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Tilt

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Download links and information about Tilt by The Lightning Seeds. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Rock, Alternative Rock, Pop, Alternative, Indie genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 43:56 minutes.

Artist: The Lightning Seeds
Release date: 2009
Genre: Rock, Alternative Rock, Pop, Alternative, Indie
Tracks: 12
Duration: 43:56
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Buy on Amazon $12.41
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Life's Too Short (Album Version) 4:01
2. Sweetest Soul Sensations 3:29
3. If Only (Album Version) 4:54
4. City Bright Stars (Album Version) 2:52
5. I Wish I Was In Love (Album Version) 3:24
6. Happy Satellite (Album Version) 4:07
7. Get It Right (Album Version) 3:24
8. Cigarettes & Lies (Album Version) 4:17
9. Crowd Pleaser (Album Version) 4:03
10. Tales Of The Riverbank (Album Version) 4:09
11. Pussyfoot (Reprise) 1:41
12. All The Things (Album Version) 3:35

Details

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Ian Broudie is probably one of the least likely people to embrace electronica, but on their fifth album Tilt, some of the Lightning Seeds' dancier undertones are brought to the forefront. The Seeds are no strangers to stiff, computerized beats; because the band was technically Broudie's solo act until 1996's stellar Dizzy Heights, he often used a drum machine to round out the sound. That's why Tilt, which is neither electronica nor rock, but merely danceable pop, is hardly a real reach for them. If anything, the album is a minor disappointment because it seems that just as the group began to sound like a live act (and enlisted Zak Starkey, Ringo Starr's son, as drummer) they reverted back to being a slick pop band. This is not to say that Tilt is a bad record, however; it's quite the opposite. Some of the lyrics here are Broudie's most affected yet, and some of the arrangements are very exciting. In a way, it's like a less-dated version of their debut Cloudcuckooland, released nearly ten years before this one. Highlights include the first single, the up-tempo "Life's Too Short" and the techno-rocker "Crowdpleaser." Occasionally, the Lightning Seeds sound like a warmer version of the Pet Shop Boys, especially on "If Only" and "Happy Satellite." Furthermore, the second single, "Sweetest Soul Sensations," samples Al Green. Overall, however, the album gels into a cohesive statement that's sure to please both casual and die-hard fans of this excellent pop band.