All the Falsest Hearts Can Try
Download links and information about All the Falsest Hearts Can Try by Centro-Matic. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 42:28 minutes.
Artist: | Centro-Matic |
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Release date: | 2000 |
Genre: | Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative |
Tracks: | 14 |
Duration: | 42:28 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Cool That You Showed Us How | 1:14 |
2. | The Blisters May Come | 4:05 |
3. | Call the Legion in Tonight | 3:09 |
4. | In the Strategy Room | 2:00 |
5. | Huge in Every City | 5:50 |
6. | Saving a Free Seat | 2:15 |
7. | Save Us, Tothero | 2:50 |
8. | Most Everyone Will Find Out | 3:04 |
9. | Gas Blowin' Out of Our Eyes | 2:07 |
10. | Hurcules Now! | 3:25 |
11. | Magic Cyclops | 1:57 |
12. | Would Go Over | 1:36 |
13. | Members of the Show Them How It's Done | 5:34 |
14. | Aerial Spins / Nautical Wilderness | 3:22 |
Details
[Edit]Will Johnson's straining voice and lyrical surrealism on Centro-Matic's fourth full album elicit comparisons to the psychedelic pop that the Flaming Lips fashioned throughout the 1990s. Borrowing from the Lips' theatrical arrangements on their albums, the tracks on All the Falsest Hearts Can Try overlap thematically, so that the entire album seems to run in a continuous strain of inventively assembled music. The wistful lyrics clinging to a lilting classical piano accompaniment on "Cool That You Showed Us How" shift directly to "The Blisters May Come," with its grinding guitar and screaming speculation about impending pain. This stirring contrast in turn moves into an impressive array of solid indie rock. Although for the most part Centro-Matic's sound draws from indie archetypes like Guided By Voices and Pavement, it reveals the band's roots in a Texas tradition of guitar-driven blues, country, and rock. During certain parts, the album quiets down to a beautiful, eerie mix of acoustic guitar and Wurlitzer organ or piano. But both the loud and the soft, the distorted and the purely acoustic, and the screaming and the whispering in Centro-Matic's music feel contaminated with a melancholy that is as alarming as it is compelling.