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14:59

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Download links and information about 14:59 by Sugar Ray. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Rock, Metal, Reggae, Pop, Ska, Alternative genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 40:23 minutes.

Artist: Sugar Ray
Release date: 1999
Genre: Rock, Metal, Reggae, Pop, Ska, Alternative
Tracks: 13
Duration: 40:23
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. New Direction (Intro) 0:46
2. Every Morning 3:39
3. Falls Apart 4:15
4. Personal Space Invader 3:37
5. Live & Direct (Featuring KRS-One) 4:33
6. Someday 4:02
7. Aim for Me 2:19
8. Ode to the Lonely Hearted 3:12
9. Burning Dog 3:01
10. Even Though 2:34
11. Abracadabra 3:42
12. Glory 3:26
13. New Direction (Outro) 1:17

Details

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Sugar Ray lead singer Mark McGrath had proven himself on national television as a walking rock encyclopedia, in a 1998 episode of VH1's Rock and Roll Jeopardy. It was an impressive feat that could explain the divergent styles of Sugar Ray's 1999 album 14:59. Their third album showed an alarming overhaul in their approach, practically moving Sugar Ray into a new genre. 14:59 steered them from their metal shellac toward a calmer, melodious pastiche of songs. The band on 14:59 has versatility nailed down better than your grade-A wedding band: "Every Morning" bounces with the acoustic pop gentility of their 1997 hit "Fly," while "Falls Apart" and "Personal Space Invader" reflect influences from Synchronicity and Men Without Hats. 14:59 also favors the leaner, faster punk of Green Day in "Aim for Me." There's even a frighteningly faithful cover of Steve Miller's "Abracadabra." If there's one criticism of 14:59, it's that if you listen hard enough you'll be playing "sounds like..." for many songs. In that sense it's almost a parody; the inclusion of two comic songs entitled "New Direction" (one death metal, one circus tent) help that assessment. Finally, though, 14:59 has such catchiness and charm that it's a guilty pleasure of high order, and a bigger step than one might have expected from Sugar Ray.