MP3 1657 mb.
Performer: The Thermals
Title: Personal Life
Country: UK, Europe & US
Catalog Number: KRS519
Label: Kill Rock Stars
Released: 07 Sep 2010
Style: Punk, Indie Rock
Rating: 4.9
Votes: 400
| 1 | Not Like Any Other Feeling | 3:35 |
| 2 | I Don't Believe You | 2:38 |
| 3 | I'm Gonna Change Your Life | 2:59 |
| 4 | You Changed My Life | 3:26 |
| 5 | Power Lies | 2:58 |
| 6 | Only For You | 4:18 |
| 7 | Alone, A Fool | 2:09 |
| 8 | Never Listen To Me | 4:30 |
| 9 | Your Love Is So Strong | 3:01 |
| 10 | A Reflection | 2:37 |
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KRS519 | The Thermals | Personal Life (LP, Album) | Kill Rock Stars | KRS519 | US | 2010 |
| KRS519 | The Thermals | Personal Life (CD, Album, Promo) | Kill Rock Stars | KRS519 | US | 2010 |
In 2009/2010:
Recorded at Jackpot!, Portland, OR.
Mixed at Alberta Court, Portland, OR.
Mastered at SAE Mastering, Phoenix, AZ.
AAD - Recorded and mixed analog.
(C) (P) 2010
Royal We Publishing (BMI)
Kathleen Foster (BMI)
Laura Palmer Songs (BMI)
Under exclusive license to Kill Rock Stars
Heavy cardboard gate-fold sleeve holding the CD and a 12-page booklet with lyrics.
Personal Life by The Thermals, released 07 September 2010 1. I'm Gonna Change Your Life 2. I Don't Believe You 3. Never Listen To Me 4. Not Like Any Other Feeling 5. Power Lies 6. Only For You 7. Alone, A Fool 8. Your Love Is So Strong 9. A Reflection 10. You Changed My Life Over the course of seven years and four LP's, The Thermals have tackled a variety of subjects with no small amount of passion and fervor. Personal Life is the fifth album from the Portland-based indie rock band The Thermals. The album was released on September 7, 2010, on Kill Rock Stars. It is the first to feature current drummer Westin Glass, who joined after the completion of 2009's Now We Can See. After making two albums of unbridled, incredible noisy indie rock and a third album that scaled back the noise but boosted the lyrical stakes, the Thermals lost the plot on their fourth record, Now We Can See. The glossy production and clichéd rock & roll moves made it seem like the band was off the rails for good, but luckily for fans of the bands energy and outlook, their fifth album Personal Life is a welcome comeback. Album 2010 10 Songs. On Personal Life, indie tunesmith Hutch Harris suspends his fascinations with politics and religion to focus on the ups and downs of love. Between its dark bassline and Harris longing-soaked delivery, Never Listen to Me anchors the sets ruminative atmosphere Only for You follows a similar trajectory, until Harris heartache boils over into desperation at the end. But despite the songwriters trials and tribulations, the album closes on an upbeat note thanks to the tender indie pop ballad You Changed My Life. Personal Life The Thermals. The Thermals : Personal Life,альбом, рецезия, трек-лист, mp3, тексты песен. I'm Gonna Change Your Life. I Don't Believe You. Never Listen to Me. Not Like Any Other Feeling. Power Lies. Only for You. Alone, a Fool. Your Love Is So Strong. A Reflection. The Thermals. Personal Life. Kill Rock Stars от лица компании Kill. Like An Outlaw Life, 2010. I'm Gonna Change Your Life, 02:59. Authorization is only required to store your personal settings. I have read and agree with the Terms & Privacy. Login with. The Thermals: все альбомы, включая Desperate Ground Demos , Desperate Ground , Not Like Any Other Feeling - 7inch и другие. Personal Life is something of retro-technical achievement. Producer Chris Walla Death Cab For Cutie, Tegan and Sara recorded The Thermals the same way in which he produced their 2004 LP. The band was recorded live for the most part to tape, and the album was mixed to tape as well. The sonic care Walla gave to Personal Life assures an enjoyable listen for audiophiles the vinyl was mastered straight from tape as well as for the rest of us who don't care and will be listening on awful headphones and Radio Shack speakers. Vinyl September 7, 2010. The Thermals Personal Life Review. Released 2010. It's amazing, really, how the Thermals have managed to pick apart a series of vast and complicated themes religion, death and now, with their fifth album, love using only the most basic tools. There are no strings, no climactic orchestral flourishes and none of the grandstanding employed by a world of bigger, crasser acts. Any such tropes are pushed to the side in favour of rudimentary 44 time signatures, insistent bass plunks and fuzz-coddled guitar as the background for Hutch Harris emotive keening