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Archive - Controlling Crowds album flac

Archive - Controlling Crowds album flac Performer: Archive
Title: Controlling Crowds
Style: Downtempo, Trip Hop, Indie Rock
Released: 2009
Country: France
MP3 album: 1244 mb
FLAC album: 1283 mb
Rating: 4.8
Other formats: XM AAC MP3 AC3 MP1 ASF MP4
Genre: Electronic / Rock

Album Controlling Crowds. Controlling Crowds Lyrics

Controlling Crowds (Parts I-III) - Archive. Открывайте новую музыку каждый день. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. Миллионы композиций бесплатно и в хорошем качестве. Controlling Crowds (Parts I-III). Исполнитель: Archive.

Controlling Crowds is a music studio album recording by ARCHIVE (Crossover Prog/Progressive Rock) released in 2009 on cd, lp, vinyl and/or cassette.

Listen free to Archive – Controlling Crowds (Controlling Crowds, Bullets and more). Controlling Crowds is the 8th studio album released by Archive, being released in Europe on March 29th 2009. The album was played in its entirety through Myspace. Rosko John, who did the rap vocals on the first album Londinuim, appears on tracks Quiet Time,Bastardised Ink and Razed To The Ground, and Graham Preskett, who already worked with Archive on the Michel vaillant soundtrack, collaborates once again with Archive in Controlling Crowds. The main theme of the album is the human obsession.

Archive continued their "Controlling Crowds" tour, having already sold out some fifty concerts from September 2009 - February 2010, up to and extensively for the 2010 Summer Festival Season. With Us Until You're Dead. Archive have worked on their eighth studio album (excluding Michel Vaillant) in London and Paris; under new management, having finished their deal with Warner Music - This has enlivened hopes in their home country of an official release at last. Demos and Tracks from the Archives (2010). Demos and Tracks from the Archives 2 (2012).

Controlling Crowds (Parts I-III) is the sixth studio album by British trip hop progressive and alternative group Archive. It was released worldwide on March 30, 2009. The album consists of three different parts: Part I: Controlling Crowds ; Bullets; Words on Signs; Dangervisit; Quiet Time. Part II: Collapse, Collide; Clones; Bastardised Ink; Kings of Speed; Whore. Part III: Chaos; Razed to the Ground; Funeral.

Archive Controlling Crowds lyrics: Why are you so scared and creeping around,, taking photographs all ov. .Album: Controlling Crowds (2009). A A. Controlling Crowds. Why are you so scared and creeping around, taking photographs all over town

Tracklist Hide Credits

Part I
1 Controlling Crowds
Written-By – Danny Griffiths, Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Pollard Berrier
10:01
2 Bullets
Written-By – Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Pollard Berrier
5:33
3 Words On Signs
Written-By – Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Dave Pen*
3:59
4 Dangervisit
Written-By – Danny Griffiths, Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Pollard Berrier
7:37
5 Quiet Time
Written-By – Danny Griffiths, Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Pollard Berrier, Rosko John
5:53
Part II
6 Collapse / Collide
Vocals – Maria QWritten-By – Darius Keeler
9:12
7 Clones
Written-By – Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Pollard Berrier
5:00
8 Bastardised Ink
Vocals – Maria QWritten-By – Danny Griffiths, Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Rosko John
3:34
9 Kings Of Speed
Written-By – Darius Keeler, Pollard BerrierWritten-By, Vocals – Dave Pen*
4:22
10 Whore
Vocals – Maria QWritten-By – Danny Griffiths
4:15
Part III
11 Chaos
Vocals – Pollard BerrierWritten-By – Darius Keeler
5:28
12 Razed To The Ground
Written-By – Danny Griffiths, Darius KeelerWritten-By, Vocals – Rosko John
5:22
13 Funeral
Vocals – Pollard BerrierWritten-By – Danny Griffiths, Darius Keeler, Steve Harris
7:19

Companies, etc.

  • Pressed By – Warner Music UK Ltd.

