Dakota Theim - Tangled Heart (2021) Hi-Res
BAND/ARTIST: Dakota Theim
- Title: Tangled Heart
- Year Of Release: 2021
- Label: Indepandent
- Genre: Bedroom Pop, Indie Pop, Pop Rock, Alternative
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz
- Total Time: 35:14
- Total Size: 642 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Losing Sleep (3:55)
02. Tangled Heart (4:05)
03. Never Give Up On Your Love (4:41)
04. You Don't Have To Lie (3:30)
05. Casual Catastrophe (2:04)
06. Sunshiny Day / Pick Up The World (5:44)
07. Til The Day I Die (3:16)
08. Like The Wind (4:26)
09. Feel No Pain (3:33)
01. Losing Sleep (3:55)
02. Tangled Heart (4:05)
03. Never Give Up On Your Love (4:41)
04. You Don't Have To Lie (3:30)
05. Casual Catastrophe (2:04)
06. Sunshiny Day / Pick Up The World (5:44)
07. Til The Day I Die (3:16)
08. Like The Wind (4:26)
09. Feel No Pain (3:33)
A 70’s-inspired release from Portland’s Dakota Theim, ahead of his new album ‘Tangled Heart‘.
Dakota Theim takes you back. The Portland songwriter returns with the release of Tangled Heart, the follow up to his 2020 debut, Somewhere Under The Sun. Tangled Heart was born in the early days of the pandemic as a loose collection of tunes that the multi-instrumentalist Theim originally tracked by himself, before taking the demos to bandmates Ben Bilotti (guitar) and Alex Werner (bass), who helped to flesh the songs out into their current forms.
The album doesn’t particularly point to its contemporary origin, and in fact, Tangled Heart gestures back, evoking a kind of late-60’s classic pop, both in its progressions and soundscapes. It lists roughly the same instrumentation as Somewhere Under the Sun–guitar, keys, bass, drums–but everything seems to hum with a little more electricity, as though all the effects got a couple percent wetter as thing went along. Most notably changed from the first project are Theim’s vocals, which have a more ambitious range, and also feel slightly more processed in the mix, drawing auditory parallels to The Sgt. Peppers and White Album-era Beatles.
The songwriting on Tangled Heart also clearly draws from that era, and Theim shines in that space of cascading chords and infinitely hummable melodies, of which he has no shortage. If there’s criticism to be levied against the album, it’s also that it doesn’t do much to contemporize that sound, but it’s not trying to. Rather, it inhabits a kind of nostalgia, the same kind you feel listening to a song you grew up with, thinking about early loves and the way they made you feel. It’s a safe place, but one that’s tinged with melancholy, and perhaps there’s something illuminating in the way Theim wrote from that place amidst a time of such debilitating uncertainty.
Dakota Theim takes you back. The Portland songwriter returns with the release of Tangled Heart, the follow up to his 2020 debut, Somewhere Under The Sun. Tangled Heart was born in the early days of the pandemic as a loose collection of tunes that the multi-instrumentalist Theim originally tracked by himself, before taking the demos to bandmates Ben Bilotti (guitar) and Alex Werner (bass), who helped to flesh the songs out into their current forms.
The album doesn’t particularly point to its contemporary origin, and in fact, Tangled Heart gestures back, evoking a kind of late-60’s classic pop, both in its progressions and soundscapes. It lists roughly the same instrumentation as Somewhere Under the Sun–guitar, keys, bass, drums–but everything seems to hum with a little more electricity, as though all the effects got a couple percent wetter as thing went along. Most notably changed from the first project are Theim’s vocals, which have a more ambitious range, and also feel slightly more processed in the mix, drawing auditory parallels to The Sgt. Peppers and White Album-era Beatles.
The songwriting on Tangled Heart also clearly draws from that era, and Theim shines in that space of cascading chords and infinitely hummable melodies, of which he has no shortage. If there’s criticism to be levied against the album, it’s also that it doesn’t do much to contemporize that sound, but it’s not trying to. Rather, it inhabits a kind of nostalgia, the same kind you feel listening to a song you grew up with, thinking about early loves and the way they made you feel. It’s a safe place, but one that’s tinged with melancholy, and perhaps there’s something illuminating in the way Theim wrote from that place amidst a time of such debilitating uncertainty.
Year 2021 | Pop | Rock | Alternative | Indie | HD & Vinyl
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads