| Genre | Unknown |
|---|---|
| Date (CEST) | 2014-02-16 12:31:56 |
| Group | 404 |
| Size | 77 MB |
| Files | 12 |
| M3U / SFV / NFO | |
Augustines-Augustines-2014-404
Infos
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Tracklist (M3U)
| # | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 01-augustines-intro_(i_touch_imaginary_hands).mp3 | Augustines | Intro (I Touch Imaginary Hands) | Unknown | Unknown |
| 2 | 02-augustines-cruel_city.mp3 | Augustines | Cruel City | Unknown | Unknown |
| 3 | 03-augustines-nothing_to_lose_but_your_head.mp3 | Augustines | Nothing To Lose But Your Head | Unknown | Unknown |
| 4 | 04-augustines-weary_eyes.mp3 | Augustines | Weary Eyes | Unknown | Unknown |
| 5 | 05-augustines-dont_you_look_back.mp3 | Augustines | Don't You Look Back | Unknown | Unknown |
| 6 | 06-augustines-walkabout.mp3 | Augustines | Walkabout | Unknown | Unknown |
| 7 | 07-augustines-kid_youre_on_your_own.mp3 | Augustines | Kid You're On Your Own | Unknown | Unknown |
| 8 | 08-augustines-this_aint_me.mp3 | Augustines | This Ain't Me | Unknown | Unknown |
| 9 | 09-augustines-now_you_are_free.mp3 | Augustines | Now You Are Free | Unknown | Unknown |
| 10 | 10-augustines-the_avenue.mp3 | Augustines | The Avenue | Unknown | Unknown |
| 11 | 11-augustines-highway_1_interlude.mp3 | Augustines | Highway 1 Interlude | Unknown | Unknown |
| 12 | 12-augustines-hold_onto_anything.mp3 | Augustines | Hold Onto Anything | Unknown | Unknown |
NFO
Artist: Augustines
Album: Augustines
Bitrate: 236kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: Caroline
Genre: Indie
Size: 80.35 megs
PlayTime: 0h 44min 50sec total
Rip Date: 2014-02-16
Store Date: 2014-02-04
Track List:
--------
01. Intro (I Touch Imaginary Hands) 1:37
02. Cruel City 3:44
03. Nothing To Lose But Your Head 3:53
04. Weary Eyes 4:08
05. Don't You Look Back 4:24
06. Walkabout 5:00
07. Kid You're On Your Own 3:59
08. This Ain't Me 4:37
09. Now You Are Free 4:09
10. The Avenue 3:32
11. Highway 1 Interlude 2:13
12. Hold Onto Anything 3:34
Release Notes:
--------
AUGUSTINES release their sophmore album 'AUGUSTINES' on 3rd February!
ôDamn near perfectàone of the best albums of the year.ö Classic Rock
ôResonates as the work of a band with the chops to translate thoughtful material
into a powerful and purposeful force.ö 4'K's Kerrang!
There are many beginnings, many stories and many themes to AugustinesÆ second
full-length. ItÆs an album, as the eponymous title suggests, of rebirth, renewal
and regeneration. ItÆs an album about growth, about exploration and moving on
from the past. But more than anything, æAugustinesÆ is about the band, and its
origins can be traced back to one very specific moment and location in time û a
recording studio in a converted 19th church in Geneseo, New York. Because that
was the first time that singer/guitarist Billy McCarthy, multi-instrumentalist
Eric Sanderson and drummer Rob Allen had sat down and written songs together,
even though theyÆd been a band and had been touring their first album, æRise Ye
Sunken ShipsÆ, for over two years.
