Artist: Fugees | Album: The Score | Released: 1996, 2016 | Genre: Hip-Hop
Artist: Fugees | Album: The Score | Released: 1996, 2016 | Genre: Hip-Hop
320 kbps | 77 MB | LINKS
unday Morning with Nat Stuckey & Connie Smith is the second and final collaboration album between American country music artists, Nat Stuckey and Connie Smith. The album was released in January 1970 by RCA Records and was produced by Bob Ferguson and Felton Jarvis. The album was a collection of Gospel songs.Sunday Morning consisted of eleven tracks of Gospel material all performed as duets between Stuckey and Smith. The album includes cover versions of Johnny Cash’s “Daddy Sang Bass,” as well as “If God Is Dead (Then Who’s This Living in My Soul).” It was recorded at the RCA Studios in Nashville Tennessee in late 1969, four months before its official release the following year.
320 kbps | 89 MB | LINKS
Tracks:
01. Lucille
02. Right Wing Date Night
03. Throw Away Your Bible
04. Lonely Ranger
05. The Tall Oak and the Weeping Willow
06. Elementary Particles
07. A Very Strange Individual
08. Clandestine
09. The Whispering Tree
10. All That’s Mine Is Yours
11. Let Mama Sleep
160 kbps | 87 MB | LINKS
Death Cab for Cutie have spent the last two decades as one of the premiere American pop/rock bands. Fueled by the poetically earnest lyrics and characteristically endearing singing of frontman Ben Gibbard, their earliest collections built a solid foundation for what would become dual peak performances—and two of the best LPs of the decade—with 2003’s Transatlanticism and 2005’s Plans. Since then—and despite upholding their indie charm after years on Atlantic Records—they’ve released three very good, but not equally great or consistent, albums.
On their ninth outing, Thank You for Today, they continue that trend. While a bit subtler and dreamier than 2015’s Kintsugi, the record generally feels very much like an extension of that sound and spirit, making it another safe but enjoyable work that maintains their idiosyncratic recipe. In other words, the full-length doesn’t offer anything markedly fresh or startling, yet it once again reveals why Death Cab for Cutie are kings of the style.
Thank You for Today marks the quintet’s first studio effort without guitarist Chris Walla (who left in 2014 and was replaced by guitarists/keyboardists Dave Depper and Zac Rae). Aptly described (in the press release) as both “beautiful and dynamic” and “darkly anthemic and bittersweet”, the ten-track set captures Gibbard at his most “inward” and “personal”. Specifically, he “weaves a thread throughout [it] about how interconnected geography is with memory, and how hard it can be to hold onto places, and to people, too”.