Chromatics Night Drive Zip

  1. Chromatics Night Drive Zip Code
  2. Chromatics Night Drive Zip Code 9
  3. Chromatics Night Drive Zip
  4. Chromatics Night Drive Zip Code

Disco is not dead. On the contrary, it is alive and well all over Night Drive, the newly released and hotly anticipated album from Portland's Chromatics (you might know them from their contributions to the After Dark compilation earlier this year or through their overlap with another great band, Glass Candy). This batch of songs is a departure from the band's prior noisy punk efforts. Chromatics turn the night into a woozy slow-mo disco ball twirl, and the titles say it all really: ‘Tomorrow Is So Far Away’, ‘Let’s Make This Moment A Moment To Remember’. The culmination is ‘Tick Of The Clock’, a quarter of an hour slowed almost to a stop.

Nearly unrecognizable as the work of the one-time punk rock outfit, Night Drive is effectively Chromatics' third debut album in a row, following a wholesale transformation in sound and style and yet another lineup change: Adam Miller is again the sole constant member; vocalist Ruth Radelet is a new addition even since the 2006 teaser Nite, replacing Lena Okazaki, while Glass Candy's Johnny Jewel, who produced that single, is now a full-fledged member. Actually, this seems to be Jewel's record more than anyone's -- in the silver-screen conceit of the liner notes he's listed as director to Miller's screenwriter, though he also has a writing credit on all the record's originals, only four of which (the vocal songs) Miller co-wrote -- indeed, Jewel is emerging as the primary musical force behind much of the Italians Do It Better label. Among that camp of synthesizer-disco revivalists, Chromatics stand out as the most lush and cinematic, drawing on the more languorous, atmospheric aspects of '80s electronica to fashion a hazy imaginary soundtrack to a stylish, decadent noir film (as the album's visual presentation suggests) or just a lonely late-night drive (as per the opening 'Telephone Call.') (One is reminded that Giorgio Moroder is almost as celebrated for his film work as his dancefloor material.) Sounding somehow stark and sensuous at the same time, the album evokes widescreen opulence with a sonic palette that extends beyond the bedrock of synths, guitars, and drum machines to include touches of organ, strings, flutes, and so on, but it's always used sparingly, rarely outstepping the group's meticulously minimal, carefully controlled arrangements. 'In the City,' a highlight of the After Dark label compilation (and centerpiece of the 'Shining Violence' 12') is unfortunately absent here, but its stark, hypnotic, after-hours vibe is echoed across the album, on beat-driven numbers like the eerie, unsettling title track and the relatively uptempo 'I Want Your Love' (whose insistent refrain, steady disco glide, and ice-pick guitar work make it the most plausibly danceable selection here, though it's hardly a party-starter), as well as moodier pieces like the gentle, resigned 'Tomorrow Is So Far Away' with its twinkling synths and mournful flutes, and the burned-out, utterly minimal, epic-length closer 'Tick of the Clock,' which rides a single, skeletal percussion-and-synth pulse for 15 minutes, letting up only for several minutes of unaccompanied organ drone in the middle. Jewel's compositions and production are certainly effective, and the arrangements, whether his or the band's, are undeniably tasteful, but Night Drive could have been a much more offputting, lonelier affair -- not that that would necessarily be a bad thing -- if it weren't for Radelet, whom liners rightly list as the album's star. She's not exactly overtly emotive, but there's enough warmth in her breathy voice to create a sense of palpable, relatable humanity, just enough to distinguish her from the glassy-eyed alienation of so many dark post-disco vocalists (Glass Candy's Ida No, for one.) That's crucial, especially, on the stirring Kate Bush cover 'Running Up That Hill' -- chalk it up to the unassailable songwriting, if you like, but it just might be the finest moment on a consistently engrossing record that, if it can't quite claim the title, is as distinctive and striking as a great debut.

Title/ComposerPerformerTimeStream
1 Chromatics 01:51 Amazon
2 Chromatics 03:43 Amazon
3 Chromatics 06:41 Amazon
4 Chromatics 06:07 Amazon
5 Chromatics 03:59 Amazon
6 Chromatics 03:54 Amazon
7 Chromatics 05:35 Amazon
8 Chromatics 07:06 Amazon
9 Chromatics 03:33 Amazon
10 Chromatics 15:45 Amazon
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Released on - 9 - 2007
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Chromatics night drive zip file
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Chromatics night drive zip
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Chromatics Night Drive Zip
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Chromatics Night Drive Zip Code

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Chromatics Night Drive Zip Code 9

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Night Drive (alternatively known as Original Motion Picture Soundtrack IV) is the third studio album by Chromatics, released on August 28, 2007 on the Italians Do It Better record label. The label reissued an analogue remaster of the album as a 'Deluxe Edition' in 2010, on both CD and double LP formats. A limited print run of the double LP was pressed on colored vinyl: blue for Sides A and B, and red for Sides C and D. The 'Deluxe Edition' restores five tracks that had originally constituted Side D of the album, but had been scrapped before the original 2007 release date due to technical problems and time constraints.With this album, Chromatics made a drastic departure from their previously punk sound, as they pursued a new direction reminiscent of Italo disco. It is the first full-length Chromatics album to feature singer Ruth Radelet and drummer Nat Walker. Guitarist Adam Miller and multi-instrumentalist Johnny Jewel had been featured on the band's previous LPs.

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Night Drive (album) , which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
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Chromatics Night Drive Zip

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Chromatics Night Drive Zip Code

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