No Words Left Lucy Rose
Album info
Album-Release:
2018
HRA-Release:
22.03.2019
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Conversation 03:52
- 2 No Words Left (Pt. 1) 01:27
- 3 Solo(w) 04:07
- 4 Treat Me Like A Woman 03:48
- 5 The Confines Of This World 03:40
- 6 Just A Moment 01:43
- 7 Nobody Comes Round Here 03:46
- 8 What Does It Take 02:33
- 9 Save Me From Your Kindness 03:48
- 10 Pt. 2 03:08
- 11 Song After Song 03:07
Info for No Words Left
Zuletzt haben wir 2017 mit Something’s Changing etwas von Lucy Rose gehört – einem Album, das ihre musikalische Neuausrichtung und reflektierte Herangehensweise bereits andeutete. Nach zwei veröffentlichten Longplayern (inkl. Mini-Hit Shiver), etablierter Fanbase und ausverkauften Touren begab sie sich mit eben jenem letzten Album auf die Suche danach, was sie machen wollte und wie sie es machen wollte. Stärker denn je meldet sich Lucy wieder zurück und veröffentlicht ihr viertes Album No Words Left. Einen Eindruck davon, wie das klingen wird, vermittelt die erste Single Conversation, die inkl. Musikvideo ab sofort überall verfügbar ist. Untermalt von Gitarre, Streichern und der gewohnt feenhaften Akustikklänge, gibt die 29-jährige Britin sehr intime Einblicke in die Schwierigkeiten und die Zerrissenheit einer Beziehung, die schon längst nicht mehr frei von Schmerzen, aber dennoch zu wertvoll ist, um sich von ihr loszureißen. Handelte Something’s Changing von einer Künstlerin, die ihre Stimmte wiederentdeckt, so setzt Lucy in No Words Left diese Klang- und Stimmentwicklung auf umwerfend ehrliche Weise fort. Lyrisch und musikalisch furchtlos, erweist sich das Album als wunderbar intensive, aber ebenso aufreibende Hörerfahrung.
Lucy Rose, Gesang
Lucy Rose Parton
known simply as Lucy Rose, is a singer/songwriter from Warwickshire, England. Originally, Rose began playing drums in her school orchestra. When that didn't satisfy her creative ambition, she began playing and writing songs on the piano in her parents' house. She later bought a guitar and began to write pastoral, folk-inspired pop music. It wasn't until she left home — after deferring a place at University College of London — when she was 18 that she shared her material with anybody. Her fragile, emotive songs soon drew comparisons to Laura Marling, with whom she shares influences such as Joni Mitchell and Neil Young.
By 2008, Rose had set about finding other musicians to experiment and perform with. After a while she met Bombay Bicycle Club frontman Jack Steadman and they became friends. Once Steadman heard Rose sing, he asked her to perform vocals on the band's acoustic album Flaws in 2010. Rose also began playing her own shows, and gradually assembling a band for live performances; on-and-off bandmembers included former Razorlight guitarist Björn Ågren, drummer Sam Nadel, and Broadcast 2000 bassist Joe Steer. With only a small budget, Rose shunned traditional recording studios and instead opted for live videos shot by close friend Orestes Mitas, which she posted online. She continued to tour throughout 2011, playing with contemporaries Ben Howard, Daughter, and Pete Roe along with headlining her own shows.
The year 2012 was a busy one for Rose. She played widely during the first half of the year, including a tour of Great Britain and North America with Bombay Bicycle Club and Noah and the Whale, plus the festival circuit during the summer. She also returned to her hometown in the Warwickshire countryside, where she and her bandmates set about recording an album in her family home, the nuclear bunker in the basement, and the local village hall. Signed to Columbia, she released her debut album Like I Used To in September 2012. The full-length release featured many of her road-worn tracks such as the hazy "Night Bus" and the lovelorn "First."
Her next material appeared in 2015, when the single "Our Eyes" began airing on Radio 1. Rose had written a batch of songs, swapping her guitar for music software, and her much poppier second album Work It Out followed in July of that year (also on Columbia).
This album contains no booklet.