Credits

  • Artwork By – Hello Charlie
  • Mixed By – Jerome Devoise*
  • Producer – Archive, Jerome Devoise*

Notes

(P) 2009 Archive; the copyright in this sound recording is owned by Archive under exclusive licence to Warner Music France, a Warner Music Group company.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 0825646922840
  • Matrix / Runout (Variant 1, 2, 3): [Warner logo] 256469228-4 V01 JYP
  • Mastering SID Code (Variant 1, 2, 3): IFPI L016
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 1): IFPI 052S
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 2): IFPI 053Z
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 3): IFPI 05R3

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
2564691136 Archive Controlling Crowds ‎(Box, Ltd + 2xCD, Album + 7", Ltd) Warner Music France 2564691136 France 2009
none Archive Controlling Crowds ‎(CDr, Album, Promo) Not On Label none Europe 2009
PRO16718 Archive Controlling Crowds ‎(CDr, Album, Promo, Wat) Warner Music France PRO16718 France 2009
2564692283 Archive Controlling Crowds ‎(CD, Album + CD, Enh + Ltd) Warner Music France 2564692283 France 2009


Comments: (3)
Bukelv
Good news! Archive recently confirmed that they were working on getting this, Controlling Crowds Part Four, and Lights put on vinyl. It almost certainly isn't happening this year, but likely sometime during the 2020s. You can hear them talk about it a couple minutes into their latest livestream. https://www.facebook.com/ArchiveOfficial/ .
Cheber
After flirting with indie-rock and polished pop-rock in the mid-'00s with mixed results, Archive spent three years refining and rediscovering their creativity, including reuniting with Rosko John, whose rapping was last heard on the band's debut album over ten years previously. The result is a four-part dystopian concept album, the first three parts of which are found on the first Controlling Crowds album.Archive always seem to work best after a bit of a creative shake-up, and the huge leap in scale from the somewhat pedestrian Lights has lead to what is probably the group's best album since 1996's Londinium. The darker, gritty sound fits the band like a glove, and is a joy to behold here. With a heavier emphasis on electronics than the past few albums, particularly in the rhythm section, Archive's core duo really get chance to show off their creativity here. With help from co-producer Jerome Devoise, they piece together a tapestry of sound that combines elements of trip-hop, ambient, post-rock and industrial. This harder-edged sound provides a doom-laden backdrop for the bleak and dramatic songs on display here.Pollard Berrier and Dave Pen front the majority of songs again, and both put in dramatically improved performances and compositions from those found on Lights. If Berrier is still fond of sticking to just one or two notes at times, there are enough beautiful chord changes in the backing this time to compensate. Both singers channel a lot more personality this time, with Berrier putting in a fittingly tense performance on the stunning string-laden single 'Bullets'; Pen's slightly gruffer vocal chords sit brilliantly atop the haunting post-rock chugger 'Kings of Speed'. All three songs that spotlight Rosko John are excellent. His rapping shares centre-stage with a beautifully understated performance from Berrier on the heartbreaking 'Quiet Time', while the industrial-tinged 'Razed to Ground' is probably the most brutal sounding piece in the band's catalogue to date. His style is happily unchanged since we last heard him on an Archive record, and the anger and energy in his lyrics and performance fit the dystopian record perfectly.Maria Q gets two songs this time, and one - 'Collapse / Collide' - is quite clearly the strongest here, and must go down as one of the band's classics. At nearly ten minutes long, the track works up from near silence - simply the sound of the album's titular crowds - through Maria's whispered vocals, to a synth- and string-soaked climax, headed by the passionate refrain 'they rejected / they reject our hearts'. It's one of the most overtly dramatic and emotional moments the band have produced, and a better centrepiece could not be wished for. The song itself morphs into a euphoric coda in the form of Berrier's 'Clones'. Maria Q's other lead vocal is on the bluesy 'Whore', which, other than some fine production touches at the end, would fit in considerably better on one of the group's poppier albums. It's a shame the song is done a disservice here, as it shows off Q's soulful voice well.These are merely highlights: in truth, there is not a single song I dislike on the album. Yes, 'Whore' is out of place, 'Dangervisit' is a touch overlong, and it would be nice to have a song or two more by Dave Pen. But these are all small points, really. Against the odds, Archive manage to fill the best part of 80 minutes with the most beautiful, dramatic, and possibly the most satisfying music of their career to date. A superb album.
Moswyn
Undoubtedly one of the best albums of the 2000s. The intro is outstanding!