Days Come and Go
Download links and information about Days Come and Go by Mockingbird Wish Me Luck. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 36:44 minutes.
Artist: | Mockingbird Wish Me Luck |
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Release date: | 2008 |
Genre: | Rock, Pop, Alternative |
Tracks: | 9 |
Duration: | 36:44 |
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Buy on iTunes $8.91 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | You’ve Got a Friend to Lean On | 3:48 |
2. | Let’s Watch the Sunrise | 4:12 |
3. | The Way That You Paint It | 3:16 |
4. | Moves On the Screen | 2:42 |
5. | Pictures (Too Big to Fit In a Sight) | 3:03 |
6. | Days Come and Go | 4:49 |
7. | Step In Concrete | 3:34 |
8. | New Beginnings | 4:34 |
9. | Summer Again | 6:46 |
Details
[Edit]Swedish group Mockingbird, Wish Me Luck occupy the same "twee" and quirk-folk realm as predecessors such as Belle & Sebastian and Bright Eyes. The eight-piece band certainly isn't trying to hide the influence of the former, with mournful trumpets occasionally breezing through their orchestral acoustic pop and a fey Stuart Murdoch-like lead vocal often augmented by an accompanying female voice. Even the cover of Days Come and Go nods to the Scottish group. Nevertheless, there is something utterly guileless here, despite the band's sometimes derivative nature, and in "Let's Watch the Sunrise" the group only uses the Belle & Sebastian medium as an entry point to find a strident beauty that is purely their own. Here, a martial drumbeat spurs the song into a crescendo, the singer cries desperately about the street lights, and the song cracks wide open into melodic glory. As "Moves on the Screen" gathers heat, the band moves into Bright Eyes territory, with a galloping, shifting meter and a more caustic tone creeping into the vocals. Instrumentally, the large ensemble creates an expansive yet somehow featherweight and nuanced sound, with organ, banjo, woodwinds, and trumpets occasionally drifting in and making brief but clear statements. "You've Got a Friend to Lean On" nods to Morrissey at his most infectious, with a singsongy, rhythmically acute chorus, while the sparer "Days Come and Go" ushers a willfully depressive bent into the proceedings. Nevertheless, despite the group wearing distinct — mostly Anglo-pop — influences on their collective sleeve, one can't fake pretty melodies and unerring pop sensibilities. There's also something appealingly D.I.Y. yet paradoxically rich and full about the recording circumstances that make this an album to pay attention to. Especially if any of the aforementioned influences are a significant part of one's vocabulary.