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Intensive Care 42 members have voted

  1. 1. What's Your Favourite Track?

    • Ghosts
      5
    • Tripping
      2
    • Make me pure
      4
    • Spread your wings
      2
    • Advertsing space
      3
    • Please don't die
      1
    • Your gay friend
      1
    • Sin Sin Sin
      4
    • Trouble with me
      8
    • Random acts of kindness
      2
    • A Place to crash
      8
    • King of bloke and bird
      2

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28 minutes ago, Better Man said:

Still waiting for release of any outtakes from their recording period :)

There are about 15-20 songs more.

Yes, it would be amazing to hear them. It's 20 years. C'mon Rob !

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  • elisabeth1974
    elisabeth1974

    I would have loved him to write further with Stephen Duffy. What a great album this is.

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Tune in to Rewind Robbie Williams Podcast to listen to their special episode on Intensive Care.

Robbie Williams Rewind

Angie from Scotland, who now lives in Australia, joins us to dissect Intensive Care track by track. Hear about Angie’s meet and greets with Rob and how she was once lucky enough to attend a VERY intimate gig! We also reminisce about Rob’s album launch gigs in October 2005, one of which Lucy & Matt were at!

Source https://www.youtube.com/@rewindrobbie

EP12 - Intensive Care–Robbie Williams Rewind – Apple Podcasts

Classic Album Review: Robbie Williams | Intensive Care

By

Darryl Sterdan 2025-10-28

Robbie-Williams-Intensive-Care-640x640.j

This came out in 2005 — or at least that’s when I got it. Here’s what I said about it back then (with some minor editing):

 


The sixth time’s the charm for Robbie Williams.

After spending most of the last decade playing Jack the Lad, taking the piss and generally acting the fool, the British megastar (and North American nobody) finally takes his tongue out of his cheek and plays it fairly straight on Intensive Care. Why the big change? Well, I can think of one reason: He’s got an unlikely new creative partner. Longtime songwriter and producer Guy Chambers is out; former Tin Tin and Lilac Time leader Stephen Duffy is in. And anyone familiar with Duffy’s literate, melodic pop won’t be surprised by the calming influence he seems to have had on the 31-year-old tabloid magnet. Sure, Robo still tends to go too far with his winking, self-obsessed lyrics on tunes like Your Gay Friend and Sin Sin Sin — but at least now he seems to have spent just as much time and energy on crafting lush, string-laced pop-rockers and ballads to go with them. Not that it’ll make much difference down south — last I heard, Intensive Care didn’t even have a U.S. release date. So maybe the sixth time isn’t the charm for Williams after all. Still, this is a charmer.

 

Classic Album Review: Robbie Williams | Intensive Care - Tinnitist

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