Mapping the Rendezvous by The Courteeners

Album cover for Mapping the Rendezvous - The Courteeners
1. Lucifer's Dreams
3:27
2. Kitchen
2:55
3. No One Will Ever Replace Us
3:54
4. De La Salle
4:31
5. Tip Toes
3:44
6. Not for Tomorrow
3:28
7. Finest Hour
3:21
8. The Dilettante
3:05
9. Modern Love
3:38
10. Most Important
3:48
11. The 17th
5:25
12. Are You in Love with a Notion? (Live at Heaton Park)
4:52
13. Cavorting (Live at Heaton Park)
3:39
14. Push Yourself (Live at Heaton Park)
3:41
15. How Good It Was (Live at Heaton Park)
4:53
16. Summer (Live at Heaton Park)
4:14
17. Please Don't (Live at Heaton Park)
4:05
18. The Opener (Live at Heaton Park)
5:42
19. Fallowfield Hillbilly (Live at Heaton Park)
3:57
20. Lose Control (Live at Heaton Park)
3:49
21. Next Time You Call (Live at Heaton Park)
3:57
22. Bide Your Time (Live at Heaton Park)
4:35
23. Sycophant (Live at Heaton Park)
4:58
24. Take over the World (Live at Heaton Park)
4:07
25. Small Bones (Live at Heaton Park)
4:58
26. Acrylic (Live at Heaton Park)
3:28
27. Aftershow (Live at Heaton Park)
2:49
28. Here Come the Young Men (Live at Heaton Park)
4:06
29. Beautiful Head (Live at Heaton Park)
5:14
30. Not Nineteen Forever (Live at Heaton Park)
4:35
31. What Took You so Long? (Live at Heaton Park)
6:06

"Mapping the Rendezvous" is the fifth studio album from British indie rock band The Courteeners, released on 28 October 2016 through Ignition Records. Recorded in Paris and at Real World Studios, and produced by the band’s regular collaborator Joe Cross. The CD version has eleven tracks with the deluxe format including a DVD of the band’s sold out headline gig at Heaton Park on 5th June 2015 which saw them play to a huge audience of over 30,000. On its release, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, the album received an average score of 66, based on 5 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". AllMusic wrote --- Mapping the Rendezvous might not appease those fans still waiting for the return of St. Jude, but eight years after their debut, the Courteeners have grown up and streamlined their sound, resulting in a tight, energetic blast of dance-rock.