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The Most Lamentable Tragedy

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Download links and information about The Most Lamentable Tragedy by Titus Andronicus. This album was released in 2015 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 29 tracks with total duration of 01:32:36 minutes.

Artist: Titus Andronicus
Release date: 2015
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 29
Duration: 01:32:36
Buy on iTunes $7.99
Buy on Songswave €2.62

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Angry Hour 1:41
2. No Future Part IV : No Future Triumphant 4:53
3. Stranded ( On My Own ) 4:23
4. Lonely Boy 5:21
5. I Lost My Mind ( +@ ) 4:18
6. Look Alive 0:33
7. The Magic Morning 1:00
8. Lookalike 0:47
9. I Lost My Mind ( DJ ) 1:35
10. Mr. E. Mann 3:48
11. Fired Up 4:04
12. Dimed Out 2:56
13. More Perfect Union 9:39
14. [ intermission ] (Silent Track - No Audio) 1:17
15. Sun Salutation 0:55
16. (S)HE SAID / (S)HE SAID 9:11
17. Funny Feeling 3:23
18. Fatal Flaw 3:27
19. Please 1:14
20. Come On, Siobhán 3:43
21. A Pair of Brown Eyes 3:16
22. Auld Lang Syne 1:45
23. I’m Going Insane ( Finish Him ) 1:57
24. The Fall 0:46
25. Into The Void ( Filler ) 4:36
26. No Future Part V : In Endless Dreaming 4:40
27. [ seven seconds ] (Silent Track - No Audio) 0:07
28. Stable Boy 6:51
29. A Moral 0:30

Details

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On their first three albums, Titus Andronicus made it clear they were among the most thematically and stylistically ambitious bands to emerge from the punkier end of indie rock since the dawn of the new millennium. Having shown they were equal to the task of a concept album on 2010's The Monitor, TA leader Patrick Stickles has chosen to scale the slippery slope of a creative challenge that has bested many great bands: the rock opera. 2015's The Most Lamentable Tragedy is a narrative in five acts concerning a man scarred by abuse, drugs, and mental illness who encounters his doppelganger, leading to an internal crisis that explodes into violence. In the grand tradition of rock operas from the Who's Tommy to F****d Up's David Comes to Life, The Most Lamentable Tragedy doesn't always scan very clearly as a story, with the through line from song to song often getting lost or wandering astray. But Stickles has done an outstanding job in drafting his protagonist, making his anger, fear, and madness seem vivid and powerfully honest, and Stickles' vocals bring the haunted man to vivid life. And if the narrative isn't always effective, Stickles has given each of the five acts a genuine feel of its own, from the agony and paranoia of Act I: Set Aside, or Miserable and Water Buried to the romantic hope-against-hope in Act IV, The Other Side, Or a Midsummer Night's Dream. The whole of this album is truly more than the sum of the parts, and the parts are quite strong in and of themselves; the opening salvos are smart but muscular punk rock with a melodic edge, "Mr. E. Mann" is one of several letter-perfect Bruce Springsteen homages on the set list, "Fatal Flaw" and "Come On, Siobhan" are superb pop tunes with just the right touch of grit, and the stark background of "No Future, Pt V: In Endless Dreaming" and "Stable Boy" help bring the album to an emotionally powerful close. And instrumentally, Stickles and his collaborators — including guitarists Adam Reich and Jonah Maurer, bassist Julian Veronesi, drummer Eric Harm, and a small army of backing vocalists and instrumentalists — give this music and their performances a rich and dynamic sound that suits the many moods of the material and achieves the stylistic diversity these songs demand. Sometimes suggesting a cross between Hüsker Dü's Zen Arcade and Bruce Springsteen's The River, The Most Lamentable Tragedy is as big, smart, and heartfelt as either of those albums, and a striking example of what Titus Andronicus can achieve. Anyone who doubted they were one of the major bands of our day will doubtless be convinced after a couple spins of The Most Lamentable Tragedy. [The CD version added three bonus tracks.]