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Shades of Streamers

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Download links and information about Shades of Streamers by Licorice Roots. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative, Psychedelic genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 01:08:44 minutes.

Artist: Licorice Roots
Release date: 2006
Genre: Rock, Pop, Alternative, Psychedelic
Tracks: 15
Duration: 01:08:44
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Starswept Dancer 7:43
2. Shout 7:40
3. Meteor Queene 4:56
4. Mystifying You 2:40
5. Come My Way 3:11
6. Shades of Streamers 3:04
7. Silver Hill 2:39
8. Easter Island Highways 3:07
9. Jade Dream 5:45
10. Yarrow Narrows 5:56
11. Sunlit Galleon 3:09
12. Lacquered Presences 3:12
13. Soul Childe 3:20
14. Scalloped Stallion 4:33
15. Pearl of the World 7:49

Details

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Nearly a decade-and-a-half after their original debut as a Kramer-produced Shimmy Disc act called Raymond Listen, the Licorice Roots stay true to their peculiar mix of lo-fi folk, homemade psychedelia and quirky pop hooks on their third proper album. There are some genuinely peculiar moments on Shades of Streamers, most notably the extended, Galaxie 500-like re-imagination of the Isley Brothers' "Shout" into placid eddies of narcotic haze. If anything, this album may be slightly less polished than the Licorice Roots' previous efforts: for some reason, Edward Moyse's vocals on all 15 songs have been sent through the exact same form of processed distortion (think of a crackly version of John Lennon's lead vocal on his solo single "Mind Games"), which has the frustrating effect of making the tunes sound much more alike than they really are. That distraction aside, the expansive, double-album-length Shades of Streamers recalls the D.I.Y. neo-prog of vintage Olivia Tremor Control. Concise and playful psych-pop tunes like "Silver Hill" and the amazingly catchy "Mystifying You" sit comfortably next to willfully experimental wig outs and trippy, oddball tunes like "Yarrow Narrows," which sounds like what would have happened if "Wear Your Love Like Heaven"-era Donovan had been tapped to write the Sesame Street theme song. Those fans of the old Elephant 6 bands who have not yet been hipped to the Licorice Roots will find much to enjoy here.