Beth Orton - Trailer Park (Legacy Edition) (2009)

Artist: Beth Orton
Title: Trailer Park
Year Of Release: 1996 / 2009
Label: Heavenly – HVNLP17CDLE / 2 x CD / Sony BMG – Legacy Edition
Genre: Indie Pop, Indie Folk, Folktronica, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks+.cue,log) / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:57:27 / 2:01:20
Total Size: 271 / 723 / 748 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Trailer Park
Year Of Release: 1996 / 2009
Label: Heavenly – HVNLP17CDLE / 2 x CD / Sony BMG – Legacy Edition
Genre: Indie Pop, Indie Folk, Folktronica, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks+.cue,log) / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:57:27 / 2:01:20
Total Size: 271 / 723 / 748 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
CD 1
01. She Cries Your Name (4:48)
02. Tangent (7:29)
03. Don't Need a Reason (5:05)
04. Live As You Dream (2:59)
05. Sugar Boy (4:21)
06. Touch Me With Your Love (7:27)
07. Whenever (3:53)
08. How Far (4:27)
09. Someone's Daughter (4:16)
10. I Wish I Never Saw the Sunshine (4:43)
11. Galaxy of Emptiness (10:11)
CD 2
01. Safety (2:13)
02. It's Not The Spotlight (4:19)
03. Galaxy Of Emptiness (Live) (5:51)
04. Pedestal (4:57)
05. Touch Me With Your Love (Instrumental) (6:38)
06. It's This I am, I Find (3:50)
07. Bullet (4:38)
08. Best Bit (3:06)
09. Best Bit (EP version) (4:18)
10. Skimming Stone (5:51)
11. Dolphins (feat. Terry Callier) (4:19)
12. Lean On Me (feat. Terry Callier) (5:09)
13. I Love How You Love Me (2:39)
14. Precious Maybe (4:05) *** Only WEB FLAC
A folkie for the electronica age, Beth Orton brilliantly bridges the gap between acoustic songcraft and digital dance beats with her extraordinary debut album, Trailer Park. Fusing the plaintive emotional power of the singer/songwriter tradition with the distanced cool of trip-hop rhythms, Orton creates a fresh, distinct, and surprisingly organic sound without obvious precedent; blessed with a warm, ethereal voice capable of adapting comfortably to Spartan folk ("Whenever," a touching cover of the Spector/Greenwich/Barry-penned "I Wish I Never Saw the Sunshine"), buoyant pop ("Live as We Dream," "How Far"), and spacy, densely layered electronica ("Tangent," "Touch Me with Your Love"), she shifts gears with remarkable ease, the depth and clarity of her unique perspective connecting even the most disparate tracks together into a unified whole. Simply put, Trailer Park is one of the most promising and innovative debuts of its era.