David Wimbish & The Collection - David Wimbish & The Collection (2025) Hi-Res

  • 12 Jul, 15:42
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Artist:
Title: David Wimbish & The Collection
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Nettwerk Music Group
Genre: Indie Pop, Alternative, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 30:34
Total Size: 71 / 184 / 322 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Won't Stop Yet (One More Hour) (3:34)
02. Love Me More (3:21) *** 16/44.1
03. Medication (Deserve To Be Well) (4:09)
04. Beautiful Life (Just Can't Get Enough) (4:13)
05. The Weather (Too Tired to Cry) (3:30)
06. Love (At the End of the World) (4:00)
07. You (Taste Like Wine) (4:021)
08. Take It With You (3:46)

David Wimbish returns to his origins with the onset of his next era, solo as David Wimbish & The Collection. His new self-titled LP features catalog mainstays revisited with a big, anthemic folk-pop sound as well as two new songs, including the contemplative single “Take It With You.”

A new beginning wipes the slate clean, yet it often completes a full circle. After four full-length albums and countless shows at the helm of The Collection, singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist David Wimbish returns to his origins with the onset of his next era, solo as David Wimbish & The Collection. His new self-titled LP features catalog mainstays revisited with a big, anthemic folk-pop sound as well as two new songs, including the contemplative single “Take It With You.”

Anthemic and hopeful, the song is fittingly about finding common ground in a toxic dynamic to work together to move on. Speaking of the song, David says “It’s a common experience, but you get into a relationship and this person makes his or her problems yours. Even if it’s not explicitly your problem, the energy becomes ‘I’m suffering so we’re both going to suffer.’ I’m trying to say, ‘Let’s talk through it and take care of it emotionally’.”

Speaking of the album, David says “I always just want people to feel like they’re not alone,’ he concludes. “On these songs, I’m tapping into some deeply vulnerable topics and spaces, like relationships, self-loathing, depression and fear. My hope is people will feel very seen and maybe even held.”