Tom Eyre - I See You album flac
Performer: Tom EyreTitle: I See You
Style: Tech House
Released: 2009
MP3 album: 1511 mb
FLAC album: 1334 mb
Rating: 4.6
Other formats: WMA FLAC TTA AU APE MP4 XM
Genre: Electronic
I See You is the 13th studio album by Gong, released on November 10, 2014. I See You is the last Gong album recorded with co-founder Daevid Allen before his death on 13 March 2015. I See You was engineered, mixed and produced by Orlando Monday Allen (Daevid Allen's son) at Flamedog Records Studios and at the Bananamoon Observatory Studios in New South Wales, Australia, with additional production by Dave Sturt and Daevid Allen.
I See You is the third studio album by English indie pop band the xx. It was released on 13 January 2017 by the Young Turks record label. It is the band's first release in more than four years, following their 2012 album Coexist. The xx began recording I See You in 2014 at Marfa Recording Co. in Marfa, Texas, and were assisted by producer Rodaidh McDonald. According to the band, they had a more progressive, wide-ranging musical concept in mind, compared to their previous two albums.
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Edward Fairfax Rochester: I wish at times I were a trifle better adapted to match with her, externally. Q: Who else has played Jane Eyre on screen?
Given the half decade between that album and I See You, change wasn't just necessary, it was inevitable.
Four years after releasing their sophomore album, Coexist, the xx have announced their highly anticipated follow-up I See You, out January 13, 2017 via Young Turks. The album, produced by Jamie xx and Rodaidh McDonald, was recorded between March 2014 and August 2016 in New York, Marfa, TX, Reykjavik, Los Angeles, and London. Check out the cover and tracklist below. The box set comes with three bonus tracks. The band preceded the album with several mysterious snippets of new music, introduced through a playlist of songs they were listening to in the studio.
I See You, the third album by the xx, attempts to incorporate everyone’s talents into a new version of their sound, one true to their roots but richer and more varied. About a third of the album works with stripped-down, open arrangements like this, while others make judicious use of samples and layers of synths and sequencers. Dangerous opens the album with a startling blast of a horns that returns on the chorus as a counterpoint melody. A Violent Noise has a winding and surging cluster of arpeggiating notes that explode at all the right moments-something of a Jamie xx trademark-and the production brilliantly traces the emotional arc of the song
On ‘I See You’ we meet a new tactile version of The xx. They’re relaxed, warm, joyful even. They admit it themselves: I really enjoyed not feeling so clenched, says Romy about the process. And you can feel it from the first euphoric note on ‘Dangerous’. A blast of synthetic horns gives way to a Burial-esque beat and Oli Sim and Romy harmonising on a shuffling chorus straight from a ’90s garage rave, You are dangerous but I don’t care/I’m going to pretend that I’m not scared. The vibrancy continues. Say Something’ is lush and glowing.
The xx's latest album is 'I See Yo. For a band that often gets described as minimal, the xx pack a massive amount of drama and emotion into their subtle music. trio specialize in Zen restraint, blurring the line between indie guitar pop, R&B and dance music in stripped-down songs that are as sleek and eerie as they are weirdly inviting.






