Finger Eleven - Them Vs. You Vs. Me (Deluxe Edition) (2007)

Artist: Finger Eleven
Title: Them Vs. You Vs. Me (Deluxe Edition)
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: The Bicycle Music Company
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Post Grunge, Funk Rock, Alternative
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 58:57
Total Size: 418 MB | 135 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Them Vs. You Vs. Me (Deluxe Edition)
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: The Bicycle Music Company
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Post Grunge, Funk Rock, Alternative
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 58:57
Total Size: 418 MB | 135 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
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01. Paralyzer
02. Falling On
03. I'll Keep Your Memory Vague
04. Lost My Way
05. So-So Suicide
06. Window Song
07. Sense of a Spark
08. Talking to the Walls
09. Change the World
10. Gather & Give
11. Easy Life
12. Change The World (Acoustic Mix)
13. Sacrifice
14. Them Vs. You Vs. Me
15. Falling On (Live In Toronto 2007)
16. Paralyzer (Live In Toronto 2007)
There have always been vague underpinnings of funk in Finger Eleven's rhythms, but it still comes as a bit of a shock that "Paralyzer," the opening track of their fourth album, Them vs. You vs. Me, finds the Canadian quintet embracing the full-on disco-rock that started to emerge when they released their last album in 2003. Four years later, this sound isn't exactly passé -- plenty of bands are still pushing it -- but it's not exactly fresh either, except within the context of Finger Eleven, where it does add some welcome new dimension to their traditional '90s alt-rock sound. Sure, it's hard not to see it as a little bit of a desperate bid for relevancy, but even if the move comes across as calculated, the occasional dash of disco-rock gives Them vs. You vs. Me a little bit of needed new hue to a collection of otherwise colorless but capable by-the-book alt-rock, pitched partway between Stone Temple Pilots and Matchbox Twenty. Finger Eleven are pros, so they can deliver Oasis-styled anti-love songs like "I'll Keep Your Memory Vague" or Live-inspired anthemic ballads like "Change the World" with as much workmanship as their grungy rockers, but they need something to stand apart from the pack -- and the addition of awkward funk rhythms to the likes of "Lost My Way" nearly accomplishes that. So, the variety of rhythms, along with the increasing emphasis on acoustic-based power ballads, gives Them vs. You vs. Me the greatest musical variety of any Finger Eleven record, but they remain boxed in by their good intentions: they remain a group that's too polite too dislike but too well-mannered to remember.~Them vs. You vs. Me Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
FLAC
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Mp3
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