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Who's Got Trouble?

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Download links and information about Who's Got Trouble? by Shivaree. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Country, Alternative Country, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 43:14 minutes.

Artist: Shivaree
Release date: 2005
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Country, Alternative Country, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 11
Duration: 43:14
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. New Casablanca 3:07
2. I Close My Eyes 3:55
3. Someday 2:10
4. Lost In a Dream 4:36
5. Little Black Mess 4:31
6. Mexican Boyfriend 3:40
7. The Fat Lady of Limbourg 4:13
8. 2 Far 2:54
9. Baby Girls 5:18
10. It All Got Black 4:02
11. I Will Go Quietly 4:48

Details

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The velvety torch-and-twang tenor of singer/songwriter Ambrosia Parsley — her name alone is delicious — permeates Shivaree's third full-length record like smoke through a saloon filled with carnies. The trio's sophisticated blend of spacious alt-country and dark pop with Tin Pan Alley sensibilities — keyboardist Danny McGough toured with Tom Waits — more than lives up to the band name, which is derived from the French word "charivari," meaning "a noisy mock serenade (made by banging pans and kettles) to a newly married couple." Parsley, who sounds like a mischievous composite of Neko Case, Jill Sobule, and Aimee Mann, feels just as natural assuming the role of torchy vamp ("Lost in a Dream") as she does a wounded heart pining for her "Mexican Boyfriend," and "Little Black Mess," with its sensuous strings and jazzy piano, comes off like a moon-drunk cross between Björk and Nick Cave. At its core, Who's Got Trouble? is the soundtrack to a late-night road trip, and nowhere is that more apparent than on the subtle closer, "I Will Go Quietly." With its atmospheric banjo bookends and lonely last-cigarette-before-the-sun-comes-up imagery, it leaves the listener with an alarming sense of place and an unsettling case of Twin Peaks creeps.