Tuesday, September 1, 2009

St. vincent - marry me (2007) The felice brothers - through these reins and gone (2006)

Part: 1 : St. vincent - marry me (2007)
diva href="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/big_show.php?/avaxhome/d1/6b/000b6bd1.jpeg"img src="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/d1/6b/000b6bd1_medium.jpeg" alt="St. Vincent"/a/div br divbSt. Vincent - Marry Me (2007)/b br Pop-rock, singer-songwriters | mp3, VBR V0 | 43 min | 76 MB/div br St. Vincent is the moniker of singer/multi-instrumentalist/composer Annie Clark whose first full-length iMarry Me/i was one of the most acclaimed debuts of 2007 -- iSpin/i called the album "pure enchantment", and iThe NY Times/i lauded its "brilliance and grandeur." Before recording as St. Vincent, Annie Clark was a member of The Polyphonic Spree and Sufjan Stevens' touring band, and, being a versatile guitarist, she also performed with the guitar orchestra of avant-garde composer Glenn Branca. On iMarry Me/i, she writes cinematic pop epics that feel at times like Paris in the 1920s before all the fun ended. Or, conversely, an orchestra of pure modernity -- a new American music, informed by jazz, gosp! el blues, Southern folk music, and classical composition but, in the end, an animal original unto itself. She's been compared to everyone from Bjork to Kate Bush to Jeff Buckley, and her beautiful voice melds perfectly with her intricate guitar work. (Amazon.com)
Part: 2 : The felice brothers - through these reins and gone (2006)
diva href="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/big_show.php?/avaxhome/19/6e/000b6e19.jpeg"img src="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/19/6e/000b6e19_medium.jpeg"/a/divbr divbThe Felice Brothers - Through These Reins and Gone (2006)/bbr Americana, Folk Blues | mp3 192kpbs | 61MB | RS links/divbr Hailing from the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York, the Felice Brothers blend folk, Americana, and revivalist roots rock into a uniquely Folk Bluesearthy sound. Released independently in late 2006, their debut Through These Reins And Gone was a tough slice of classic Americana played in a loose and ragged fashion befitting the brothers' self-confessed lack of musical ability.