Robert De Leo - Lessons Learned (2022) Hi Res

  • 22 Jan, 11:23
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Artist:
Title: Lessons Learned
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: R.E.D. Records
Genre: Pop Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks) | 24Bit/44 kHz FLAC
Total Time: 00:37:24
Total Size: 87 mb | 205 mb | 394 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Robert De Leo - Big Sky Woman
02. Robert De Leo - She Brings The Rain
03. Robert De Leo - Love Is Not Made Of Gold
04. Robert De Leo - Anew
05. Robert De Leo - Put Aside Your Sorrows
06. Robert De Leo - Lessons Learned
07. Robert De Leo - What Will Be
08. Robert De Leo - Everything
09. Robert De Leo - What'll I Do
10. Robert De Leo - Is This Goodbye

If any rocker has earned the right to call his solo debut album Lessons Learned, it's Robert De Leo. Over the course of his career, De Leo has seen highs and lows, sometimes having them intertwine at the exact same moment, as when Stone Temple Pilots were riding high during the heyday of alternative rock in the 1990s. During one of STP's hiatuses, De Leo stepped away from the group to form Talk Show, a busman's holiday that found him mining a similar vein to his main gig. He repeated this pattern through the years, which is what makes the warm, burnished feel of Lessons Learned come as a bit of a surprise: De Leo is venturing into new territory here. Using the sun-bleached country-rock of the early 1970s as a foundation, De Leo anchors his solo album with acoustic instruments, broadening his horizons enough to encompass a sweet, swirling psychedelia vaguely reminiscent of Led Zeppelin in their folk mode. De Leo invites a host of singers Jimmy Gnecco of Ours, Kara Britz, Tim Bluhm of Mother Hips, Pete Shoulder, and Gary Wright among them to better articulate the mood of a particular song. De Leo himself sings the murmuring closer "Is This Goodbye." Despite this large cast of characters, Lessons Learned feels unified thanks to De Leo keeping a focus on emotion, conveying feeling through songcraft and quietly textured production, sounds that emphasize a soft, enveloping warmth as much as melody. It's an understated album but it's not slight: it's a rich, reflective record, one that serves as comfort during moments of contemplation.




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Many thanks for Hi-Res.
Thaksa a lot for HiRes