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| Song Title | Time | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play | 1. Maybe That's What It Takes | 3:53 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 2. Cry | 3:48 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 3. Dirty Pretty Words | 3:07 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 4. Imagine | 3:12 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 5. Not Your Average Kind Of Girl | 3:36 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 6. Mad World | 3:01 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 7. Stones & Feathers | 3:05 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 8. Here Comes The Rain Again | 3:18 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 9. Yellow | 4:29 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 10. Wandering Soul | 3:29 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 11. Over Conscious | 3:39 | £0.69 |
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I sort of wish they had not rushed her debut CD, and given her (or the people surrounding her) enough time to come up with a CD of all original material. Still, this girl seems to have an uncanny ability to make a song sound like her own. When I first heard her singing Here Comes The Rain Again, I honestly had to think a bit before being able to remember that it had been originally sung by the Eurythmics. I know that sounds daft, but Alex Parks had taken over the song that much. The first single is an original song and it's a real winner.
Believe me I am not a typical teenaged Fame Academy fan, and I'm looking forward very much to how this young woman's career progresses.
I assure you, if you buy "Introduction", you will not be disappointed: you will be left wanting to hear more
With the different co-writers Alex has created a collection of ballads, rock songs and impressively original music. "Stones & Feathers" stands out as a song which refuses to be pigeon-holed. Building from a slow start it develops into an undulating classic flowing over the listener like waves. "Dirty Pretty Words" is a rock song with a gritty feel, contrasting with "Cry" which is hauntingly beautiful, but again having its powerful moments. "Over Conscious" is on the single and is another slow enigmatic song. Finally "Wandering Soul" is a rousing rock/folk hybrid starting slowly but with a full-on rock chorus.
All the cover's are good, but two stand out for me, "Mad World" sung in the style used in Donnie Darko is spine-tingling, and "Everybody Hurts", which is played slower than in Fame Academy, becomes an even more dark and mournful piece.
Although Alex's next album will be the first with all her own songs, this is an outstanding debut. It stands up against the competition in its own right, even for people who didn't watch Fame Academy. Buy it and it'll rarely be out of your cd player.
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