ôBy the end of that tour,ö explains Allen, ôwe had people at festivals dancing
and singing words back to us. It was incredible. I donÆt think we were fully
expecting that. But by the end of it, it was so inspiring that, after two and a
half years, we were able to look at the past with a positive attitude. And
thatÆs really what this new record is about û capturing those feelings and
positive energy. It made us a unit. It made us a band.ö
ItÆs a marked difference from the chaos and sadness that surrounded the first
record. Consisting of songs that McCarthy and Sanderson had worked on in their
previous outfit, Pela, æRise Ye Sunken ShipsÆ drew heavily from tragedy, namely
the 2009 suicide of McCarthyÆs brother James, a diagnosed schizophrenic whoÆd
been in and out of mental institutions for years. Unwilling to let go of the
songs after the demise of Pela, Sanderson and McCarthy continued working on them
and finished them. And then, with Allen on board, things started taking off. The
songs started to resonate and the power of the songs and the reaction of the
audiences began to overpower the darkness that had inspired them.
ôDuring the last record,ö explains Sanderson, ôwe spoke openly about a deeply
personal time period in our lives, especially Billy's. That time period was
intertwined with personal and commercial success and failure. As individuals, we
hit rock bottom after our dream of becoming musicians evaporated with Pela's
demise. We started drinking the pain away and gave up on mostly everything.ö
Not only that, but a legal dispute had brought about an end to their name, the
trio adding æWe AreÆ to the start of their moniker in an act of hopeful
defiance. Now, in 2013, they can lay claim to it once more û both the name and
the band are fully theirs.
To get there, though, the band didnÆt just move on from the past û they went
deeply back into it. After the tour, McCarthy stopped living full-time in New
York and took to exploring more of the world. He drove all across the States, up
to Alaska and back on his motorbike, and even went as far as Turkey, Mexico and
Kenya (ôI played the demo of æCruel CityÆ to Kenyans in Kenya,ö McCarthy beams,
ôand I didnÆt have the lyrics figured out.ö) Yet for all the miles travelled, it
was closer to home, but way back in time that the seeds of æAugustinesÆ began to
take root.
ôWhat I decided to do,ö explains McCarthy, ôwas erase the blackboard. I really
needed to go back to a place that was empowering and I thought, æWell, how do I
go back to the beginning and start over?Æ And I actually called my elementary
school teacher and I went and stayed with her on her farm. I met her when I was
nine years old. And I stayed on her farm and wrote. The second thing I decided
to do was call my old school. In my mind, in the madness of New York, IÆve
always thought about this music room when I was a little boy. IÆve always
thought about the way the light came through the windows in that room and how it
was cold in the winter and the smell of that piano, and I actually called the
school and they gave me the keys to that room. And I got to go sit in there in
my thirties, sitting on that stool starting all over again and thatÆs how the
record started.ö
That wasnÆt enough, however, and McCarthy travelled back even further in time.
ôFor some reason,ö he explains, "it was important for me to go back to the
oldest relationships I had before all this, so I got in touch with an old friend
of mine I went to elementary school with and sheÆs now married with children and
she had a back shed that she let me stay in and what I did was I rented a car û
IÆm from Northern California, near San Francisco û and I just started driving up
and down the coast, and the beaches that I played on when I was a kid. It was
this incredibly emotional experience for me to look at the sea, thinking about
the man that I am and the boy that I was and where am I going and what the fuck
just happened to me.ö
ôFor me,ö adds Sanderson, ôthe core of the record is the concept of a walkabout.
Going on a journey to find û re-find û yourself after going through a life
changing experience. What do you do when you make it through the other side?
When you can confidently say that you've worked through the tragedy? When your
life actually starts to mirror the belief you have in yourself?ö
Truly, itÆs a record formed from thousands of miles and years of memories and a
journey through a long, dark tunnel, the songs themselves a physical
manifestation of hope and positivity, of pure triumph in the face of adversity.
Recorded with co-producer Peter Katis (The National, Frightened Rabbit,
Interpol, Jonsi) at Tarquin Studios in Connecticut, you can hear that triumph
flowing through its songs. ThereÆs the gorgeous, lilting atmosphere of the
aptly-titled, short-but-sweet opener æIntro (I Touch Imaginary Hands)Æ, the
desperate jitters of self-awareness and identity in æThis AinÆt MeÆ û ôI can
change,ö McCarthy repeats over and over, his voice tremulous and terrified as
cascades of sound fall down around his voice û the mellow, melancholy falsetto
that soars, angelic, over the gorgeous piano of æWalkaboutÆ, and first single
æCruel CityÆÆs despairing love letter to New York. Yet these songs are infused
with the support of the people that Augustines have met along the way and the
encouragement they gave the band.
