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Love Saves the Day

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Download links and information about Love Saves the Day by G. Love & Special Sauce. This album was released in 2015 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 41:20 minutes.

Artist: G. Love & Special Sauce
Release date: 2015
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 41:20
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.16

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Love Saves the Day (feat. David Hidalgo) 4:23
2. Dis Song 4:17
3. That Girl 3:29
4. Back To Boston 3:01
5. New York City (feat. Lucinda Williams) 2:06
6. R U Kidding Me?! 3:40
7. Muse (feat. Citizen Cope) 3:38
8. Baby Why You Do Me Like That? (feat. DJ Logic) 2:51
9. Let’s Have a Good Time (feat. Ozomatli) 3:51
10. Peanut Butter Lips 4:03
11. Pick Up the Phone (feat. Kristy Lee) 2:33
12. Lil’ Run Around 3:28

Details

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Love Saves the Day kicks off with a title track that lurches like prime Black Keys, but this isn't a sign that G. Love & Special Sauce are scrambling to keep up with the times, nor is it an indication that they're aching for their past. Instead, the band — which, as on 2014's Sugar, is a reconstituted version of their original lineup featuring guitarist/vocalist G. Love, drummer Jeffrey Clemens, and bassist Jim Prescott, who returned in 2014 after a five-year hiatus — feel as if they're pulling together all their interests, both past and present, to engage with a perpetual now. For G. Love & Special Sauce, they live in a world where soul-jazz is filtered through hip-hop and co-exists happily with greasy electric blues; a world where rap, R&B, and rock are traditions to be played with, not treated with respectful distance. Appropriately, all the invited guests — and there are a lot of them — share this sensibility and all these musicians underscore the group's wide-ranging interests. Roots rock stalwarts David Hidalgo and Lucinda Williams stand alongside the funkier Ozomatli, Money Mark, and DJ Logic, plus there's a feint toward pop via a duet with Citizen Cope. It's aggressively eclectic but it's not showy: it doesn't draw attention to its cornucopia of sounds, it simply slides from one jam to another. If the songs don't necessarily stick, that's fine — this is all about vibe, the idea of creating a never-ending party where everybody is welcome and, in that regard, G. Love & Special Sauce succeed.