"Wichita Lineman"
— yaririmbwe na Villagers
"Wichita Lineman" nindirimbo ikorerwa kuri irlande yasohotse kuri 19 gashyantare 2016 kumuyoboro wemewe wa label - "Villagers". Menya amakuru yihariye yerekeye "Wichita Lineman". Shakisha indirimbo yindirimbo ya Wichita Lineman, ibisobanuro, nukuri kwindirimbo. Kwinjiza hamwe na Net Worth byegeranijwe nabaterankunga nandi masoko ukurikije amakuru aboneka kuri enterineti. Ni kangahe indirimbo "Wichita Lineman" yagaragaye mubishushanyo mbonera bya muzika? ".
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"Wichita Lineman" Ukuri
"Wichita Lineman" igeze kuri 142K yose hamwe na 1.2K kuri YouTube.
Indirimbo yatanzwe kuri 19/02/2016 kandi yamaze ibyumweru 22 kurutonde.
Izina ryumwimerere rya mashusho yindirimbo ni "".
"Wichita Lineman" yasohotse kuri Youtube kuri 04/01/2016 04:59:41.
"Wichita Lineman" Indirimbo, Abahimbyi, Ikirango
Villagers - "Wichita Lineman" from 'Where Have You Been All My Life?', released 2016 on Domino Record Co.
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Where Have You Been All My Life?, released on 8th January 2016, is a collection of songs that distils five years and three albums of Villagers’ songwriting into one flowing narrative.
Recorded in one day at London’s RAK Studio with Richard Woodcraft (Radiohead, The Last Shadow Puppets) and Villagers live engineer Ber Quinn, the album is a re-imagining of older material seamlessly woven with present glories from Villagers’ most recent studio album, Darling Arithmetic.
Released in April 2015, Conor O’Brien’s third album under the guise of Villagers was a more pared-back, intimate journey compared to the multi-faceted arrangements of Becoming A Jackal (2010) and {Awayland} (2013). This fresh approach was extended on subsequent Villagers tours, where old songs were reinvented to match the
;Then for one day in July 2015, 18 songs were quickly captured and 12 songs chosen for the final album, making it Villagers’ most intense, but satisfying, session to
;These recordings are all first or second takes, and the immediacy of the occasion was part of the magic that day, live and unadorned by overdubs or studio trickery.
The unique nature of these arrangements is due in no small part to the musicians in the room at the time of recording: Cormac Curran on grand piano and analogue synthesizer, Danny Snow on double bass, Mali Llywelyn on harp, mellotron and vocals, and Gwion Llewelyn on drums, flugelhorn and
;The result is a lush, harmony-laden and vibrant document of a time and a place.
Illustrated by Peter Strain.