Abby Holliday - Crack a Smile Come On Stay a While (2024) Hi-Res
Artist: Abby Holliday
Title: Crack a Smile Come On Stay a While
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Independent
Genre: Indie Folk, Indie Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-48kHz
Total Time: 46:28
Total Size: 109 / 291 / 536 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Crack a Smile Come On Stay a While
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Independent
Genre: Indie Folk, Indie Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-48kHz
Total Time: 46:28
Total Size: 109 / 291 / 536 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Earth-Eating Tree (3:24)
02. crack a smile come on stay a while (1:08)
03. Steve Martin (4:09)
04. Immortal (4:154)
05. Sleeping Sculpture (5:15)
06. The Price (3:05)
07. Couch Comrade (3:28)
08. Think Before I Speak (3:47)
09. Andrea (4:39)
10. at some point you’ll have to be angry at all of this (3:59)
11. Butterfly Song (2:56)
12. Spiral (6:24)
Singer/songwriter Abby Holliday takes us track-by-track through her vulnerable, cinematic, and liberating third album ‘CRACK A SMILE COME ON STAY A WHILE’ – an intimate, all-consuming indie pop record of raw humanity, inner reckoning, and unfiltered self-discovery.
A fascinating listen, but certainly has it's flaws. At some point, the effects become both monotonous and a bit annoying, and the vocal editing unnecessary. My biggest issue is some of the lyrics however, which come off either too blunt or too vague to be taken seriously, particularly in Earth-Eating Tree, Steve Martin, and Immortal. Some points, however, certainly have stronger lyrics, such as Butterfly Song and The Price. I love the reference to Ohio Laundry Room in Butterfly Song, too. I definitely think that the album gets a lot stronger from The Price and forward.
A fascinating listen, but certainly has it's flaws. At some point, the effects become both monotonous and a bit annoying, and the vocal editing unnecessary. My biggest issue is some of the lyrics however, which come off either too blunt or too vague to be taken seriously, particularly in Earth-Eating Tree, Steve Martin, and Immortal. Some points, however, certainly have stronger lyrics, such as Butterfly Song and The Price. I love the reference to Ohio Laundry Room in Butterfly Song, too. I definitely think that the album gets a lot stronger from The Price and forward.