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Wonder Years, The - The Greatest Generation flac album

Wonder Years, The - The Greatest Generation flac album
  • Performer Wonder Years, The
  • Title The Greatest Generation
  • Date of release 2013
  • Style Pop Punk, Alternative Rock
  • Other formats MP4 MP1 MOD MIDI XM MP2 VQF
  • Genre Rock / Pop
  • Size MP3 1696 mb
  • Size FLAC 1303 mb
  • Rating: 4.8
  • Votes: 589

The Greatest Generation is the fourth studio album by American rock band the Wonder Years. The album was produced by Steve Evetts, who also produced their previous album, Suburbia I've Given You All and Now I'm Nothing. On January 13, 2013, Campbell posted that the group had finished pre-production. On February 12, the band announced they had finished recording.

Although The Greatest Generation contains many of the honest, energetic pop-punk tunes The Wonder Years are known for, it also has some tracks couldn’t have possibly been on their last album. A big part of this is due to the welcome improvement in the vocal work of Dan ‘Soupy’ Campbell.

The Greatest Generation is the fourth studio album by pop punk band The Wonder Years. The album was produced by Steve Evetts, who produced their last album, Suburbia I’ve Given You All and Now I’m Nothing. The Greatest Generation Q&A.

The album isn't so much about getting older as it is about the choices we all have to make and live with, capturing each songs subject as they not only examine the paths they've taken to get to where they are, but the paths they wish they could have taken as they curse themselves for their own failings.

The Greatest Generation, the fourth studio album by the Philadelphia pop-punk sextet The Wonder Years, is rife with the nostalgia of growing pains. The opening tune, There, There, starts softly with Campbell singing in a near-whisper over electric guitar distortion. When the song builds to a crescendo, the band balances restraint with sonic tantrums that at times recall Sunny Day Real Estate's emo-defining 1994 album Diary. The following single, Passing Through a Screen Door, exudes a more palpable catharsis as Campbell spits and sneers lyrics that reflect a quarter-life crisis having crept up on him while his friends and cousins got married and started families.

The Wonder Years have come a long, long way since then. According to lead vocalist Dan Campbell, The Upsides, Suburbia and The Greatest Generation all tell a tale of a bittersweet life story. The Upsides is all about life before and after college, Suburbia is about the tragic tales of Suburban life and The Greatest Generation is about, well, life itself. The Greatest Generation is not as hard hitting as Suburbia or The Upsides, and because the band have been pumping out their almost 'emo' style for two previous albums, it is surely expected that The Wonder Years will eventually just. But The Greatest Generation is a fantastic ending to their previous album ethoi. 1 of 1 users found this helpful.