On 20 February 2008, Miles Kane and Alex Turner revealed they would be known as the Last Shadow Puppets and that their album would be titled
The Age of the Understatement and would be released on 21 April 2008. They wanted to release it at the end of 2007 but it wasn't possible. The band played their first ever show in
Brooklyn,
New York, at Sound Fix Records on 4 March 2008, playing a second gig at the
Lower East Side's Cake Shop the following night. Their first show in the United Kingdom was a short two song set on 5 April at the Lock Tavern in Camden, London, where they played "Meeting Place" and "
Standing Next to Me".
Singles and videos The first single, "
The Age of the Understatement", was released the week before on 14 April, with new song "Two Hearts in Two Weeks" and covers of
Billy Fury's "
Wondrous Place" and
David Bowie's "In the Heat of the Morning" —a song previously mentioned by Turner as a favourite— as b-sides. An accompanying music video directed by
Romain Gavras, was released three days before. The video was shot mainly in
Moscow,
Russia, and features the band walking down the city, tanks, a girl
ice skating, an
Orthodox church, and a military choir. Gavras would later describe the shoot as "crazy" saying: "On the other side of the camera, it was a training camp with tanks shooting all the time, totally unsafe." Their second single, "
Standing Next to Me", was released on 7 July 2008. On 15 July a music video directed by
Richard Ayoade was released. The video, shot in
London, featured the band performing the song in what resembles to be a television studio accompanied by a group of dancers wearing colored leggings. Their third and last single, "
My Mistakes Were Made for You", was released on 20 October 2008, and it included live covers of
Nancy Sinatra and
Lee Hazlewood's "Paris Summer", featuring
Alison Mosshart, and
Burt Bacharach's "
My Little Red Book" as b-sides. The corresponding music video, released a month earlier, was shot at
Pinewood Studios and also directed by Ayoade. The music video shows Turner on a crashed car with
Alexa Chung, his then girlfriend. Kane appears later. The video was inspired by
Federico Fellini's cult film
Toby Dammit (1968).
Tour and other performances In June 2008, the band announced their debut world tour, which would start on 19 August of that year. The Puppets and a 16-piece orchestra, played their first tour shows at
Portsmouth Guildhall and
New Theatre Oxford, before attending
Reading and Leeds Festivals 2008. Kane said the two festival stops would be "our [the band] first proper gigs". Their Leeds set was described by
The Guardian as "a classy offering from the Puppets. But, maybe, that isn't what's needed at a festival on a Friday night". The first leg of the tour ended with a show at
The Olympia in
Paris on 26 August. The tour restarted in October at
Cirkus in
Stockholm, and continued in continental Europe, throughout the rest of the month. Their London and Sheffield shows were generally well received by both fans and critics. The band played their last show at the
Mayan Theater of
Los Angeles on 3 November 2008. The band performed on a number of television shows including
Later with Jools Holland,
Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, and ''Canal +'s Concert Privé''. On May, they played a four-song setlist for
NPR's
World Cafe. A month later, the Puppets played a secret set at
Glastonbury with Arctic Monkeys'
Matt Helders playing drums on "
The Age of the Understatement" and
Jack White playing a guitar solo on "Wondrous Place." On July, the band appeared on
BBC Radio 1's
Live Lounge, as mystery guests to honor host
Jo Whiley's birthday. They performed "Standing Next to Me" and a cover of
Rihanna's "
SOS", with Turner rejecting to gender flip the lyrics of the latter, maintaining the original pronouns. On September, they performed at the
2008 Mercury Prize Awards, and a month later played a show at
Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool as part of the
Electric Proms. ==Reception==