Bat For Lashes Lost Girls

Bat For Lashes - Lost Girls (2019)  Music

Posted by Domestos at Sept. 25, 2019
Bat For Lashes - Lost Girls (2019)

Bat For Lashes - Lost Girls (2019)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue, log) ~ 250.70 Mb | 38:28 | Cover
Indie Pop, Dreampop | Label: AWAL Recordings - BATFL01CD

Lost Girls is another brilliant full-length in Khan's incredible, acclaimed discography, mixing sounds she's always loved - heavy bass lines, synth arpeggios, Iranian pop beats, cascading choruses - with some of her finest songwriting to date. It's an album full of romance, a homage to Los Angeles where the album was recorded, to being a kid in the 80's, to films that touched and changed her life.

Bat for Lashes - Lost Girls (2019)  Music

Posted by delpotro at Sept. 2, 2019
Bat for Lashes - Lost Girls (2019)

Bat for Lashes - Lost Girls (2019)
CD FLAC (tracks) - 242 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 88 Mb | 00:38:26
Indie Pop, Art Pop, Female Vocal | Label: AWAL Recordings

Bat For Lashes - aka Natasha Khan - releases her fifth studio album, entitled Lost Girls. Lost Girls is another brilliant full-length in Khan’s incredible, acclaimed discography, mixing sounds she’s always loved - heavy bass lines, synth arpeggios, Iranian pop beats, cascading choruses - with some of her finest songwriting to date. It’s an album full of romance, an homage to Los Angeles, to being a kid in the 80’s, to films that touched and changed her life. Spanning 10 tracks, Lost Girls sees Khan dreaming up her own fully formed parallel universe, creating an off-kilter coming of age film in which gangs of marauding female bikers roam our streets, teenagers make out on car hoods and a powerful female energy casts spells and leave clues for us to follow.

Scott Walker - Scott 1-4 (1967-1969) 4CDs, Remastered 2000  Music

Posted by Designol at May 21, 2024
Scott Walker - Scott 1-4 (1967-1969) 4CDs, Remastered 2000

Scott Walker - Scott 1-4 (1967-1969) 4CD [Remastered 2000]
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 1 Gb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 480 Mb | Scans included
AM Pop, Baroque Pop, Chanson, Pop/Rock | Label: Fontana | Time: 02:34:08

One of the most enigmatic figures in rock history, Scott Walker was known as Scotty Engel when he cut obscure flop records in the late '50s and early '60s in the teen idol vein. He then hooked up with John Maus and Gary Leeds to form the Walker Brothers. They weren't named Walker, they weren't brothers, and they weren't English, but they nevertheless became a part of the British Invasion after moving to the U.K. in 1965. They enjoyed a couple of years of massive success there (and a couple of hits in the U.S.) in a Righteous Brothers vein. As their full-throated lead singer and principal songwriter, Walker was the dominant artistic force in the group, who split in 1967. While remaining virtually unknown in his homeland, Walker launched a hugely successful solo career in Britain with a unique blend of orchestrated, almost MOR arrangements with idiosyncratic and morose lyrics. At the height of psychedelia, Walker openly looked to crooners like Sinatra, Jack Jones, and Tony Bennett for inspiration, and to Jacques Brel for much of his material. None of those balladeers, however, would have sung about the oddball subjects – prostitutes, transvestites, suicidal brooders, plagues, and Joseph Stalin – that populated Walker's songs.