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If You Lose It

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Download links and information about If You Lose It by Last Days Of April. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 34:20 minutes.

Artist: Last Days Of April
Release date: 2003
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 10
Duration: 34:20
Buy on iTunes $7.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on iTunes $9.90

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. It's On Everything 2:32
2. Been Here All Time 3:11
3. Tears On Hold 4:18
4. If You 3:05
5. Me the Plague 3:06
6. Your Anyone 4:00
7. Want to Go 3:44
8. Do for Two 2:53
9. Live the End 4:15
10. Fast, So Fast 3:16

Details

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Last Days of April is primarily the brainchild of singer Karl Larsson, and judging by the opening summer-breeze pop of "It's on Everything," you get the sense he's been listening to a cross between the Jayhawks and Fountains of Wayne. The tune has a light but catchy hook to it as the guitars weave themselves throughout for some fine results. Short and to the point, the group wastes little time padding or buffering the track, instead leaving it as is and getting out while on a sonic high. However, the group shines far better during the mid-tempo, four/four, smart, melodic pop of "Been Here All Time" that recalls pop gurus like Matthew Sweet, Velvet Crush, and Pete Yorn. This is exemplified in the slightly rootsy hue that colors the lovely pop rocker "Tears on Hold" that would fit perfectly on a Swedish pop mixtape along with Soundtrack of Our Lives and Shout Out Louds. Here Larsson briefly takes the song down a sparse, minimal road before bringing it back up again. "If You" takes a bit of a chance as Larsson delivers the lines in a cramped, hushed manner in the vein of Robert Smith singing "Lullaby." But "Me the Plague" is a full-out, radio-friendly nugget with the alt rock guitars and airtight arrangement, as is the sugar-coated, cavity-inducing "Your Anyone." Fans of A.C. Newman would also see some fare comparisons, especially on the moody "Want to Go." The finest tracks might be the Killers-like "Do for Two," and the lovely New Order-esque "Live the End."