Somewhere In the Between
Download links and information about Somewhere In the Between by Streetlight Manifesto. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Reggae, Ska, Alternative genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 44:28 minutes.
Artist: | Streetlight Manifesto |
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Release date: | 2007 |
Genre: | Rock, Reggae, Ska, Alternative |
Tracks: | 10 |
Duration: | 44:28 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | We Will Fall Together | 4:49 |
2. | Down, Down, Down to Mephisto's Café | 5:03 |
3. | Would You Be Impressed | 3:21 |
4. | One Foot On the Gas, On Foot In the Grave | 5:27 |
5. | Watch It Crash | 4:42 |
6. | Somewhere In the Between | 3:43 |
7. | Forty Days | 3:53 |
8. | The Blonde Lead the Blind | 4:49 |
9. | The Receiving End of It All | 5:18 |
10. | What a Wicked Gang Are We Below | 3:23 |
Details
[Edit]Although Somewhere in the Between is the third full-length release by Streetlight Manifesto, longtime fans are more likely to view it as the band's sophomore effort. 2006's Keasbey Nights was, for all intents and purposes, a refurbished replica of the Catch-22 album by the same name, complete with the same vocalist and few (if any) musical changes. This makes Somewhere in the Between the band's first effort of all-original material in nearly five years, and Streetlight Manifesto is no longer the fresh-faced group that once rose from Catch-22's ska/punk ashes. They've spent a half-decade on the road, touring with ska stalwarts like Reel Big Fish while weathering lineup changes and several robberies of their equipment-filled van. Losing treasured bandmates and expensive instruments would dampen anyone's spirits, and Streetlight Manifesto does sound a bit less reckless here, but not at the expense of the group's peppy ska/punk appeal. While 2003's Everything Goes Numb saw vocalist Tomas Kalnoky rushing through his lines, cramming them chock-full of syllables and raspy melodies, Somewhere in the Between shows him improving as a lyricist and vocalist. The rasp is still there, but so is a focused tone that we haven't heard before, particularly during the subdued intro to "Down, Down, Down to Mephisto's Café." Despite his improved vocals, Kalnoky remains the most punked-out member of the band, whose other members play their horn lines and guitar chords with crisp, bright precision. It's this balanced relationship — clear orchestration and jaunty tempos paired with rasped melodies about the macabre ("Would You Be Impressed"), war ("Watch It Crash"), and sin ("Forty Days") — that ultimately governs the album, and even if Somewhere in the Between can't match the raucous nature of the band's debut, it's nevertheless a catchy follow-up.