New Model Army - Eight (2000)
BAND/ARTIST: New Model Army
- Title: Eight
- Year Of Release: 2000
- Label: earMUSIC
- Genre: Folk Rock, Post-Punk, New Wave
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
- Total Time: 46:31
- Total Size: 322 / 119 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Flying Through the Smoke 03:13
2. You Weren't There 03:36
3. Orange Tree Roads 03:56
4. Someone Like Jesus 06:36
5. Stranger 03:35
6. R&R 03:37
7. Snelsmore Wood 04:14
8. Paekakariki Beach 04:43
9. Leeds Road 3am 05:18
10. Mixam 03:31
11. Wipeout 04:12
1. Flying Through the Smoke 03:13
2. You Weren't There 03:36
3. Orange Tree Roads 03:56
4. Someone Like Jesus 06:36
5. Stranger 03:35
6. R&R 03:37
7. Snelsmore Wood 04:14
8. Paekakariki Beach 04:43
9. Leeds Road 3am 05:18
10. Mixam 03:31
11. Wipeout 04:12
Like its seven studio predecessors, the self-produced Eight is a gripping album that can seriously alter anyone's passive attitudes towards music -- so much so that the extra effort to obtain it seems ridiculous.
Eight is a bit of a curve ball after Hopeless Causes and 1998's equally strident Strange Brotherhood, with edgy acoustics and slithering harmonica providing a confrontational temperament right from the staccato bang of the last notes of "Flying Through the Smoke." The shuffling "Someone Like Jesus" is so subdued and ominous, you can feel your heart race in worry like an intruder is in the house. "You Weren't There" is likewise irritated underneath its simple, sparse, repetitive vocal lines. And the LP's most noteworthy track, "Paekakariki," again demonstrates the band's trademark manipulation of multi-moods. One of the most beautiful songs Justin Sullivan has ever recorded, it's a provoking ballad, with a soaring chorus vocal and philosophical words, making special use of a supernatural delay on the a cappella vocal passage. Sweet!
Sullivan also sprinkles in four post-punk slammers to keep the adrenaline flowing and to prove his new lineup can rock with any band going. The brisk "Orange Tree Roads" is an immediate stinger, thanks to a dramatic string bed and a drastic chorus. Likewise, "Stranger" and "R&R" are full of Sullivan's rapid-fire delivery, punishing, jagged guitar licks and spit-out lines. The closing "Wipeout" is another vigorous corker with timeless background vocals swelling as the band builds to the album's ultimate conclusion.
Electric and loud or acoustic and meditative, we're left with the same: Sullivan's intelligence and humanity, his blend of fury and enthusiasm. Nearly 20 years since NMA's first gig, there is zero sign of fall-off. (P.O. Box 2168, Burnham On Crouch, Essex, CM0 8Qz, England)
Eight is a bit of a curve ball after Hopeless Causes and 1998's equally strident Strange Brotherhood, with edgy acoustics and slithering harmonica providing a confrontational temperament right from the staccato bang of the last notes of "Flying Through the Smoke." The shuffling "Someone Like Jesus" is so subdued and ominous, you can feel your heart race in worry like an intruder is in the house. "You Weren't There" is likewise irritated underneath its simple, sparse, repetitive vocal lines. And the LP's most noteworthy track, "Paekakariki," again demonstrates the band's trademark manipulation of multi-moods. One of the most beautiful songs Justin Sullivan has ever recorded, it's a provoking ballad, with a soaring chorus vocal and philosophical words, making special use of a supernatural delay on the a cappella vocal passage. Sweet!
Sullivan also sprinkles in four post-punk slammers to keep the adrenaline flowing and to prove his new lineup can rock with any band going. The brisk "Orange Tree Roads" is an immediate stinger, thanks to a dramatic string bed and a drastic chorus. Likewise, "Stranger" and "R&R" are full of Sullivan's rapid-fire delivery, punishing, jagged guitar licks and spit-out lines. The closing "Wipeout" is another vigorous corker with timeless background vocals swelling as the band builds to the album's ultimate conclusion.
Electric and loud or acoustic and meditative, we're left with the same: Sullivan's intelligence and humanity, his blend of fury and enthusiasm. Nearly 20 years since NMA's first gig, there is zero sign of fall-off. (P.O. Box 2168, Burnham On Crouch, Essex, CM0 8Qz, England)
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MP3 New Model Army - Eight.rar - 119.5 MB
New Model Army - Eight.rar - 322.5 MB
MP3 New Model Army - Eight.rar - 119.5 MB
New Model Army - Eight.rar - 322.5 MB
Folk | Rock | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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