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Every Waking Moment

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Download links and information about Every Waking Moment by Citizen Cope. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 45:51 minutes.

Artist: Citizen Cope
Release date: 2006
Genre: Rock, Pop, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 12
Duration: 45:51
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Back Together 3:06
2. Every Waking Moment 3:51
3. Friendly Fire 3:42
4. More Than It Seems 5:23
5. Brother Lee 3:49
6. 107° 5:11
7. Somehow 4:22
8. John Lennon 2:51
9. All Dressed Up 3:53
10. Awe 4:11
11. Left for Dead 2:03
12. Bullet and a Target 3:29

Details

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There are a number of artists — Everlast, G. Love, Mat Kearney — who, while staying firmly within blues and rock, bring in hip-hop tendencies, with varying degrees of success. Citizen Cope is another one who could be added to that group, although the only "rap" he actually incorporates into his music is relegated to an occasional singsongy, quickly spoken line and some internal rhyme. This, along with the characters he created and sang about, was what won him fans on his first two albums, and it's something he continues onto his next. For Every Waking Moment, however, Cope has a slightly broader approach to his songwriting, telling more abstract stories that aim toward the universal rather than the specific. He has that gruff, world-weary kind of voice that sounds like it's seen a few too many things and had a few too many whiskeys, and the band does a pretty good job of taking a standard bluesy line and embellishing it until it almost shines. The best track on the entire album, in fact, is "Awe," an instrumental, because it allows room for them to show off some of their many influences, and ends up with some nice Latin and blues-tinged acoustic guitar-driven rock. It's nothing extraordinary, but the groove is pretty tight, the horns are clean, and the drums are intricate and fun, and it works well with the rest of Every Waking Moment. Cope's catchy, melodic lyrics are here as well ("I got a Brother named Lee who looks a lot like me/He's got a lot of enemies," he sings on "Brother Lee"), and the album should please fans of any of his previous work.