ôThat whole experience,ö says Allen, ômade us much stronger. We learned a lot
about each other, even though Bill and Eric have been together in a band for ten
years. The whole point is finding who you are and finding yourself, taking in
everything that happened and moving on. Because by the end of it, we felt so
many positive vibes and we wanted to put that into the record. There are loads
of big sing-alongs and choruses, and itÆs all because, when we were playing,
weÆd get that back from the crowds and it was so inspirational for us. It was a
wonderful feeling and we wanted to make sure that got put onto the record.ö
ôThe last record,ö says McCarthy, ôwas about cold, hard truth. Cold, hard fact.
There was nothing I could do to help any of the characters in the songs last
time. This time itÆs absolutely about having the ability to help all the
characters in the songs. ThereÆs an empowerment to it. If you wake up every day
and you have the best intentions and you carry yourself as someone who looks at
the glass as half-full and you try to be a good person. ItÆs very scary to be
defined as a tragic band. Not to say that the situation we did live through
wasnÆt worth anybodyÆs empathy, but thereÆs a lot of life left to live.
ôThis record,ö adds Sanderson, ôis kind of like the sequel that starts right
after the first movie ended. The last scene of the first movie is the first
scene of the sequel. The last record was very difficult and full of emotional
turmoil and struggle and pain. It was the band overcoming and working through
all these issues. But once weÆd dealt with the death and the break-up of our
band û and weÆd pretty much given up on the idea of becoming musicians because
the struggle for ten years was just too much û we released the record and it
actually worked. It started to pick up and connect with people and, after a
decade of being the underdog and struggling, we were suddenly touring all over
the world. We were standing in the place we always wanted to be, but realising
that itÆs not what we thought it was. When we started working on this record it
was called æNow You Are FreeÆ. Because when you invest all your time and heart
and passion into getting somewhere and overcoming obstacles and finding a sense
of peace and you finally get there, youÆre free to do whatever you want. WeÆre
free to finally prove ourselves to people and live life the way it should be.ö
That, if anything, is the crux of æAugustinesÆ. Through their friendship, their
music and all the fans who they touched with the tragedy of that first record,
theyÆve beaten off everything that life has thrown at them and emerged into the
bright light of day that outside the tunnel, free of the shackles that once
bound them and with a renewed sense of spirit and vitality.
ôAn artist once told me,ö McCarthy says, ôthat the streets of the world are
littered with talent that didnÆt go anywhere. IÆve had my back against that wall
many, many, many times. I think that having success really validated my life,
because I was someone who didnÆt go to college, I dropped out of high school and
I had a real problem with adults growing up. If I didnÆt get the nod that æWhat
you did is good, kidÆ, I might have just thought, æWell, I fucked my life up.Æö
He didnÆt. All you have to do is listen to æAugustinesÆ to know that. This is a
brand new beginning for the band, and they can rest assured, despite all the
trauma, trouble and tragedy experienced in their lives, that this part of the
journey is going in a much more positive direction.
ôThis was us moving on together,ö Allen beams. ôIt was wonderful to come through
the other end and record a new record. It was a huge accomplishment and it looks
towards a brighter future for us all.ö
This is just the beginning of that future û thereÆs at least a year of touring
on the horizon, so the walkabout is far from over. The trio are taking British
musician Al Hardiman, who plays most of the horns that can be heard on
æAugustinesÆ, along for the ride.
ôHeÆs a very talented artist who we have a strong connection with,ö explains
Sanderson. ôHeÆll play trombone and sing, and play keyboards as well. We
decided, with the nature of the music that we made on this record, that we
wanted someone else to come out for the journey with us, because the walkabout
hasnÆt stopped, now that weÆre learning to play these songs live. So as we go
out into America and Europe and the rest of the world, this idea of a walkabout,
of finding yourself, is going to carry on, and AlÆs going to be joining us, for
however long it lasts.ö