Size: unknown
Location: other fileshare
Description: Tags: alt-country, folk, Possessed by Paul James
Gothic folk pervading 2010′s Feed the Family shows up only occasionally on There Will Be Nights When I’m Lonely . Instead, the fourth album from Possessed by Paul James , the spirited musical moniker of Konrad Wert, finds him using Austin musicians: Lloyd Maines provides steel to the serene “Back Down Here on Earth” and honky-tonk counterpart “38 Year Old Cocktail Waitress”; harpist Walter Daniels blows on the slinky, dobro-riddled “Dragons”; and members of East Cameron Folkcore (“Songs We Used to Sing”) and the Weary Boys play pivotal roles. The results are a collection far more profound that the last. That’s evident from LP opener “Hurricane,” an anthem about the inspiration Wert gleans from his special education schoolchildren that gusts like a storm front.
320 kbps | 126 MB | UL | TB | MC ** FLAC
Those looking for Family ‘s stripped sound should queue up “Heavy” and album closer “Pills Beneath Her Pillow,” a survey of depression and loneliness Wert backs with a slow guitar. The latter of those two themes gets an altered look on the album’s title track – fronted by a rousing, minute-long violin overture – as Wert sings, “Please know that I will always love you and these pictures in my mind” over his delicately plucked fiddle chords. Timeless.
Location: other fileshare
Description: Tags: alt-country, folk, Possessed by Paul James
Gothic folk pervading 2010′s Feed the Family shows up only occasionally on There Will Be Nights When I’m Lonely . Instead, the fourth album from Possessed by Paul James , the spirited musical moniker of Konrad Wert, finds him using Austin musicians: Lloyd Maines provides steel to the serene “Back Down Here on Earth” and honky-tonk counterpart “38 Year Old Cocktail Waitress”; harpist Walter Daniels blows on the slinky, dobro-riddled “Dragons”; and members of East Cameron Folkcore (“Songs We Used to Sing”) and the Weary Boys play pivotal roles. The results are a collection far more profound that the last. That’s evident from LP opener “Hurricane,” an anthem about the inspiration Wert gleans from his special education schoolchildren that gusts like a storm front.
320 kbps | 126 MB | UL | TB | MC ** FLAC
Those looking for Family ‘s stripped sound should queue up “Heavy” and album closer “Pills Beneath Her Pillow,” a survey of depression and loneliness Wert backs with a slow guitar. The latter of those two themes gets an altered look on the album’s title track – fronted by a rousing, minute-long violin overture – as Wert sings, “Please know that I will always love you and these pictures in my mind” over his delicately plucked fiddle chords. Timeless.