Blood Red Shoes - Fire Like This (Deluxe Version) (2010)

  • 21 Sep, 17:43
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Artist:
Title: Fire Like This (Deluxe Version)
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: [PIAS] Cooperative
Genre: Alt Rock, Garage Rock, Indie Rock
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 56:30
Total Size: 131 / 400 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Don't Ask (3:08)
02. Light It Up (4:00)
03. It Is Happening (3:41)
04. When We Wake (4:32)
05. Keeping It Close (3:21)
06. Count Me Out (3:38)
07. Heartsink (3:41)
08. Follow the Lines (3:34)
9. One More Empty Chair (4:23)
10. Colours Fade (7:08)
11. Keeping It Close (Live at Montreux, 2010) (3:54)
12. Count Me Out (Live at Montreux, 2010) (3:35)
13. It Is Happening (Live at Montreux, 2010) (3:47)
14. Light It Up (Live at Montreux, 2010) (4:08)

This release features unforgettable tracks like the high-octane ‘Light It Up’, the intense ‘Don’t Ask’, the deeply moving ballad ‘Count Me Out’, and the subtly eloquent ‘When We Wake’.

Each song showcases the band’s raw talent and dynamic range, making this album a must-have for alt-rock enthusiasts. Don’t miss out on adding this exclusive vinyl edition to your collection. Immerse yourself in the raw, unfiltered energy of Blood Red Shoes.

Guitarist Laura-Mary Carter and drummer Steven Ansell return with their second album of stripped-down power punk, refining the thick, guitar-heavy sound of their debut. Once again they have the help of producer Mike Crossey (Arctic Monkeys, Razorlight), who helps them sculpt their raw sound into a force that's both more primitive and more polished than their debut, no mean feat. Blood Red Shoes have jettisoned most of the dance beats they used on Box of Secrets, with Carter's guitar turning out grinding, industrial textures that complement the band's tales of moral and societal decay and Ansell's drums still driving the machine forward with his stripped-down rhythms and cymbal crashes that are processed and mixed to blend into the overtones of Carter's guitar. The set was recorded live in the studio to analog tape to preserve the duo's crude, rude wall of noise. Carter's big distorted guitar drives the punky opener, "Don't Ask," while adding skewed single-note runs to add tension and excitement. "Light It Up" sounds a bit like AC/DC doing T. Rex, with a stomping '70s-style chorus. "Heartsink" portrays the plummeting frustration of a pointless relationship, with Carter's swooping guitar moving in for the kill and filling the track with distorted overtones that blend into Ansell's cymbal-bashing frenzy. "Follow the Lines" is a poignant song about dancing alone in your room at twilight. It briefly revisits the disco with Ansell's stomping funky backbeat and Carter laying down a New Order-like bassline on the low strings of her guitar while singing in a high, vulnerable tone. The climax comes with "Colors Fade," a seven-minute opus about a relationship that's falling apart, propelled by Ansell's stomping 4/4 snare, Carter's grinding guitar that morphs from punk to surf to industrial, and a surprisingly catchy vocal refrain.




  • whiskers
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