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    Mystery Jets - Curve Of The Earth (2016) [Official Digital Download]

    Posted By: HDV
    Mystery Jets - Curve Of The Earth (2016) [Official Digital Download]

    Mystery Jets - Curve Of The Earth (2016)
    FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Time - 48:23 minutes | 570 MB
    Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Front cover

    To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the band's debut album, Mystery Jets unleash "Curve Of The Earth", which finds the progressive British group stripping back some of its more shapeshifting tendencies to distill its essence. Considered one of the band's strongest, most personal and most coherent set of tracks to date, Curve Of The Earth displays influences from King Crimson and Pink Floyd and particularly highlights Mystery Jet's evolving songwriting skills.

    Mystery Jets may hail from England, but as their career has spanned over five albums, they've begun to sound more and more American, and their latest record Curve of the Earth is the next step in their progression towards Yankee assimilation. 2012's Radlands was an odd blend of Cool Britannia and good ol' fashioned Americana—imagine four scrawny British lads in oversized cowboy boots and 10-gallon hats and you'll come to grips with the cognitive dissonance of listening to the album. On Curve of the Earth that country twang is a distant memory (only hinted at by the occasional wisp of a slide guitar), now eclipsed by the emotional maturity and ambitious swell of their latest effort. In a statement about their new record, the Jets shared their desire to convey a "bigger picture" and to write "a suite of songs that could transcend our own 'skull-sized kingdoms'"; with a name as intimidating and awe-inspiring as Curve of the Earth they were obviously aiming for the sky (and beyond). Tracks like "1985" and "Taken by the Tide" are built for arena exposure, soaring on orchestral strings and booming riffs unlike anything the Jets have ever done before. Blaine Harrison proves he's as comfortable rattling off commercial-ready hooks about having a crush on your neighbor as he is singing plaintive meditations about human DNA ("Telomere") and astronomy ("Saturnine," "Blood Red Balloon"). Curve of the Earth is an ode to the uncertainty of the quarter-life crisis that somehow manages to make that awkward entry into maturity sound bittersweet and beautiful at once.


    Three years in the making, the London-based neo-psych-rockers fifth studio long player, and first with new bassist Jack Flanagan, is a sumptuous distillation of the myriad styles that Mystery Jets have been weaving in and out of over the years, from the proggy post-punk of Making Dens and Zootime to the open road Americana of Radlands. Always an inward looking, albeit reliably quirky gang of retro-casters, Curve of the Earth finds the Jets assessing their place in the universe via nine incrementally protracted set pieces that invoke Soft Bulletin-era Flaming Lips, early Radiohead, and of course, Pink Floyd. Self-produced in a homespun studio in an abandoned button factory, Curve of the Earth wastes little time in setting the controls for the heart of the sun with the lead single "Telomare," a big, atmospheric blast of anthemic, mid-'90s stadium rock that segues nicely into the equally dreamy "Bombay Blue." From there things bounce back and forth between the bucolic and the sublime, peppered with plenty of crafty guitar bits that run the gamut from angular to downright noodly. Guitarist William Rees noted in the LP's press release that the group has "been through quite a lot in the last couple of years and there have been certain realizations that come with being in a band that has been playing together for two decades," and that sentiment is most deeply felt on the emotionally charged "Taken by the Tide" and the meditative"1985" (the year of frontman Blaine Harrison's birth), both of which strike the perfect balance between immediacy and nostalgia, which is something that Mystery Jets have been slowly but surely perfecting since 2003.

    Tracklist:

    01 - Telomere
    02 - Bombay Blue
    03 - Bubblegum
    04 - Midnight's Mirror
    05 - 1985
    06 - Blood Red Balloon
    07 - Taken By The Tide
    08 - Saturnine
    09 - The End Up

    Line-up:
    Blaine Harrison - vocals, guitar
    William Rees - guitar
    Matt Park - pedal steel
    Henry Harrison - keyboards
    Jack Flanagan - bass
    Kapil Trivedi - drums

    Analyzed: Mystery Jets / Curve of the Earth
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    DR Peak RMS Duration Track
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    DR5 0.00 dB -7.71 dB 3:53 01-Telomere
    DR5 0.00 dB -7.15 dB 4:55 02-Bombay Blue
    DR6 0.00 dB -7.22 dB 4:25 03-Bubblegum
    DR5 0.00 dB -7.15 dB 5:56 04-Midnight's Mirror
    DR5 0.00 dB -9.04 dB 4:04 05-1985
    DR6 0.00 dB -8.70 dB 6:43 06-Blood Red Balloon
    DR6 0.00 dB -8.07 dB 5:36 07-Taken By The Tide
    DR6 0.00 dB -7.99 dB 6:21 08-Saturnine
    DR7 0.00 dB -9.57 dB 6:30 09-The End Up
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    Number of tracks: 9
    Official DR value: DR6

    Samplerate: 44100 Hz
    Channels: 2
    Bits per sample: 24
    Bitrate: 1587 kbps
    Codec: FLAC
    ================================================================================


    Thanks to the Original customer!