Ben Lee - Awake Is The New Sleep (10th Anniversary Deluxe) (2016)
Artist: Ben Lee
Title: Awake Is The New Sleep (10th Anniversary Deluxe)
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: New West Records
Genre: Pop Rock, Indie Rock
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:27:32
Total Size: 515 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Awake Is The New Sleep (10th Anniversary Deluxe)
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: New West Records
Genre: Pop Rock, Indie Rock
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:27:32
Total Size: 515 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Whatever It Is
02. Gamble Everything For Love
03. Begin
04. Catch My Disease
05. Apple Candy
06. Ache For You
07. Into The Dark
08. No Right Angles
09. Get Gotten
10. Close I’ve Come
11. The Debt Collectors
12. We're All In This Together
13. Light
14. I’m Willing
15. Begin (demo)
16. How Lovers Pray (outtake)
17. Gamble Everything For Love (live on KEXP)
18. New Old Love (outtake)
19. Desire (outtake)
20. No Right Angles (live on KEXP)
21. Begin (remix)
22. We're All In This Together (demo
Like most musicians who make a splash in their teens, Ben Lee has had a hard time finding his footing in his twenties. First, his American record label, Grand Royal, closed after the release of his 1999 album Breathing Tornados, and then, during the first half of the 2000s, shifting pop trends - plus a general unspoken consensus that he was no longer a pop wunderkind now that he was in his twenties - pushed him out of the limelight. He managed to get an album out in his native Australia in 2002, a move that didn't get nearly as much attention in the U.S. as his 2003 breakup with celebrity girlfriend Claire Danes. So, approaching the halfway point of his twenties and the 2000s, Lee was adrift, but he managed to regroup, at least artistically, with his 2005 album Awake Is the New Sleep. Reteaming with renowned indie rock producer Brad Wood, who helmed his 1997 LP Something to Remember Me By, Lee returns to the gently melodic, tentatively introspective indie pop that marked his best work of the '90s, but there is a difference here. Where that record, along with much of his previous work, was marked by a shy innocence, Lee is older now. He's been through the wringer and has had his heart broken, and it's given his music a greater emotional resonance. That alone would have made Awake Is the New Sleep noteworthy, but what makes it stand alongside Something to Remember Me By as his strongest album is that he's written a strong, melodic set of songs and Wood has given them a colorful but unadorned production that gives each tune its own character. It's not a great change - he's still a gentle, low-key pop singer/songwriter in the vein of Evan Dando -- but the subtle changes in tone and perspective make Awake Is the New Sleep a nice, low-key comeback and an album that proves that Lee is beginning to reach his musical maturation.