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Joyce Manor - Million Dollars To Kill Me album flac

Joyce Manor - Million Dollars To Kill Me album flac Performer: Joyce Manor
Title: Million Dollars To Kill Me
Style: Pop Punk, Indie Rock
Released: 2018
MP3 album: 1379 mb
FLAC album: 1114 mb
Rating: 4.6
Other formats: VQF APE AIFF AA ASF MP4 AAC
Genre: Rock

Million Dollars to Kill Me by Joyce Manor, released 21 September 2018 1. Fighting Kangaroo 2. Think I'm Still In Love With You 3. Big Lie 4. I'm Not The One 5. Million Dollars To Kill Me 6. Silly Games 7. Friends We Met Online 8. Up The Punx 9. Gone Tomorrow 10. Wildflowers. All songs written by Joyce Manor except Fighting Kangaroo, Silly Games, Friends We Met Online, and Wildflowers by Joyce Manor and Rory Allen Phillips. Tracks 1 - 9 Produced and Engineered by Kurt Ballou and assistant engineer Robert Cheeseman

Joyce Manor debuted this song during their Fall 2017 tour. A fan video surfaced from their Orlando, FL show on November 2, 2017 where Barry announced it as One Million Dollars To Kill Me. These early performances seemed to have a slightly different lyric in the second verse from the final version. The official song and lyric video dropped on July 18, 2018, along with the announcement that this is the title track of their upcoming fifth album, due out September 21, 2018 on Epitaph Records. Million Dollars To Kill Me" Track Info. Written By Barry Johnson (Joyce Manor).

Cody is the fourth studio album by American punk rock band Joyce Manor, released on 7 October 2016 through Epitaph Records. Cody marks Joyce Manor's first studio release with drummer Jeff Enzor, who had replaced Kurt Walcher. The album was produced by Rob Schnapf, who had previously worked with Elliott Smith and Guided by Voices. Music videos were produced for the songs "Fake . and "Last You Heard Of Me".

Joyce Manor die!" That's the narrative around Million Dollars to Kill Me, the new album out Friday (Sept. 21) from Torrance, CA's finest rock quartet, as proclaimed by frontman Barry Johnson to Billboard from a hotel roof in downtown Manhattan. Not really: The band's not breaking up, nor are they prophesying their own demise. But it's hard for the now-veteran band to pin down another easily summarized hook for their fifth LP. "Cody was the 'Joyce Manor grow up' record," says bassist Matt Ebert of the group's 2016 album, their most recent.

Joyce Manor may still be finding their footing in this more mainstream rock field, but there's a lot to like on Million Dollars to Kill Me, indicating that they're moving in the right direction. There remains something endearing about Million Dollars To Kill Me, a certain bonhomie, a familiarity like a good pair of slippers or your Mum’s homemade shepherds pie recipe.

Altri album di Joyce Manor. only publishes for promotional use and/or for press use images, as delivered and/or authorized by record labels, press offices, promotional agencies; only resorts to degraded images as part of its information feed.

If there’s one aspect of Joyce Manor that suffers during Million Dollars, it’s Johnson’s writing. In the past, he’s often been inscrutable even at his most emotional, but the impact was there. Here, though, he sometimes dips too deeply into purple territory, singing My friend Tommy, he does origami/Forever in the morning shade during Gone Tomorrow and exclaiming Broke-a-hontas, orange eating/Talk like that, now who’s screaming near the end of the peppy Up the Punx. Their willingness to expand the subtleties of their sound makes Million Dollars to Kill Me an enthralling listen, even at its lowest points.

Joyce Manor's most pop-centric music yet. Joyce Manor Million Dollars To Kill Me cover art California indie-punk band Joyce Manor are back with their fifth studio album, Million Dollars To Kill Me. While their mixture of crunchy guitar rhythms and catchy choruses are pres. The evolution of Joyce Manor's sound began on their 2014 album, Never Hungover Again. The following album, Cody, moved the band even farther from their punk beginnings with a more light-hearted pop-rock sound. Million Dollars To Kill Me continues the trend. While the distortion and hallmark brevity are present (only 4 songs reach the two and a half minute mark), lyricist and vocalist Barry Johnson's voice is noticeably sounding more clean and sweet than ever before.

Tracklist

A1 Fighting Kangaroo
A2 Think I'm Still In Love With You
A3 Big Lie
A4 I'm Not The One
A5 Million Dollars To Kill Me
B6 Silly Games
B7 Friends We Met Online
B8 Up The Punx
B9 Gone Tomorrow
B10 Wildflowers

Credits

  • Design, Layout – Scott Arnold
  • Engineer – Robert Cheeseman (tracks: A1 - B9)
  • Mastered By – Eric Boulanger
  • Mixed By – Andrew Scheps
  • Photography By – Hans White
  • Producer – Rory Phillips (tracks: B10)
  • Producer [Vocal Production] – Mike Bardzik
  • Producer, Engineer – Kurt Ballou (tracks: A1 - B9)
  • Recorded By [Additional Recording] – Brett Gurewitz, Peter Novoa, Rory Phillips
  • Written-By – Joyce Manor (tracks: A1 - B10), Rory Phillips (tracks: A1, B6, B7, B10)

Notes

Contains printed inner sleeve with lyrics and credits.

Sequentially listed tracks, regardless of sides.

Pressing plant identified by matrix.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 045778762293

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
7622-1 Joyce Manor Million Dollars To Kill Me ‎(LP, Album) Epitaph 7622-1 Europe 2018
87622-2 Joyce Manor Million Dollars To Kill Me ‎(CD, Album, dig) Epitaph 87622-2 US 2018
7622-2 Joyce Manor Million Dollars To Kill Me ‎(CD, Album, dig) Epitaph 7622-2 Europe 2018
7622-1 Joyce Manor Million Dollars To Kill Me ‎(LP, Album, Red) Epitaph 7622-1 US 2018
87622-1 Joyce Manor Million Dollars To Kill Me ‎(LP, Album, Opa) Epitaph 87622-1 US 2018