Released in April 2007, Favourite Worst Nightmare updated Arctic Monkeys' sound with louder instruments and faster tempos.
As Alex Turner briefly turned his attention to a side project, the Last Shadow Puppets, Arctic Monkeys received another Mercury Prize nomination and took home two titles at the 2008 BRIT Awards.
The bandmates had recorded the sophomore album quickly, wishing to return to the road as soon as possible, and the speedy turnaround between records helped maintain the group's popularity at home.
Favourite Worst Nightmare sold 85,000 copies during its first day of release, and all 12 tracks entered the Top 200 of the U.K. singles charts.
Recording sessions for a third album commenced in early 2008 and lasted throughout the year, with producers James Ford (who previously worked with Turner on the Last Shadow Puppets' album) and Josh Homme (frontman of Queens
of the Stone Age) adding some newfound heft to the band's sound.
Meanwhile, Arctic Monkeys released
a concert album entitled At the Apollo — with accompanying video footage captured on 35mm film — before unveiling Humbug in August 2009.
Humbug went platinum in the U.K. with the singles "Crying Lightning" peaking at number 12 and "Cornerstone" topping out at 94.
The band hit the road that February, kicking off a multi-leg tour that ran through the rest of the year.
After playing another handful of shows in early 2010, the guys took a short hiatus before reconvening with James Ford for their fourth album.
Sessions began that fall, and the resulting Suck It and See arrived in spring 2011, topping the U.K. album chart and landing at number 14 on the Billboard 200.
Meanwhile, Turner also wrote music for
a Richard Ayoade film, Submarine, whose soundtrack doubled as the frontman's first solo release.