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Edges of the Heart

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Download links and information about Edges of the Heart by Tret Fure. This album was released in 1984 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:12:33 minutes.

Artist: Tret Fure
Release date: 1984
Genre: Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:12:33
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. As If by the Wind 3:27
2. Terminal Hold 3:43
3. What Goes on in the Night 3:41
4. Movin' in for the Kill 4:21
5. Cold, Cold Heart 3:14
6. Annie Aircraft 4:58
7. Angel Fire 3:33
8. That Side of the Moon 3:22
9. Turned Around Again 3:03
10. It's up to Me and You 3:03
11. Tight Black Jeans 4:05
12. I Move for Your Love 5:11
13. Edges of the Heart 3:55
14. Guilty 3:46
15. Cherish the Love 4:01
16. Too Many Tears 3:28
17. Land of Milk and Honey 4:26
18. Alone with You 3:36
19. Bayou Blue 3:40

Details

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Although Edges of the Heart may not be as strong as its predecessor, Terminal Hold, it had "Tight Black Jeans," a clever, lively, catchy, lusty song about a former love that should have been licensed for an ad campaign by Guess or some other maker of the appropriate title product. A lot of the rest is more introspective and lyrical, with a very rich palette of sounds, most notably "I Move for Your Love," which seems to show the influence of the Police in its timbre, especially the opening, while "Guilty" has a roots rock earthiness. The title track has the prettiest singing ever to grace a Tret Fure record, and "Cherish the Love" was always a high point of Fure's '80s shows. Her singing here is almost wrenching in its passion — curiously, the choruses are less than catchy, but the verses are achingly disarming and ravishingly beautiful, within the context of a rock song. Some of the rest is below this standard, and Fure's plunge into a Cajun-influenced sound ("Bayou Blue") is questionable, but this set has some peaks worth climbing by the listener.