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Dreamboats & Lemonade

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Download links and information about Dreamboats & Lemonade by Yearning. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 36:05 minutes.

Artist: Yearning
Release date: 2014
Genre: Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 36:05
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dreamboat 2:48
2. If I Can't Have You 2:59
3. Dance With Me 2:04
4. Chasing Shadows 3:00
5. Marry Me In the Morning 4:38
6. It's You That I Want 2:30
7. Lemonade 2:59
8. How Will I Know? 2:59
9. Never Learn To Cry 2:50
10. Every Time I Fall In Love 3:00
11. Tomorrow Night 2:12
12. When I Was Your Baby 4:06

Details

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After a couple years of releasing luminous singles and EPs that sound like soundtracks to the sweetest secondary school dances ever, the Yearning finally made a full album. Released in 2014, Dreamboats & Lemonade is orchestrated and played by Joe Moore and a small cast of like-minded musicians with vocals by the barely out of secondary school herself Maddie Dobie. Moore's aim is to take the girl group and Brill Building sounds of the '60s, dip them in sugar, dip them again for good measure, and then wrap them up in the cutest packaging imaginable. The songs are simple, the arrangements would be easy listening-approved if they weren't candied enough to happily rot even the hardiest set of teeth, and Dobie's vocals make Claudine Longet sound like a Franklin sister. Basically, rockers and tough guys need not apply, for this is music aimed at gentle souls and dreamers only. Most of the album sounds perfect for pining, melancholy daydreaming, moonlight reveries, and solitary walks in gardens. The slow ballads like "If I Can't Have You" and the sumptuous "Never Learn to Cry" especially. When the band turns up the dial on the tempo and energy controls, like on the almost peppy "Dance with Me" or "Every Time I Fall in Love," which kind of sounds like a song from a '50s Western sung by Doris Day, they make a teeny tiny bit of noise, but not enough to break the fragile spell the album casts. The Yearning aren't suitable for daily consumption, but as the occasional sweet treat, Dreamboats & Lemonade is a nice addition to an adventurous indie pop fan's menu.