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Lake - No Time For Heroes flac album

Lake  - No Time For Heroes flac album
  • Performer Lake
  • Title No Time For Heroes
  • Date of release 1984
  • Country Germany
  • Style Pop Rock
  • Other formats DXD TTA WMA VOC MP1 ADX AU
  • Genre Rock
  • Size MP3 1423 mb
  • Size FLAC 1198 mb
  • Rating: 4.4
  • Votes: 551

Band's List Hard FM Lake No Time for Heroes. Members owning this album1. 1. Continental Vagabond. 2. Dreams in the Night. 3. Tell Me Why. 4. Heroes. 6. Instrumental N° 1. 7. Johnny Don't Go. 8. Lorraine.

The album reached while Time Bomb reached in Canada. Lake toured the US in the late 1970s as the opening act for various headline acts, including Lynyrd Skynyrd, Black Oak Arkansas, and Neil Young. Detlef Petersen) and the Lake 2 (incl

Time for Heroes – The Best of The Libertines is the greatest hits collection by English rock band The Libertines, released in October 2007 on Rough Trade Records. The album is the first material to be released by the group, who split up following a deterioration in the relationship between Pete Doherty and the other members of the band, since the single "What Became of the Likely Lads" in October 2004.

Listening to the rest of Time for Heroes, even to indie disco standards like "Don't Look Back Into The Sun" and "Can't Stand Me Now", it feels like the band succeeded in spite of the half-assed meagerness of their music. They opted for Mick Jones to helm their subsequent records, vainly hoping that some of the Clash's panache might rub off, but Jones' slack production only hindered the group. His scuffling skiffle sound- tinny and tame- gazes up at the Only Ones' heroin-fueled star but is happier lying in the gutter.

Features Song Lyrics for The Libertines's Time for Heroes album. General Smuts (Demo Version) Lyrics. Time for Heroes Lyrics. The Delaney Lyrics. 7 Deadly Sins (demo) Lyrics. 5. I Get Along (original version) Lyrics.

Heroes In Time by Metalite, released 27 October 2017 1. Afterlife 2. Purpose of Life 3. Nightmare 4. The Hunter 5. Heroes in Time 6. Power of Metal 7. Over and Done 8. The Light of Orion 9. In The Middle of the Night 10. Black Horse Rider 11. The Great Force Within Us "Heroes In Time" is an impressive debut album filled with melodic and memorable songs, crowned with the strong and emotional vocals by vocalist Emma Bensing as well as a powerful production by Jacob Hansen. The album should be perfect for fans of bands like Beyond The Black, Dynazty and Amaranthe!

Tracklist

Continental Vagabond 4:32
Dreams In The Night 4:11
Tell Me Why 3:42
Heroes 3:59
Never Say Never 4:20
Instrumental No. 1 3:50
Johnny Don't Go 4:12
Lorraine 3:21
Scotsman 4:11
Lady Divine 3:16
Fight It Together 4:07

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
821 834-1 Lake No Time For Heroes ‎(LP, Album) Polydor 821 834-1 Germany 1984
821 834-2 Lake No Time For Heroes ‎(CD, Album) Polydor 821 834-2 Germany 1984
821 834-4 Lake No Time For Heroes ‎(Cass, Album) Polydor 821 834-4 Germany 1984
CLC 5001 Lake No Time For Heroes ‎(CD, Album) Castle Legends CLC 5001 Germany 1990
CLL 5001, CLC 5001 Lake No Time For Heroes ‎(LP, Album, RE) Castle Legends, Castle Legends CLL 5001, CLC 5001 Switzerland 1990
CD 156.182 Lake No Time For Heroes ‎(CD, Album) Trend CD 156.182 Austria Unknown


