Vinyl Floor - Funhouse Mirror (2022) Hi Res
BAND/ARTIST: Vinyl Floor
- Title: Funhouse Mirror
- Year Of Release: 2022
- Label: Karmanian Records
- Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative Rock
- Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks) | 24Bit/48 kHz FLAC
- Total Time: 00:41:05
- Total Size: 95 mb | 263 mb | 499 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Vinyl Floor - Anything You Want
02. Vinyl Floor - Clock with No Hands
03. Vinyl Floor - Between Lines Undone
04. Vinyl Floor - Dear Apollon
05. Vinyl Floor - Ever, The Optimist
06. Vinyl Floor - Pretty Predictable
07. Vinyl Floor - Funhouse Mirror
08. Vinyl Floor - Death of a Poet
09. Vinyl Floor - Stare, Scare
10. Vinyl Floor - Days
01. Vinyl Floor - Anything You Want
02. Vinyl Floor - Clock with No Hands
03. Vinyl Floor - Between Lines Undone
04. Vinyl Floor - Dear Apollon
05. Vinyl Floor - Ever, The Optimist
06. Vinyl Floor - Pretty Predictable
07. Vinyl Floor - Funhouse Mirror
08. Vinyl Floor - Death of a Poet
09. Vinyl Floor - Stare, Scare
10. Vinyl Floor - Days
A rollicking beat and unassuming vocal harmonies are waiting on the other side of the play button in “Anything You Want,” the first song in the tracklist of Vinyl Floor’s new record Funhouse Mirror, and quite frankly, the fun is only getting started here. As fetching as this introduction is, it’s just a small sampling of the clandestine charisma of Funhouse Mirror as it’s presented in the reticent groove of “Clock With No Hands” or the stirring simplicity of “Between Lines Undone,” all of which come together to form a narrative spanning each of these songs as opposed to being confined within the space of a single composition. There is no filler in this LP, but instead a collection of soulful confessions and passing thoughts that feel enamoring no matter how you’re breaking them down.
“Dear Apollon” has an almost surreal quality to its mild tempo, but it never devolves into the postmodern pop nonsense that has become all too common across the indie spectrum over the past few years. There’s no neo-psychedelic daydreaming in Funhouse Mirror, but this isn’t to say that the record lacks any cerebral sensibilities; if anything, they’re offered to us in such a way that it’s hard to determine whether they’re self-doubt or outright contemplation, such as the case is with the lyrics in “Ever, the Optimist” and “Pretty Predictable,” both of which I would say are single-worthy songs in their own right. This might not have been produced with the radio in mind, but Vinyl Floor’s new album is a very accessible listen just the same.
Where “Pretty Predictable” stops well short of being invasive with its sonic presence, the same cannot be said about the title track in Funhouse Mirror, which is perhaps the riskiest composition to have included in the LP, mostly because its cosmetics don’t gel with any of the song structures featured in the album’s first act. That said, its angularities add a bit of pop/rock inelegance to the mix I wouldn’t get rid of for anything, and being that it leads us into the startlingly dark territory of “Death of a Poet” as well as it does, I don’t know that it’s as much of a black sheep in this tracklist as an initial glance at the material might lead you to believe.
“Dear Apollon” has an almost surreal quality to its mild tempo, but it never devolves into the postmodern pop nonsense that has become all too common across the indie spectrum over the past few years. There’s no neo-psychedelic daydreaming in Funhouse Mirror, but this isn’t to say that the record lacks any cerebral sensibilities; if anything, they’re offered to us in such a way that it’s hard to determine whether they’re self-doubt or outright contemplation, such as the case is with the lyrics in “Ever, the Optimist” and “Pretty Predictable,” both of which I would say are single-worthy songs in their own right. This might not have been produced with the radio in mind, but Vinyl Floor’s new album is a very accessible listen just the same.
Where “Pretty Predictable” stops well short of being invasive with its sonic presence, the same cannot be said about the title track in Funhouse Mirror, which is perhaps the riskiest composition to have included in the LP, mostly because its cosmetics don’t gel with any of the song structures featured in the album’s first act. That said, its angularities add a bit of pop/rock inelegance to the mix I wouldn’t get rid of for anything, and being that it leads us into the startlingly dark territory of “Death of a Poet” as well as it does, I don’t know that it’s as much of a black sheep in this tracklist as an initial glance at the material might lead you to believe.
Year 2022 | Rock | Alternative | Indie | FLAC / APE | Mp3 | 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