Memory Span
Download links and information about Memory Span by The Lines. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:17:15 minutes.
Artist: | The Lines |
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Release date: | 2008 |
Genre: | Rock, Pop, Alternative |
Tracks: | 18 |
Duration: | 01:17:15 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | White Night | 3:25 |
2. | On the Air | 3:35 |
3. | Not Through Windows | 3:11 |
4. | Dance for a Drop of Blood | 2:03 |
5. | Blisstability | 3:44 |
6. | Uneasy Affair | 3:43 |
7. | Don't Need Surgery | 2:59 |
8. | 2Split Seconds | 3:10 |
9. | False Alarm | 4:25 |
10. | Background | 4:54 |
11. | Cool Snap | 4:59 |
12. | Nerve Pylon | 3:45 |
13. | Over the Brow | 5:18 |
14. | Transit | 2:48 |
15. | Part II | 5:56 |
16. | House of Cracks | 8:01 |
17. | Old Town | 7:25 |
18. | Barbican | 3:54 |
Details
[Edit]Always ahead of their time, the Lines were post-punk while the first wave of British punk was still finding its feet in 1977, and just as their wiry, minimal approach to pop began to mesh with the mainstream, their music became even leaner and more muscular, stripping back the melodies and giving the rhythms greater prominence. By the time the Lines called it quits in 1983, their sound had evolved into dance-oriented rock dominated by cool, sinewy grooves and minimalist percussion accents, while the guitar was used more for texture than as a melodic framework. The Lines released two albums during their lifespan (1981's Therapy and 1983's Ultramarine), but it's the four singles and two EPs they recorded that provide a more telling portrait of the band's creative growth and stylistic shapeshifting, and Acute Records has compiled a near-definitive history of the Lines with Memory Span, which collects all their non-LP material (along with two unreleased demos) onto one CD. Memory Span presents these 18 tracks in chronological order (except for one song — "Barbican," the B-side to their first single, is the last song on the disc) and the band's growth is so graceful that at first spin one almost doesn't notice how different the music near the end of the disc is from that at the beginning, especially with "Barbican" bringing the songs full circle at the close. Rico Conning's voice suggests some odd fusion of Ray Davies and Pete Shelley, while the edgy insistence of his lyrics is the ideal match for his razor's-edge guitar work and that of Mick Lineham, while Nicholas Cash and Jo Forty were a tremendous rhythm section. The Lines never quite reached the audience they deserved, partly because they were signed to a small label and disliked self-promotion, but the music on Memory Span also makes it clear that these guys were a few steps ahead of what their colleagues were doing at all times, and while it wasn't much good for their bank accounts, it helps much of the music on this disc to sound fresh and keenly intelligent decades after it was first recorded. (Acute have also released the material from Therapy and Ultramarine on a sister compilation, Flood Bank.)