วันพุธที่ 21 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2554
The Rifles Freedom Run 2011 SiRE
Artist: The Rifles
Title: Freedom Run
Label: EMI
Genre: Indie
Bitrate: 265kbit av.
Time: 00:46:47
Size: 93.12 mb
Rip Date: 2011-09-19
Str Date: 2011-09-19
01. Dreamer 3:53
02. Long Walk Back 3:36
03. Sweetest Thing 3:34
04. Tangled Up In Love 3:52
05. Eveline 2:11
06. Love Is Key 4:17
07. Falling 3:25
08. Interlude 1:21
09. Nothing Matters 3:54
10. Coming Home 3:43
11. I Get Low 2:54
12. Little Boy Blue (Human Needs) 6:44
13. Cry Baby 3:23
Release Notes:
Recorded at Paul Weller's Black Barn Studios and endorsed by the
Modfather himself, the sleeve notes of the Rifles' third studio album,
Freedom Run, suggests the London five-piece have stuck rigidly to the
same lad rock formula which has seen them replace Ocean Colour Scene as
the Jam legend's mod revivalists of choice. However, perhaps inspired
by a change in personnel (Garda's Lee Burgess and Kenton Shinn have
taken over from founding members Grant Marsh and Rob Pyne), and the
presence of the Verve producer Chris Potter, the follow-up to 2009's
The Great Escape has slightly toned down their trademark attitude and
bravado in favor of a gentler, and some might say slightly romantic,
indie pop sound which proves that their claims of progression weren't
just hollow talk. The sweeping strings, jangly Brit-pop guitars, and
triumphant brass sections on lead single "Tangled Up in Love" recall
the late-'90s heyday of Divine Comedy, "Nothing Matters" is a yearning
slice of orchestral pop whose spacious percussion, orchestral
flourishes, and aching harmonies produce an enchanting Spector-ish Wall
of Sound, while the band embrace '60s psychedelia with encouraging
results on the Hendrix-inspired "Interlude," the sprawling acid rock
atmospherics of "Little Boy Blue (Human Needs)," and the Stone
Roses-esque "Falling." Less inspiring are the retreads into more
familiar territory such as the Merseybeat pastiche "Eveline," the
formulaic, '60s-tinged pop of "Cry Baby," and the plodding boogie rock
of "Love Is a Key," which veers dangerously close to three-chord Status
Quo territory. These quintessential Rifles offerings may appease those
deterred by the album's unexpected wistful nature, but Freedom Run's
inherent charm has the potential to elevate the band into the big
league, regardless of how many longterm fans stay on board or jump ship
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