When The Sun Goes Down

Arctic Monkeys

Sale - Sale price $18.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $18.99 CAD
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Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

“When the Sun Goes Down” is a 2006 single by Arctic Monkeys from their debut era, often thought of like a mini‑story set in the band’s familiar world of late‑night Sheffield. It follows a narrator who gradually realizes that the “scummy man” he sees hanging around a certain corner is a pimp, and the woman he’s with is a sex worker. The song opens with a deceptively bright, jangly guitar figure before crashing into a faster, more aggressive section, mirroring how the narrative shifts from curiosity to anger and disgust.

Lyrically, it’s one of Alex Turner’s sharpest early portraits of urban life, full of conversational lines and specific local details that make the scene feel lived‑in rather than moralizing. The track captures the band’s core appeal at the time: observational storytelling, vivid characters, and the collision between catchy indie rock hooks and grim, real‑world subject matter. For a website, you can present it as both a standout single and a key snapshot of the gritty, documentary‑style writing that helped define Arctic Monkeys’ first album.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0887829021672
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Domino Record Co.
detail icon genre
Genre :
Rock/Pop
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
250 g

When The Sun Goes Down

Arctic Monkeys

Sale - Sale price $18.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $18.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

“When the Sun Goes Down” is a 2006 single by Arctic Monkeys from their debut era, often thought of like a mini‑story set in the band’s familiar world of late‑night Sheffield. It follows a narrator who gradually realizes that the “scummy man” he sees hanging around a certain corner is a pimp, and the woman he’s with is a sex worker. The song opens with a deceptively bright, jangly guitar figure before crashing into a faster, more aggressive section, mirroring how the narrative shifts from curiosity to anger and disgust.

Lyrically, it’s one of Alex Turner’s sharpest early portraits of urban life, full of conversational lines and specific local details that make the scene feel lived‑in rather than moralizing. The track captures the band’s core appeal at the time: observational storytelling, vivid characters, and the collision between catchy indie rock hooks and grim, real‑world subject matter. For a website, you can present it as both a standout single and a key snapshot of the gritty, documentary‑style writing that helped define Arctic Monkeys’ first album.

  • Vinyl