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Little Heart's Ease

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Download links and information about Little Heart's Ease by Royal City. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Indie Rock, Country, Alternative Country, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 43:56 minutes.

Artist: Royal City
Release date: 2004
Genre: Indie Rock, Country, Alternative Country, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 43:56
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Bring My Father a Gift 3:02
2. Jerusalem 3:48
3. She Will Come 2:37
4. Count the Days 3:36
5. Can't You 4:09
6. Cabbage Rolls 2:53
7. My Body Is Numbered 5:10
8. O Beauty 3:46
9. Ain't That the Way 2:53
10. That Me Head Were a Spring of Water 2:12
11. Enemy 5:32
12. Take Me Down to Yonder River 4:18

Details

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On Little Heart's Ease, their third album and first for Rough Trade, Royal City continues in the direction of Alone at the Microphone but opts for a fuller, cleaner, more polished sound. At times, more polished means too polished: occasionally, Aaron Riches' vocals sound a little airless, and the album doesn't feature as much unique instrumentation as Alone at the Microphone did. However, Little Heart's Ease does deliver more of the dark but oddly jaunty songwriting that made Royal City's previous album noteworthy: Riches can still deliver lyrics like "let my tongue rot in my mouth" as sweetly as a lullaby. But Riches' words are darker than his music — although the comparisons to Smog, Damien Jurado, and Will Oldham's many incarnations aren't inaccurate (Oldham fans will particularly like the epic "Enemy"), Royal City crafts a lighter, somewhat sweeter kind of indie-country-rock gloom. And, with Little Heart's Ease's cleaner, fuller sound, Riches and company end up sounding less like their contemporaries and more like Neil Young, Gram Parsons, Sweetheart of the Rodeo-era Byrds, and the other artists who inspired alt-country in the first place. This classicist sound reaches its peak on the engaging "Can't You," which recalls Dylan right down to its climactic swell of harmonicas. As good as the band is at revitalizing the past, Royal City is at its best when it sounds distinctly modern; the spare percussion and wiry guitars of "Count the Days" crackle with a quiet energy, and the dreamy, droning "O Beauty" sounds similarly fresh. Interestingly, the strongest moments on Little Heart's Ease tend to be the subtlest; songs such as "Ain't That the Way" arrive with little fanfare, but they definitely make an impact. Alone at the Microphone might still be Royal City's most immediate work, but the striking restraint of the best moments on Little Heart's Ease is no less captivating.