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Good Things Come And Go Like Bad Things

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Download links and information about Good Things Come And Go Like Bad Things by Sounder. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 52:06 minutes.

Artist: Sounder
Release date: 2008
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 52:06
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Good Things 2:51
2. Those Days Were Good Days (As Days Sometimes Are) 2:56
3. Daily I Will Calculate The Distance 5:56
4. Oh River 4:23
5. Get Use To Falling 5:24
6. La Guerra Sobre La Mesa 3:06
7. A War On The Coffee Table 3:13
8. Things Are Gonna Get Worse (Before They Get Worser) 4:53
9. Bad Things 2:10
10. If We All Collide In The Sun 5:42
11. Who Put The Skylight In Heaven 3:08
12. Aquifer's Water 8:24

Details

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Mike Aho is known for his videos and artwork but the visual arts aren't his only pursuit, as Sounder, his duo with drummer Steve Stratton, has shown. For the band's second album they create an attractive blend of everything from noisy murk to sweet singalongs — sometimes in the same song, as opening track "Good Things" readily shows — and in steering away from any easy categorization come up with a listen that's much more interesting than so many efforts-by-rote in the world of early 21st century indie rock as broadly defined. The easygoing roughness of compositions like "Daily I Will Calculate the Distance" and "If We All Collide in the Sun" among others helps to signal that there's a new generation reinterpreting the late-'80s/early-'90s heyday of "indie" rock as such, in the same way that acts like No Age and Times New Viking are, both catchy and scraggly and definitely not interested in pop-punch sheen. Aho's singing is in ways a perfect summary of the band on these tracks — distanced from the mic and in the mix but not inaudible, yearning but not strained, and often quite affecting. The sense of equivocation and not wanting to fully settle into a style or sound even gets hinted at in the song titles — "Those Days Were Good (As Days Sometimes Are)" and "Things Are Going to Get Worse (Before They Get Worser)" are two of the better uses of parentheses around — while the inclusion of everything from soft keyboard lines and muffled spoken word ("La Guerra Sobre La Mesa") to Tom Waits-like cabaret sea shanties keeps a listener involved throughout.