Edwin - Another Spin Around The Sun (2000)

Artist: Edwin
Title: Another Spin Around The Sun
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Epic
Genre: Pop Rock, Alternative Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 49:16
Total Size: 368 / 125 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Another Spin Around The Sun
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Epic
Genre: Pop Rock, Alternative Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 49:16
Total Size: 368 / 125 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Theories (Album Version) (00:04:37)
02. Trippin' (Album Version) (00:03:21)
03. Hang Ten (Album Version) (00:03:32)
04. And You (Album Version) (00:03:59)
05. Screaming Kings (Album Version) (00:04:22)
06. Shotgun (Album Version) (00:02:38)
07. Alive (Album Version) (00:06:10)
08. Rush (Album Version) (00:04:19)
09. Amazing (Album Version) (00:04:09)
10. Take Me Anywhere (Album Version) (00:04:29)
11. Better Than This (Album Version) (00:05:05)
12. Another Drink (Album Version) (00:02:35)
Total length: 00:49:16
Label: Epic
The arrangements on former I Mother Earth singer Edwin's debut solo album, Another Spin Around the Sun, make the listener strongly suspect that he's one of the many pop musicians of his generation who has memorized every sound on the Beatles' Revolver. The deliberate tempos, noisy guitars, filtered vocals, sound effects, and catchy melodies all recall the mid-'60s era of pop/rock exploration encapsulated in the Beatles' mid-period masterpiece. But that sound has been so pervasive in pop since the early '90s that it's possible Edwin picked up his traits from one of the Beatles' successors, Oasis, say. No matter. The Canadian star made a splash with this album, which gave him four singles at home in the year before it was picked up for American release. But there is little substance under the sizzle. Rather, Edwin comes off as a second-hand stylist, a new Corey Hart for the 2000s, to cite his true antecedent. His best hope for Stateside success is "Alive" (already a Canadian hit), an over-the-top anthem that boasts a mid-song cadence borrowed from Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir" topped off with strings and a choir. It's the album's most extreme track, and therefore, given the artist's tendencies, the best-realized.