiastically with both feet. The result was a record that was one of the best examples ...

    Like on ‘Going Through Hell’, Skinner never had any fear of embracing different musical styles and this track comes across like something out of a twisted West End musical which somehow works, as Mike mulls over whether to spend eternity upstairs or downstairs. It showed that he was fully over his Hardest Way to Make an Easy Living breakdown, setti...

    The last track on Everything is Borrowed, this was a gorgeous, woozy way to end the album, with Mike giving himself up to the metaphorical winds - “I’ll not feel no fear, cos’ I’m not really here, I’m nowhere near here”. Who hasn’t wished to just walk away from everything once in a while?

    The final single from the amazing A Grand Don’t Come for Free which, in anyone else’s hands, could have been cloying and trite, Skinner somehow manages to perfectly observe the little minutiae of those glorious times when you can’t help but start falling for someone. And it showed that ITV canbe educational sometimes.

    Yes, it’s basically ‘Fit But You Know It But Now You’re Famous So It’s A Bit Different’ but Skinner is such an entertaining storyteller that he drags you in. There’s some stellar lines in here - the sudden dawning realisation that you believed all the tabloid lies before you became the subject of them and of course, the unforgettable “Considering t...

    Likewise, this was Skinner’s attempt at another ‘Dry Your Eyes’ - an unrepeatable trick - and yet, he pulled it off. It could have been cheesy - it is cheesy (something he himself admits) - and yet, as a tribute to his recently-passed father, it’s incredibly moving. The line “I forgot you left me behind to remind me of you” is brilliant, as is the ...

    I mean, pretty much every track on Original Pirate Materialis amazing so even the ‘weakest’ single is brilliant. An essential tale of your mates looking out for you when you’re about to make an idiot of yourself in the love department. “Stop me if I’m wrong, stop me if I’m wrong”. You’re not wrong Calvin. As ever, you are right.

    I love this song. Like so many Streets tracks, the cheap casio keyboards and royalty-free samples, added to Skinner’s honest vocals, somehow create something lo-fi, yet epic. This glorious philosophical track leaves you feeling thankful for life: “I came to this world with nothing, and I leave with nothing but love. Everything else is just borrowed...

  2. This is the official music video playlist for The Streets, featuring hits like 'Blinded By The Lights', 'Dry Your Eyes', 'Don't Mug Yourself' and 'Fit But Yo...

  3. Without further ado, here are The Streets top 10 tracks of all time: 1. Fit but You Know It. The Streets. 2. Turn The Page. The Streets. 3. Take Me As I Am. The Streets, Chris Lorenzo. 4. Has It Come to This? The Streets. 5. Mike (desert island duvet) The Streets, Dermot Kennedy. 6. Blinded by the Lights. The Streets. 7. Dry Your Eyes. The Streets.

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  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_StreetsThe Streets - Wikipedia

    The Streets is an English musical project led by vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Mike Skinner. The project was founded in the early 90s, while Skinner was still a teenager; however, no music would formally eventuate until the early 2000s.

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