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Water

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Download links and information about Water by Skooshny. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 39:22 minutes.

Artist: Skooshny
Release date: 2000
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic
Tracks: 10
Duration: 39:22
Buy on iTunes $9.90

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Flawed 3:22
2. Sad Summer Spring 4:31
3. No for Yes 3:39
4. Lullabye 4:45
5. It's Your Advantage 3:41
6. For Me Again 2:45
7. Desert Rain 3:43
8. Lost In Transit 3:46
9. Kate's Green Phone 3:56
10. The Water Song 5:14

Details

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Water, Skooshny's third full-length offering, is a heavier effort overall and sounds not quite as inspired and upbeat as their previous releases. The L.A.-based power pop trio — augmented here by studio guest musicians and friends — composed nine of the songs on this ten-song CD and offers up a rather uninspired indie rock-sounding cover of Gene Clark's "For Me Again" (the original version appeared on the Byrds' Preflyte album). Guitarist/lead vocalist Mark Breyer's voice — reedier and thinner on earlier group efforts — sounds somewhat deeper and morosely serious in tone throughout, and the sequencing — back and forth, light and dark — makes for a difficult listen. A musky "Flawed" introduces the album with a challenging and somewhat darker, guitar-oriented sound that portends to what will follow. The next track, "Sad Summer Spring," is a pretty Byrds-inspired ballad that is surely one of the band's better efforts, but it sounds out of place amid these mostly downcast psych-folk ditties. "No for Yes," the next track, is a dusky, solo, Arthur Lee-inspired number with Breyer's vocals growling intently and purposefully. "Lullabye," an echo-filled psych-pop song, brings the mood back up a notch, even though its somewhat out-of-place whistling solo, spoken vocals in the background, and dramatic guitars make for a cluttered listen. "Desert Rain" is another Arthur Lee/Love-inspired ballad, with robust and nostalgic affection for the melodic crunch of the British Invasion era and postmodern melancholia that is similar to bands like the Smithereens and Rain Parade. "Kate's Green Phone," recorded in 2000, features lead guitar riffage by guest musician Andy Colquhoun (of Mick Farren & the Deviants), though his blistering, metal-tinged, and squirrelly solo is entirely inappropriate for the song, sounding like something you might expect from Def Leppard or U2. The album ends with "The Water Song," a much better effort, thankfully, with nice trumpet accents and heartfelt Spanish-style guitars.