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Echo And The Bunnymen - Crocodiles flac album

Echo And The Bunnymen - Crocodiles flac album
  • Performer Echo And The Bunnymen
  • Title Crocodiles
  • Date of release 1980
  • Style New Wave
  • Other formats MP2 DXD MP4 MOD DTS DMF AAC
  • Genre Rock
  • Size MP3 1532 mb
  • Size FLAC 1379 mb
  • Rating: 4.2
  • Votes: 898

Crocodiles is the debut album by the English post-punk band Echo & the Bunnymen. It was released on 18 July 1980 in the United Kingdom and on 17 December 1980 in the United States. The album reached number 17 on the UK Albums Chart. Pictures on My Wall" and "Rescue" had previously been released as singles. Recorded at Eden Studios in London and at Rockfield Studios near Monmouth, Crocodiles was produced by Bill Drummond and David Balfe, while Ian Broudie had already produced the single "Rescue"

Complete sua coleção de Echo And The Bunnymen.

Echo & The Bunnymen - Crocodiles (1980). Echo & The Bunnymen.

Echo & the Bunnymen. I read it in a magazine I don't wanna see it again I threw away the magazine And looked for someone to explain I don't wanna look back I can't look around I don't wanna see it coming round. Listen to the ups and downs Listen to the sound they make Don't be scared when it gets loud When you're skin begins to shake 'Cause you don't wanna look back You gotta look tall You gotta see those creeps crawl. I know you know I know you know.

Band Name Echo And The Bunnymen. Album Name Crocodiles. 版公司 Warner Music Group WEA Korova.

Echo and the Bunnymen, at least on Crocodiles, display a very interesting mix of psychedelic touches and a harder edged sound that was'nt exactly punk- what was called "new wave" at the time. All the songs are great on Crocodiles, there is no "filler", It has a raw and spontaneous sound that some of their later albums don't.

I only ask because it seems fairly obvious that Echo & The Bunnymen were a band christened during a period of impaired judgment. Of course, it's not as straightforward as its two predecessors, 1980's Crocodiles and 1981's Heaven Up Here. The Bunnymen hit the ground running, and their debut album is a stunning statement of purpose, with McCulloch already in full dramatic swing and the band at their most straightforward- any band that uses as much reverb as this one is hard to label "raw," but "Pride" and "Do It Clean" nonetheless hit hard, and "Rescue", with Sergeant's massive opening.