Talk about Lake - No Time For Heroes


RUL
1984's "No Time For Heroes" marked Lake's first new studio set in three years; a new label (Polydor), and introduced what was basically a new lineup. This time around drummer Dieter Ahrendt, longtime singer James Hopkins-Harrison, and guitarist Achim Opperman were augmented by newcomers Thomas Bauer on keyboards and sax, lead guitarist Bernd Gertig, and bass player Josef Kappl. Produced by John Groves and the band (former keyboardist Geoffrey Peacey engineered the recording sessions), musically the album found the band seemingly trying to find a balance between a return their mid-1970s blend of top-40 pop-rock and light progressive moves and opting for a more audience friendly brand of mid-1980s AOR. While you certainly couldn't begrudge Lake for wanting to enjoy renewed commercial success, slathered in cheesy synthesizers and an occasional nod to dance clubs ('Lady Divine'), a couple of tracks brought them awfully close to vapid studio hack status - you're liable to find yourself thinking of Pablo Cruise, or even Toto when listening to 'Heroes'. At least to my ears, they were much more enjoyable on tracks like 'Tell Me Why' and 'Lorraine' when dialing down the updated sounds in favor of a more streamlined pop-rock orientation. As lead-vocalist and lyricist, Hopkins-Harrison remained the prime draw. His weird voice has always fascinated me - how often do you hear an English guy who sounds like he's singing with a German accent ? Technically he wasn't the greatest singer you've ever heard, but when he got going, the man could inject considerable energy into the proceedings. Nothing wrong with the rest of the band, though some of the 1980s production effects haven't aged all that well. - Even though the sax-powered opening made it sound like a slice of adult contemporary pop, when it shifted into gear 'Continental Vagabond' served as a nice reminder of the band's knack for catchy melodies mixed with a slightly harder rock sound. Yeah, the title and lyrics apparently lost something in the translation, but the melody was highly commercial and if you weren't careful you were liable to find yourself singing the hook. rating: **** stars - With guitarist Achim Opperman handling lead vocals, 'Dreams In The Nigh' was a mid-tempo AOR ballad. Technically Opperman may actually have had a better voice than Hopkins-Harrison, but he also had a much heavier accent so the results kind of balanced themselves out. Pretty song, but maybe a touch too radio friendly for their own good. Yes, it was released as a German single (see below). rating: *** stars. - Perhaps the album's most overtly commercial track, 'Tell Me Why' had a breezy, top-40-ish melody and one of Hopkins-Harrison's most assured vocals. Lightweight and fun with some wonderful backing vocals ... rating: **** stars - Kicked along by Josef Kappl's bass and some gurgling synthesizers, 'Heroes' exhibited a curious reggae-tinged rhythm with an AOR feel arrangement dumped on top of it. Strange mash-up that didn't do a great deal for me, though lots of folks seem to think it was one of the album highlights. rating: ** stars - As much as I loved Hopkins-Harrison's weird voice, he simply couldn't save a faceless AOR track like 'Never Say Never'. This one sounded like it was literally stitched together from a slew of then current sources including a touch of AOR, a dollop of dance music, and even a little bit of progressive influences. It was also one of those songs that really suffered from an extremely dated mid-1980s production sound - what was with the flat drums ??? rating: ** stars - Penned by Opperman 'Instrumental No #1' was in fact a jazz-rock flavored instrumental that would probably appeal to folks into that particular genre. Some nice lead guitar and the classical tinge reminded me a bit of an up-tempo Focus song, but otherwise it didn't do a great deal for me. rating: ** stars - AOR, but quality AOR !!! Yeah, 'Johnny Don't Go' was kind of generic, but it had a breezy melody and would have sounded good on top-40 radio. rating: *** stars - 'Lorraine' was simply a fun pop-rock song with one of the album's best hooks. Nothing more; nothing less.   rating: *** stars - Obviously autobiographical, 'Scotsman' managed to mix up a bit of rap, bagpipes, and a Big Country-styled anthem. You wouldn't think mixture would amount to much, but it somehow worked, standing as the album's goofiest and simultaneously most intriguing number. rating: **** stars - Yeah, 'Lady Divine' started out sounding like a Chic outtake and never really managed to overcome that disadvantage. rating: ** stars - 'Fight It Together' found Lake taking a stab at Genesis-styled relevance with the usual sophomoric condemnation of mankind's foibles. Bad decision since the results came off as heavy handed, plodding, and mildly pretentious.  rating: ** stars A German single was released off the LP: - 1984's 'Dreams In he Night' b/w 'Instrumental No. 1' (Polydor catalog number 821835-7) A surprisingly assured comeback, that hardly anyone noticed ... good luck finding copies of the album since nobody bothered to pick up American distribution. "No Time for Heroes" track listing: (side 1) 1.) Continental Vagabond (Achim Opperman - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 4:32 2.) Dreams In The Night (Achim Opperman - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 4:11 3.) Tell Me Why (Achim Opperman - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 3:42 4.) Heroes (Josef Kappl - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 3:59 5.) Never Say Never (Josef Kappl - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 4:20 (side 2) 1.) Instrumental No #1 (instrumental) (Achim Opperman) - 3:50 2.) Johnny Don't Go (Thomas Bauer - Achim Opperman - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 4:12 3.) Lorraine (Thomas Bauer - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 3:21 4.) Scotsman (Thomas Bauer - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 4:11 5.) Lady Divine (Thomas Bauer - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 3:16 6.) Fight It Together (Josef Kappl - James Hopkins-Harrison) - 4:07
Buge
Hello,iam looking for the lyrics from the song "heroes" on this album, but i didnt find it anywhere, can anyone help me?