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Air Miami - Me. Me. Me. (Deluxe Edition) (2023) Hi Res

Air Miami - Me. Me. Me. (Deluxe Edition) (2023) Hi Res

BAND/ARTIST: Air Miami

  • Title: Me. Me. Me. (Deluxe Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 1995/2023
  • Label: 4AD
  • Genre: Indie Pop, Indie Rock, Lo-Fi
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks) | 24Bit/96 kHz FLAC
  • Total Time: 00:46:22
  • Total Size: 110 mb | 284 mb | 936 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Air Miami - I Hate Milk
02. Air Miami - World Cup Fever
03. Air Miami - Seabird
04. Air Miami - Warm Miami May
05. Air Miami - Special Angel
06. Air Miami - Afternoon Train
07. Air Miami - Dolphin Expressway
08. Air Miami - Sweet As A Candy Bar
09. Air Miami - Pucker
10. Air Miami - You Sweet Little Heartbreaker
11. Air Miami - Neely
12. Air Miami - Bubble Shield
13. Air Miami - See-Through Plastic
14. Air Miami - The Event Horizon
15. Air Miami - Definitely Beachy
16. Air Miami - Reprise

This deluxe edition reissue of the only studio album by Air Miami formed by Mark Robinson and Bridget Cross immediately after the breakup of their previous band, Unrest is a pleasant surprise. Namely because, upon its original 1995 release, the profoundly wonderful Me, Me, Me was a largely unheralded work that doesn't seem to have undergone any sort of widespread critical re-evaluation since then. What's even more unexpected is that this Me, Me, Me sneakily subverts both the original release and the widely accepted reissue format by inserting its three bonus tracks throughout the album's sequence, rather than appending them to the end. "Warm Miami May," "Pucker," and "See-Through Plastic" had all been previously released as singles or compilation cuts, but here, they seamlessly fit into the album flow. (Of course, sardonic subversion and "music-as-art-object" was always the M.O. of Mark Robinson, whether in this band or Unrest, or as the founder of Teen Beat Records.) The bonus tracks don't substantively alter the album's texture or dynamics, but their presence does give the vision the band had for Me, Me, Me a little more clarity. Recorded less than a year after Unrest's last show, comparisons to that band are inevitable. However, Air Miami's songs are more direct and less self-consciously "artsy," while still retaining the beauty of Unrest's later work. Being free from the struggles that led to Unrest's demise mainly the financial pressures felt as an "established indie rock band" during the early '90s alt-rock boom years—allowed Air Miami to be a more finely calibrated pop band. The material is honed to a jewel-tone brightness, but breathes with a sense of easy optimism, whether it's Robinson careening through the power-pop madness of "I Hate Milk" and the open-chord dreaminess of "Dolphin Expressway" or Cross breathily crooning on cuts like "Seabird."




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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 20:21
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Many thanks
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 22:10
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Many thanks for Hi-Res!