TV on the Radio - Nine Types of Light [24 bit FLAC] vinylseeders: 2
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TV on the Radio - Nine Types of Light [24 bit FLAC] vinyl (Size: 889.03 MB)
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TV on the Radio - Nine Types of Light (2011) [24 bit FLAC] vinyl
Released: 2011 Genre: Pop/Rock Style: Alternative, Indie Rock Codec: FLAC Bit Rate: ~ 2,800 kbps Bits Per Sample: 24 Sample Rate: 96,000 Hz 01. Second Song (4:17) 02. Keep Your Heart (5:37) 03. You (4:00) 04. No Future Shock (3:59) 05. Killer Crane (6:06) 06. Will Do (3:41) 07. New Cannonball Blues (4:29) 08. Repetition (3:41) 09. Forgotten (3:36) 10. Caffeinated Consciousness (3:20) During the nearly three years between Dear Science and Nine Types of Light, the members of TV on the Radio worked on their own projects, which ranged from Tunde Adebimpe's role in Rachel Getting Married to Kyp Malone's Rain Machine, to David Sitek's move to Los Angeles and solo album, Maximum Balloon. When they and the rest of the band reconvened, Sitek's studio became their home base, and that west coast vibe sets Nine Types of Light apart from their other work. ItΓÇÖs no coincidence that this is the groupΓÇÖs sunniest set of songs; much of the angst and yearning that fueled albums such as Desperate Youth, Bloodthirsty Babes, and Dear Science are gone, replaced by a mellower focus on matters of the heart. Nine Types of Light unfolds at an unhurried pace, beginning with a pair of Malone songs that sound like they should close an album rather than begin it. The confessional, ambling ΓÇ£Second SongΓÇ¥ takes its sweet time to build up to a mildly funky groove; as it flares into brass and guitar, it sounds like dusk becoming night on the Sunset Strip. ΓÇ£Keep Your HeartΓÇ¥ is the musical equivalent of a warm bath, with caressing strings and lyrics like ΓÇ£all these blues I have criedΓÇ¥ giving it the feel of the calm after the storm. That the album ends with ΓÇ£Caffeinated Consciousness,ΓÇ¥ a brief check-in with the righteous fury the band usually displays, underscores how different Nine Types of Light is from what came before it. Though they crank things up on ΓÇ£RepetitionΓÇ¥ and ΓÇ£No Future Shock,ΓÇ¥ TV on the Radio sound more comfortable being comfortable, even when getting in some satirical digs at the L.A. mindset (ΓÇ£Beverly Hills/nuclear winter/what should we wear/and whoΓÇÖs for dinner?ΓÇ¥) on ΓÇ£ForgottenΓÇ¥'s eternal summer haze. The band has always written about love with the same urgency and eloquence with which they tackle politics and other subjects, and Nine Types of Light is no exception. Adebimpe delivers two of the albumΓÇÖs brightest moments with ΓÇ£You,ΓÇ¥ a poppy meditation on how deceptive the heat of the moment can be, and the gorgeous ΓÇ£Will Do,ΓÇ¥ a playful, seductive piece of soul-pop that ranks among TV on the Radio's finest moments. Indeed, the way the bandΓÇÖs soul undercurrents rise to the fore, as on the psych-soul interlude ΓÇ£Killer Crane,ΓÇ¥ may be the best and most exciting thing about Nine Types of Light. In many ways, the album feels like a working holiday for the band; even if itΓÇÖs not as explosive as some of their previous work, it shows that they can age gracefully and try new things at the same time. [Nine Types of Light was also released with two remixes of "Will Do" and a bonus track, "All Falls Down."> Sharing Widget |