Fulltvseasons,plentyoftorrents











Location : Home » Music » Misc » Eat Skull - Wild and Inside [2009] (mp3)

Eat Skull - Wild and Inside [2009] (mp3)

direct download[ Download options ] alternative direct download for Eat Skull - Wild and Inside [2009] (mp3) from usenet with usenext client 5x faster.
Usenet was created before the internet and consists of more than 60000 boards for discussions (newsgroups).
Opinions are exchanged in these boards.There is nothing you won't find there... or download torrent.
Before download check the report, the internal files and the comments of this torrent.

Your report is useful for the torrents's community
Torrent report :    Fake file (0)    Password (0)    Bad quality (0)    Virus (0)    Real torrent (0)


Download this torrent or use Magnet Link     Add to your bookmarks
Eat Skull - Wild and Inside [2009] (mp3).torrent
↓ Alternative Direct Download *FREE 5x FASTER*. Click here to download the usenext client.






Secure download hide your personal activity while downloading torrents with torrent privacy
To Download From Site You Will Need Bittorrent Software Installed.Get It Here: Visit BitRoll
Category : Music » Misc
Added : 22 weeks ago
Size : 62.21 MB
Seeds : 7
Peers : 0
Hash : 65042ed3918e86676a994b4e24bec7c4ebb26ac0
Tags : Skull Wild Inside




Useful links
Find torrents directly from your browser. Download the BTscene toolbar

We recommend you to check this torrent on torrentspam: Check by hash code




Torrent description

Portland-based Eat Skull debuted in 2008 with Sick to Death, a noise-pop record heavy on noise and light on pop, scuzzier and more feedback-driven than just about anything else that could be grouped into its subgenre. Over the past year, noise-pop has seen a vast resurgence, growing in popularity in ways most of us didn't anticipate. And with so many of this year's most talked-about artists (Wavves, the Pains of Being Pure at Heart, and others) adding varying degrees of murk to pop melodies, it's getting harder to separate the wheat from the chaff. Though they've toned down their approach ever so slightly with sophomore LP Wild and Inside, Eat Skull remains the scuzziest of all, and shows us here why they're still one of the most intriguing acts operating in this style.



To say that Wild and Inside sounds "clean" would be a stretch, but what's immediately noticeable here is the album's lack of excessive noise, the squeals and screeches that dominated so much of Sick to Death. Eat Skull (and frontman Rob Enbom, in particular) seem to have matured as songwriters and they're more capable of using noise as a tool, another instrument, rather than relying on it as the sole foundation for their material. That much is clear on the record's decidedly poppy front- and back-ends. Stellar opener "Stick to the Formula" and neighboring "Heaven's Stranger" strike a fine balance between 1960s garage-rock and the sugariness of early Flying Nun acts the Clean and the Chills, adding a uniquely crusty, folksier quality that lends the songs distinctiveness.



This shift towards pop (and again, that's a relative term here) gives the band more room to breathe. It lets them tinker with other styles, too, and most of this experimenting takes place in the record's quirky midsection. Eat Skull daringly ventures into a stretch of haunted Americana here and manages to pull it off; they wind up sounding like a spookier version of fellow lo-fi crusties Woods-- not a bad thing. Unexpected detours really open up on third or fourth listen (Wild and Inside is undoubtedly a grower); tracks such as the funereal "Talkin' Bro in the Wall Blues" display a welcome adventurousness not found on Sick to Death. Similarly surprising (and appealing) is the ominous coastal instrumental "Surfing the Stairs" and "Happy Submarine", which plays like a psych-garage reimagining of Grouper's from-the-bottom-of-a-well shoegaze.



Just a few patches of Wild and Inside aren't as successful. It's hard to imagine many folks loving the minimal dirge "You're With a Thing", which subsists mostly on a simple drum-machine beat and organ squelches. And other times Eat Skull's penchant for quirkiness borders on kitsch, like on "Cooking Our Way to Be Happy", a track about, well, cooking. (A cute song, sure, but lacking the staying power of catchy late-album standouts "Dawn in the Face" and "Oregon Dreaming".) Such lapses are few and far between, though, and shouldn't spoil much one's enjoyment of the album. The real question, I suppose, is whether or not listeners will give this record the room it needs to develop, or if kids new to this wave of noise-pop will make the jump to Eat Skull's much weirder sub-strain. It's hard to say: We Twitter-era fans are generally a pretty fatigued and impatient bunch. Those who do carve out some time for Wild and Inside, though, are likely in for a treat.



— Joe Colly, May 26, 2009




Top searches
iphone spyware doctor zombieland the dark knight dragonball evolution twilight ray the ugly truth psych magic iso maker klaxxon family guy paranormal activity 2009 dexter live in naked astro boy inglorious basterds harry potter the transporter 3 x factor software kung fu panda dvdrip 2009 fr akon hd monk wanted fantastic mr fox ????????seed? ???