The Conversation
Download links and information about The Conversation by Tim Finn. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 43:42 minutes.
1.23 | |
Artist: | Tim Finn |
Release date: | 2008 |
Genre: | Rock, Alternative |
Tracks: | 13 |
Duration: | 43:42 |
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Buy on iTunes $9.99 | |
Buy on iTunes $9.99 | |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Straw to Gold | 3:57 |
2. | Out of This World | 3:01 |
3. | The Saw and the Tree | 4:04 |
4. | Slow Mystery | 4:00 |
5. | Rearview Mirror | 3:43 |
6. | Only a Dream | 2:30 |
7. | Fall From Grace | 2:42 |
8. | Invisible | 3:51 |
9. | Snowbound | 2:57 |
10. | Great Return | 3:02 |
11. | Imaginary Kingdom | 3:17 |
12. | Forever Thursday | 2:57 |
13. | More Fool Me | 3:41 |
Details
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The Conversation is an appropriate name for Tim Finn's eighth solo album: the music has a hushed, intimate quality that evokes the feeling of a conversation with a close friend. Old friends surface throughout The Conversation, either in their presence — Eddie Rayner, Finn's old Split Enz cohort plays piano throughout — or their absence, as in the case of Phil Judd, whose absence haunts "More Fool Me," a song that contains a direct quote from an early Enz song, "Matinee Idyll (129)." All of The Conversation feels as if it were built on this kind of reflective introspection or, failing that, a bit of subdued relaxation, as on the lighter "Snowbound," but it's all tied together by its quietness. Nothing about The Conversation is loud: there are no crashing drums — there's barely any percussion — and the arrangements are so spare they sometimes seem like nothing more than an acoustic guitar and piano graced by another vocal harmony, although closer inspection reveals some subtle, crucial texture and shading, usually derived from woodwinds or violins. Finn has never quite had an album this gentle or delicate before — there are echoes of his melancholy 2004 collaboration with brother Neil, Everyone Is Here — and the effect is striking: this is as naked and emotional as Tim has been on record, and its coziness feels like a secret shared between two close friends.