world.thomson-multimedia
» » The Dear Hunter - Act I: The Lake South, The River North

The Dear Hunter - Act I: The Lake South, The River North album flac

The Dear Hunter - Act I: The Lake South, The River North album flac Performer: The Dear Hunter
Title: Act I: The Lake South, The River North
Style: Alternative Rock, Prog Rock
Released: 2014
Country: US
MP3 album: 1510 mb
FLAC album: 1953 mb
Rating: 4.2
Other formats: AAC MP2 APE ADX WMA DXD VOC
Genre: Rock

Act I: The Lake South, the River North is the debut studio album by The Dear Hunter. It was released on September 26, 2006 on Triple Crown Records. It was mixed by Claude Zdanow. The album is the first part of a six-act story. Act I is about the conception, birth, and childhood of the main character-known only as The Dear Hunter or "The Boy"-to a prostitute named Ms. Terri. All tracks written by Casey Crescenzo. Casey Crescenzo – vocals, guitar, bass, keyboards, production. Nick Crescenzo – drums.

About Act I: The Lake South, The River North 1 contributor. 1. Slumbering Pierrot. The first record in a multi-album progressive rock opera that details the life of a boy born of unusual circumstances who comes into conflict with a two-faced, sinister charlatan. Features music written, arranged, and performed by Casey Crescenzo. Tap and hold to copy URL. Act I: The Lake South, The River North Tracklist. This instrumental track introduces the musical themes and leitmotifs that represent the boy Hunter and his home, The Lake. 3. City Escape Lyrics.

4. The Inquiry of Ms. 6. The Pimp and the Priest. 7. His Hands Matched His Tongue. Anderen Alben von The Dear Hunter. Act V: Hymns with the Devil in Confessional.

The Dear Hunter lyrics - 138 song lyrics sorted by album, including "The Most Cursed Of Hands, Who Am I", "The Bitter Suite IV And V: The Congregation And The Sermon In The Silt", "The Kiss Of Life". album: "Act I: The Lake South, The River North" (2006). Battesimo Del Fuoco City Escape The Inquiry Of Ms. Terri 1878 The Pimp & The Priest His Hands Matched His Tongue. album: "Act II: The Meaning Of, & All Things Regarding Ms. Leading" (2007).

A new version of Last. Act I: The Lake South, The River North. Overview (current section).

Album by The Dear Hunter. The Pimp & The Priest.

The Dear Hunter’s Act I is truly a modern epic. In the tradition of ancient bards and George Lucas, the 21st century Punk band weave a fascinating tale of perilous escape on their debut recording, an 8 track concept EP. The lyrics tell of the terrifying flee of a central group of characters, through what appears to be a high security death camp of some sort (or it could just be another album about a breakup. Throughout the first half of the album the band goes from Post-Hardcore to Classical, to electronica and back. Its hard to tell when the album will sound like the Ragtime meets At the Drive-In choruses of The Inquiry of Ms. Terri to the organic, heavily cinematic Panic! covers Bjork verses of 1878. The one thing that stays true through the entire album is the lack of unrecognizable sounds (despite how randomly they are placed) and the fact that many a song goes on a bit too long.

Tracklist: 1. Battesimo Del Fuoco, 2. The Lake South, 3. City Escape, 4. Terri, 5. 1878, 6. The Pimp And The Priest, 7. His Hands Matched His Tongue, 8. The River North. Battesimo Del Fuoco. 4.

More by The Dear Hunter. Act IV: Rebirth in Reprise. The Color Spectrum: The Complete Collection. More The Dear Hunter. Listen to Act I: The Lake South, The River North now. Listen to Act I: The Lake South, The River North in full in the this site app. Play on this site.

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 Battesimo Del Fuoco
A2 The Lake South
A3 City Escape
A4 The Inquiry Of Ms. Terri
B1 1878
Vocals – Dan Nigro
B2 The Pimp And The Priest
B3 His Hands Matched His Tongue
B4 The River North

Companies, etc.

  • Copyright (c) – Triple Crown Records
  • Pressed By – GZ Digital Media – 114666E

Credits

  • Drums – Nick Crescenzo
  • Layout, Design – Casey Crescenzo
  • Music By, Lyrics By – Casey Crescenzo
  • Organ – Phil Crescenzo
  • Photography By – Cassie Crescenzo*
  • Producer, Engineer, Mixed By, Mastered By – Casey Crescenzo
  • Trombone – Andrew Borstein
  • Trumpet – Tom Neeson
  • Trumpet, French Horn – Ryan Muir
  • Vocals – Judy Crescenzo
  • Vocals, Guitar, Bass, Piano, Organ, Percussion, Drum Programming – Casey Crescenzo

Notes

Standard reissue on black vinyl with printed inner sleeve.

© 2006 Triple Crown Records

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (A Side): 114666E1/A
  • Matrix / Runout (B Side): 114666E2/A
  • Barcode: 6 46920 30691 6

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
03069-2 The Dear Hunter Act I: The Lake South, The River North ‎(CD, Album) Triple Crown Records 03069-2 US 2006
114666E The Dear Hunter Act I: The Lake South, The River North ‎(LP, Ltd, RE, 180) Triple Crown Records 114666E US 2014
Comments: (2)
Jerdodov
I've struggled with this album a lot, since it is arguably the "rawest" and least melodic one of the Acts. If you like it or not may actually depend on whether you want to view this album as a standalone piece that has no predecessor (apart from some demos), or if you want to put it into the overarching storyline and compare it against the musical finesse of the other acts.In itself, it is an interesting and engaging piece of music. The storyline (as far as there is an actual "line") is compelling, the characters described instantly draw me into the tale that is about to unfold. There is quite a bit of variety, but ultimately this 38 minute journey fails to deliver a lot of range. The production quality is not as high as on the other acts (in fact, there are entire worlds between Acts I and V!), which makes sense considering that Casey (the "brain" behind TDH) recorded most of the music by himself, without much studio backup. The best way to describe this album would be that it shows promise. And this promise is being held in the Acts to come. The other Acts bring more story, more range and a lot better production quality. In that sense, it is the weakest of the Acts. But with each new album being released, the first Act gains more and more meaning on the story side. Countless musical and lyrical motifs appear and the payoff is monumental when you consider the amount of "easter-eggs" that have been neatly planted between the innocent lyrics of the first Act. In that sense it once again regains a lot of meaning and power.Nonetheless it remains the weakest album of The Dear Hunter's Act series. But being the worst out of a set of great works of art is maybe not that bad!
Browelali
Some surface noise on my new copy, but it's not overpowering. Cheap pressing, not surprising considering the price. Worth the money, but don't expect this to be a case of "sounding much better on vinyl".