Mitch Rowland - Come June (2023) Hi-Res

  • 06 Oct, 23:05
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Artist:
Title: Come June
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Giant Music / Erskine Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Indie Folk, Indie Rock
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz
Total Time: 37:01
Total Size: 87 / 234 / 803 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Bluebells (3:30)
02. Shadow Range (3:12)
03. See The Way You Roll (3:32)
04. On The Line (2:46)
05. Illusionist (3:03)
06. When It All Falls Down (2:55)
07. The One I Love (2:07)
08. Medium Low (4:13)
09. Here Comes The Comeback (2:42)
10. All The Way Back (3:01)
11. Goes With Everything (2:24)
12. Come June (3:36)

Mitch Rowland's Debut Album Come June. LOS ANGELES (AP) — He might not be immediately recognizable to the masses, but multi-instrumentalist Mitch Rowland is a household name to a certain cohort of music obsessives: Harry Styles fans.

There’s a warmth to ‘Come June’, with its deft use of well-worn chord structures, classic songwriting and its protagonist’s soft vocal to suggest comfort, a cocoon almost, a carefully-constructed quiet to contrast with the chaos outside. And, without putting too fine a point on it, the chaos that surrounded Mitch Rowland around the genesis of this debut album is not the kind which could be understated. A chance invitation to the studio sessions a friend was working on eventually became a multiple GRAMMY winning turn as songwriting collaborator with, and guitarist in Harry Styles’ live band. Naturally, there is overlap, largely in the superstar’s more subdued moments: say, the lilting ‘Canyon Moon’, soft build of ‘Fine Line’ or the delicate layers of ‘Ever Since New York’. But for the most part, ‘Come June’ exists in traditional singer-songwriter territory: not least does Mitch’s vocal bear an uncanny resemblance to that of Elliott Smith, but the instrumentation around him and his guitar is so careful - the lilting piano of ’Goes With Everything’, say, or the shuffling percussion that eggs on a classic rock riff on ‘On The Line’. The standout here is ‘When It All Falls Down’, a swirling, building number. Whether its boxing match is allegory or not - it’s hard not to read the line “Businessmen are cracking up / Watching blood turn to gold” as otherwise from someone who’s lived in the eye of the music industry’s storm for the past few years - the song is still a gut punch.




  • whiskers
  •  13:42
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Many thanks
  • mufty77
  •  13:35
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Many thanks for Flac & 24-96!