{[Download]} Labrinth Euphoria Season 2 Official Score (From The HBO Original Series) rar mp3 320 kbps Zippyshare Full Album Torrent^magnet m4a Mediafire Zip~file
TRACKLIST:
01 The Angels
02 I’m Tired (Long Version)
03 ICE (We Should Do Drugs)
04 See You Assholes Later
05 She Certainly Looks the Part
06 Dracula (Nate Sees Cassie)
07 Skeletons (Lexi Needed a Break)
08 Putting Everything Away
09 Fez’s Interlude
10 El Weirdo (I Relapsed)
11 This Is Life
12 Every Second Counts
13 Truth or Dare
14 Washing Off The Blood
15 Elliot’s Song Dominic Fike
16 I Don’t Know If I’m a Good Person
17 Love Is Complicated (The Angels Sing)
18 Fun At The Alley
19 Sidekicks Are Smarter
20 Pros & Cons
21 At Least I’m Loved
22 Rue’s I’m Tired
23 Mount Everest (Bonus Track)
24 I’m Tired (Bonus Track)
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For a moment there, it seemed like Everything Was Beautiful might never exist. In 2018, Jason Pierce returned with the eighth Spiritualized album, And Nothing Hurt. It was his first in six years, and he promptly spent its rollout saying it could very well be the last. Artists sometimes say stuff like that, and it’s easy to brush it off. But when I interviewed him that summer, I believed him. He had made another great Spiritualized album, but a smaller one — an album that seemed fractured and weathered and, after speaking to him, an extension of a very exhausted and drained headspace. He spent most of that conversation dwelling on what the album was supposed to be — louder, more expansive — and then on the fact he couldn’t seem to find a positive thing to say about the painstaking process of crafting it at home.
It turns out there was indeed more to the story, which partially explains Pierce’s reticence about presenting And Nothing Hurt as Spiritualized’s great big comeback. Everything Was Beautiful completes the Kurt Vonnegut-quoting title of And Nothing Hurt, and the relatively brisk waiting period between Spiritualized albums this time around suggests that these are sister projects. Originally, they were intended to be very symbiotic. Back then, Pierce envisioned a double album with the full quote as its title, culled from the same family of songs written in 2013 and 2014. His label head talked him out of it. And Nothing Hurt displayed Spiritualized at one juncture, and then the years since have allowed Everything Was Beautiful to blossom into a very different companion piece.
And Nothing Hurt was one of the calmest Spiritualized releases, all twilit classic rock balladry pushing the project’s gospel tinges to the fore. Everything Was Beautiful recalls the astral bombast of Spiritualized’s earlier albums more enthusiastically than anything Pierce has done in 20 years. “If you want a rocket ship/ I would be a rocket ship for you/ If you want the galaxies/ I would walk the galaxies with you… If you want a shooting star/ I would be a shooting star with you… If you want to be a universe, I would be a universe for you,” Pierce sings in the album’s opener and lead single, “Always Together For You.” Knowingly leaning into the spaceman imagery, he’s writing a star-gazing love song, but also a manifesto for Everything Was Beautiful. In 2018, he told me he liked albums that sounded like they were beamed in from a satellite someplace we’d never been; he was disappointed And Nothing Hurt didn’t. Everything Was Beautiful does.
Spiritualized’s specific formula has long been established: the strung-out church music and frazzled classic rock and free-jazz affectations and psychedelia both classicist and futuristic all blending together in an aesthetic that feels like a cosmic transmission. On Everything Was Beautiful, Pierce does not reinvent Spiritualized, or really break any new ground. He doesn’t need to. He’s already perfected a sound all his own, and in the last 15 or so years, each new Spiritualized album honed in on one strand or approach within that without presenting a new rule book. He’s never made a bad album, and each one at least gives us one or two all-time Spiritualized songs. But at the same time, his 1997 masterpiece Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space has often cast a long shadow. The thing that differentiates Everything Was Beautiful from its last several predecessors is that, for the first time in a very long time, he’s leaning into the part of Spiritualized’s sound that will please the fans of the project at its most far-reaching, the version in which Pierce meditates on love and mortality while arcing through outer space.
Crafted across 11 studios, Everything Was Beautiful is as dense, noisy, and lush as And Nothing Hurt was hushed in its prettiness. It begins with “Always Together With You” — an intentional quote from Ladies And Gentlemen’s immortal opener, with Pierce’s daughter intoning the album title next to Apollo 11 morse code bleeps before the song eventually surges into its celestial chorus and refrain. Afterwards, “Best Thing You Never Had” soars forward on a hypnotic groove eventually embellished by skronking horns and one of those gospel classic rock melodies Pierce can churn out — it feels like him in his wheelhouse in the best way possible.