About this deal
Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement and Your California Privacy Rights. A2 - Published by: Ducky Donath Music (BMI) / Songs Music Publishing / Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC. The record’s bittersweet trajectory feels not unlike Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Fever to Tell, intent on capturing both the carousing and the come-down in one breathless spree. In the edit page, go to the 'Metadata' tab and add your Juno artist, label or release page for listeners to purchase your release / releases.
Recorded at Electric Lady Studios in New York, NY, USA and Conway Recording Studios in Los Angeles, CA, USA.
The worst thing I can say about it is that the bass response could be a little better, but it's still satisfying. I'm hearing a lot that I never noticed when just streaming it-- this pressing sounds surprisingly organic for such a digital-sounding album. Her second album is a masterful study of being a young woman, a sleek and humid pop record full of grief and hedonism, crafted with the utmost care and wisdom. My copy has quite a bit of noise and pops but I bought it used for half what it’s selling for now so I’m not too upset. el side a suena mejor que el side b, éste último no destaca tanto el sonido de las dos últimas canciones.
B4 - Published by: Ducky Donath Music (BMI) / Songs Music Publishing / Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC. The songs span from dream pop, jangle pop, rnb, lofi hip hop, synthwave, all under the lo-fi pop umbrella - a little bit for everyone. Like her 2013 debut Pure Heroine, Melodrama is a work of sleek self-possession, packed with bursts of peculiar rhymes and production that confound expected song formulas. Some copies have a "Made in Canada" sticker (or printed) on the rear shrinkwrap next to the barcode.The album is interesting — good samples and their combination, the chorus from the multiplied vocals of Lorde sounds interesting. the vinyl have some black splatter on it , i was scared if it would ruined the sound quality but thank god it dont! At the beginning of side A there is a cyclic beating sound, which gradually disappears after the second track. She’s a touch self-deprecating in the height of the party (“Homemade Dynamite”) and tenfold pensive as it wears down (“ Perfect Places”).