Swans - Great Annihilator (Remastered 2017) Hi-Res

Artist: Swans
Title: Great Annihilator
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Mute
Genre: Post-Punk, Noise Rock, No Wave, Post-Rock
Quality: FLAC 24 Bit (96 KHz / tracks)
Total Time: 67:59 min
Total Size: 1,3 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Great Annihilator
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Mute
Genre: Post-Punk, Noise Rock, No Wave, Post-Rock
Quality: FLAC 24 Bit (96 KHz / tracks)
Total Time: 67:59 min
Total Size: 1,3 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. In 02:28
02. I Am The Sun 03:24
03. She Lives 07:00
04. Celebrity Lifestyle 04:10
05. Mother/Father 04:08
06. Blood Promise 04:15
07. Mind/Body/Light/Sound 04:41
08. My Buried Child 02:58
09. Warm 04:54
10. Alcohol The Seed 03:30
11. Killing For Company 06:58
12. Mother's Milk 02:26
13. Where Does A Body End 03:44
14. Telepathy 06:13
15. The Great Annihilator 04:53
16. Out 02:31
The Great Annihilator, originally released in 1995 and described at the time as “…a majestic symphony of haunting melodies and shifting moods” [SF Bay Guardian], will be released on double vinyl – the album’s first release on vinyl for decades - and as a 2CD set. Both the vinyl (in the form of a download code) and CD will feature Drainland, Michael Gira’s debut solo album recorded at the same time as The Great Annihilator.
This album is actually really good in a lot of ways. Too much reverb here and there, but not as intrusive as some other Swans releases (I used to be infatuated with Phil Spector and naively figured that adding reverb could get the same effect). Anyway, I think this album holds together well. It was a complete nightmare to make (but then, all the Swans albums were!). I lived in a tent in a mosquito infested studio right next to Cabrini Green in Chicago for what (?) something like 3 months, rarely leaving. Band members and Jarboe and Bill Rieflin etc came and went, and somehow we crafted this thing into what it became. I can still listen to most of this sometimes, so that counts for something. There's some reviews below if that's any help to you - Michael Gira/Young God Records 2008
This album is actually really good in a lot of ways. Too much reverb here and there, but not as intrusive as some other Swans releases (I used to be infatuated with Phil Spector and naively figured that adding reverb could get the same effect). Anyway, I think this album holds together well. It was a complete nightmare to make (but then, all the Swans albums were!). I lived in a tent in a mosquito infested studio right next to Cabrini Green in Chicago for what (?) something like 3 months, rarely leaving. Band members and Jarboe and Bill Rieflin etc came and went, and somehow we crafted this thing into what it became. I can still listen to most of this sometimes, so that counts for something. There's some reviews below if that's any help to you - Michael Gira/Young God Records 2008