The Amazing - In Transit (2018)

  • 05 Apr, 19:38
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Artist:
Title: In Transit
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Partisan Records
Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Indie Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 69:58
Total Size: 162 / 461 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Pull 07:39
02. Voices Sound 06:14
03. A Million Days 05:48
04. First Touch of Light 05:38
05. Rewind 04:56
06. Never Be 05:10
07. Benson se Convirtio Completamente Furiosa 09:56
08. For No One 03:25
09. Leave Us a Light 07:24
10. Asleep 04:38
11. Je travaille dans la banque 09:10

The Amazing stay just out of focus. On their fifth album, In Transit, they once again perform the unlikely trick of making music that is both dreamlike, drifting across the consciousness, as well as perfectly constructed. While In Transit shares the sense of mood of many of singer and founder Christoffer Gunrup's favourite bands - the Cure, My Bloody Valentine, Flaming Lips - it never drifts away into self-indulgence. At the heart of it all, beneath the washes of guitar, the woozy reveries, are sturdy, intensely melodic songs. You hear that from the very start of the album, when Pull slides into view, slide guitar casting shapes and shadows across the arpeggios beneath, while lightly jazzy drums propel the song forward and Gunrup mournfully whispers his barely audible lyrics, before the song ascends into a refrain that sounds like every emotion combined. That combination of melody and mood comes from the way the songs are made, and the interaction between Gunrup and his fellow members, Reine Fiske (also of Dungen, guitar), Moussa Fadera (drums), Alexis Benson (bass), and Frederik Swahn (keyboards and guitars). Gunrup writes alone, in what he calls "a very disgusting process. It's just me in my underwear on my couch." He emerges with a complete song - "the intros, the outros, the melodies, all the chords" - which he takes to the band, imagining they will play it just as he imagined. Except they never do. "They can feel rather than hear what needs to be done," Gunrup says. "They do pretty much what they please." Yet In Transit does not sound self-indulgent. Gunrup's songs are the very heart of In Transit, and the musicians' playing always serves them, rather than overwhelming them. On For No One, you can hear the subtlety of their interaction, which is not what one might expect to say of a song in which whistling feedback provides the core of its climax - it's only at the end you realise how cleverly it has transformed from what begins as fingerpicked near-folk into something very different.




  • mufty77
  •  11:53
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Many thanks for lossless.