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The Night Just Keeps Coming In

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Download links and information about The Night Just Keeps Coming In by Dakota Suite. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:15:46 minutes.

Artist: Dakota Suite
Release date: 2010
Genre: Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:15:46
Buy on iTunes $11.99
Buy on Songswave €2.15

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. One Day Without Harming You (Machinefabriek remix) 3:14
2. This Failing Sea (Peter Broderick remix) 2:18
3. Hands Swollen With Grace (Jasper Leyland remix) 6:12
4. A Quietly Gathering Tragedy (Hauschka remix) 3:37
5. All the Love I Had Was Not Enough (Elegi remix) 6:34
6. Very Early One Morning On Old Road (Deaf Center remix) 5:12
7. The End of Trying Part I (Arve Henricksen remix) 3:04
8. The End of Trying Part II (Greg Haines remix) 7:37
9. The End of Trying Part III (Hannu remix) 3:31
10. The End of Trying Part IV (Tape remix) 3:11
11. Een Langzaam Lekkende Wond (Swod remix) 6:07
12. The Night Keeps Coming In (The Boats remix) 4:51
13. How Could You Let Me Go (Jacaszek remix) 3:08
14. Second Hand Light (Emanuele Errante remix) 4:12
15. Things We Lost Along the Way (Loscil remix) 6:58
16. Z-Cars (Dakota Suite & Nick Hawley remix) 6:00

Details

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Part remix collection, part collaboration, part sequel, The Night Just Keeps Coming In acts as a complementary piece to the Dakota Suite's The End of Trying, finding the same level of elegantly dark, contemplative moods but in somewhat different form. This results from the track-by-track appearance of a variety of performers, from Dutch electronic artist Machinefabriek, whose "One Day Without Harming You" starts the album on a stark note, piano and backwards notes interweaving, to Swod's nervous, quick-paced keyboards for "Een Langzaam Lekkende Wond" and Loscil's gentler flow of piano and strings on "Things We Lost Along the Way." With nearly all of Chris Hooson's vocal and guitar contributions completely removed from the tracks, the result is a near-cinematic feeling of crushing emotion. Meanwhile, cellist David Darling appears throughout the collection, his sympathetic playing adding immeasurably not only to individual performances but the overall flow of the album — the resultant variety is so gentle that it could easily be heard as the work of one artist rather than a collective. The standouts include Hauschka's "A Quietly Gathering Tragedy," piano notes softly echoing into the background as a central melody recurs, and the four consecutive parts of "The End of Trying," beginning with Arve Henriksen's lovely turn on trumpet and then flowing into Greg Haines' crumbling tape distortion; Hannu's soft chimes and acoustic guitar set against distant piano; and Tape's concluding effort, a quiet blast of drone feedback seeing out the quartet.