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Ryan Adams - 1989 album flac

Ryan Adams - 1989 album flac Performer: Ryan Adams
Title: 1989
Style: Alternative Rock
Released: 2015
MP3 album: 1405 mb
FLAC album: 1255 mb
Rating: 4.9
Other formats: FLAC MP3 VOC ASF DTS AUD XM
Genre: Rock

1989 is the 15th studio album by American singer-songwriter Ryan Adams, released digitally through his own PAX AM record label on September 21, 2015. The album is a track-by-track cover of American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift's album of the same name. It debuted at number 7 on the US Billboard 200 chart, one position ahead of Swift's 1989, which was in its 48th week on the chart.

1989 (Ryan Adams album). 1989 is the fifteenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Ryan Adams, released digitally through his own PAX AM record label on September 21, 2015. The album is a track-by-track cover of Taylor Swift's album of the same name Contents. Ryan Adams is one of the artists who shaped my songwriting. When I first heard that Ryan was going to be covering my entire album, I couldn’t believe it. It’s such an honor that he would want to take my stories and lyrics and give them a new life.

What’s most impressive about Adams’ 1989 is the experienced troubadour’s eye and ear with which he brings out the material’s underlying strengths, finding melancholy currents lurking beneath supposedly upbeat, celebratory songs.

Shop Vinyl and CDs and complete your Ryan Adams collection. I shake my fist at you, Barnes and Noble!!

Ryan Adams' cover of Taylor Swift's 1989 is a lot of fun to think about and talk about, but not much fun to listen to. It is, in other words, a pure product of the Internet. a run-of-the-mill Ryan Adams album

Ryan Adams brought this up in a recent interview when discussing his decision to cover 1989 in its entirety. When I played these songs on acoustic guitar, he told Rolling Stone, they sounded like all the other songs I knew of hers before. You can tell she built the record in the same way. She just re-contextualized them. When reading that quote, it’s understandable why so many critics have praised Adams for exposing how great Swift’s songs actually are, for stripping them down and supposedly revealing an emotional core in her writing that many believed wasn’t there. Either way, the refusal to stick to one gender only adds to 1989‘s ubiquitous strength, making it less an album applicable to specific male/female relationships and more about relationships in general. After all, both Swift and Adams are populists, and what’s more populist than romantic longing or a broken heart?

Sometime in August 2015, Ryan Adams let everybody in on a secret: he'd decided to cover Taylor Swift's 1989 in total. This was not the first album-length cover of Adams' career (he never released his version of the Strokes' Is This It), nor was this his first attempt at 1989.

Last Christmas, Ryan Adams was, in his words, a little lost. He’d wrapped up one leg of a tour supporting his self-titled album, and he and his wife Mandy Moore had just separated. I had gone through some life changes, and it would be the first Christmas and New Year’s I’d spend by myself in over five years, he recalls. And I thought, ‘What the fuck am I going to do?' Chilling out on his tour bus, Adams would read or fixate on the same album so many others were obsessing over at the time, Taylor Swift’s 1989.