Create account Log in

Two Gallants

[Edit]

Download links and information about Two Gallants by Two Gallants. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 46:06 minutes.

Artist: Two Gallants
Release date: 2007
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 10
Duration: 46:06
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.91

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. The Deader 4:55
2. Miss Meri 3:18
3. The Hand That Held Me Down 5:32
4. Trembling of the Rose 5:12
5. Reflections of the Marionette 5:42
6. Ribbons 'Round My Tongue 5:06
7. Despite What You've Been Told 4:29
8. Fly Low Carrion Crow 3:56
9. My Baby's Gone 5:55
10. Liza Jane (Bonus Track) 2:01

Details

[Edit]

It would not be strange that the three albums Two Gallants have released so far were a sole (but splendid) recording subsequently split into three different issues. This third and self-titled work surprised again exactly by offering the same, but with the similar high quality. Apparently, the duo from San Francisco did not want to be swept away by new musical waves, lest they forget to make such good music. Once immersed in the "spot the difference" game, you feel that the melancholic lyrics listeners became accustomed to, worthy of authentic poets (e.g., "The Deader"), come off a little less destructive on this disc (not any less profound, but less despairing), with stories that forgo tales of alcoholism, suicide, and murder — that is to say, the overwhelming burden of a devastating existence — to focus on someone else instead of on oneself: an opponent, or another being much more complicated to bear. "The Hand That Held Me Down" and "Miss Meri" are pieces with an evidently female target. Musically, the songs' structure barely changes except for a more instrumental clarity patent in "Reflections of the Marionette" and in the ballads "Trembling of the Rose," "Ribbons 'Round My Tongue," and "Fly Low Carrion Crow," songs where the drums and cymbals escort the voice as if over a recently paved road instead of a cobblestone path. Special mention deserves the song "Despite What You've Been Told," which undoubtedly sticks out over the rest of the album and, easily, over the whole Two Gallants' repertoire. This album's first single transmits, with a more standard structure (verse-chorus-verse) and a faster tempo than usual, an infectious energy without being such a heavy song. The now perfect instrumental combination and clearness, accompany the epic chords and a voice which march together from beginning to end. So continue this way, gentlemen.