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| Song Title | Time | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play | 1. Paris Train | 5:46 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 2. Concrete Sky | 4:34 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 3. Mount Washington | 6:27 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 4. Anywhere | 4:35 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 5. Daybreaker | 3:55 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 6. Carmella | 3:36 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 7. God Song | 5:14 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 8. This One's Gonna Bruise | 4:44 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 9. Ted's Waltz | 5:41 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 10. Thinking About Tomorrow | 6:40 | £0.89 |
Product details
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Daybreaker - an upbeat song, but it's sad, whilst uplifting!
This One's Gunna Bruise - brilliantly written by Ryan Adams, this is just amazing, check out that minor broken chord! Oh YES!
It's a sad song, but...wow - blows me away every time!
Overall, it's definitely worth buying. But also by Central Reservation and Trailer Park! Buy the whole lot!
Now I've had the chance to re-listen and reconsider, I find myself in possesion of another great album from one of the best singer/songwriters around. While I still prefer Trailer Park for its rawness and the simply beautiful (semi)acoustic melodies, Daybreaker probably beats Central Reservation into third by a hair's bredth - afterall, all three are so brilliant that it is hard to put any of them down. In time this'll be crowned a masterpiece, and if it didn't just slip inside this years Mecury deadline, then i'd definately back it to make the awards shortlist next year... who knows, maybe if it did she'd win it this time!
It is impossible to listen to tracks like Concrete Sky or Mount Washington without lying back with an enormous smile of contentment, while darker songs like Daybreaker and country influenced Carmella (Ryan Adams and Emmylou Harris contribute frequently) make good the fact that Beth Orton is untouchable. Corrosive strings, trip hop and brass intertwine with joyous guitar and pure vocals that combine to make the something very special that is now to be expected with an Orton release.
Starting with a swell of strings on Paris Train and ending on a similiarly euphoric note with the magical Thinking about Tomorrow, this is an album that is at once delicate and strong but always compelling. Lay your hands on it any way you can.
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