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Lydia Loveless - Indestructible Machine flac album

Lydia Loveless - Indestructible Machine flac album
  • Performer Lydia Loveless
  • Title Indestructible Machine
  • Date of release 2011
  • Country US
  • Style Country Rock
  • Other formats AUD MP1 XM VQF MIDI WMA RA
  • Genre Rock
  • Size MP3 1785 mb
  • Size FLAC 1950 mb
  • Rating: 4.7
  • Votes: 555

Lydia Loveless' sophomore release, Indestructible Machine, sees the alt-country spitfire exploding into a country-punk fireball. Bad Way To Go makes clear the road ahead. There are more barbed-wire guitars, more songs with Loveless spewing what’s on her mind with the color of a gin-soaked sailor on leave, and truckloads more of her redhaired fury. Loveless easily earns the punk half of the country-punk label here (she did do some time as a youth the punk scene of Columbus, Ohio).

Indestructible Machine, Lydia's Bloodshot debut, combines heady doses of punk rock energy and candor with the country classicism she was raised on and just can't shake. From foggy mountain throwdowns where she sounds like a tuff Neko Case, to muscular power pop driven by choppy, tense guitar tonalities recalling Television's Richard Lloyd to the take no s t spirit of Loretta Lynn and displaying country soul well beyond her years, Loveless true-to-life testimonials hit and hit hard. Exclusive discount for Prime members. Sample this album Artist (Sample).

Indestructible Machine. If you're someone who seeks out the place where punk rock, country music, crafted songwriting, and raw, immediate, visceral garagey rock & roll meet, look no further than Indestructible Machine, the Bloodshot debut of Lydia Loveless.

Features Song Lyrics for Lydia Loveless's Indestructible Machine album. Lydia Loveless - Indestructible Machine Album Lyrics. 1. Bad Way to Go Lyrics. Indestructible Machine Tracklist. Indestructible Machine Q&A. More Lydia Loveless albums. Show all albums by Lydia Loveless.

When I asked Lydia Loveless if there was a theme that ran though Indestructible Machine she said, You know, I talk so much shit that I often forget who I’m talking to, so I’d have to say no. I don’t even have a theme for my life, or a direction for that matter, which I’ve been told isn’t going to help move me through a music career, but then, music is just something I do, have been since I was a teen. This is a really fine album, and anyone who talks about potential regarding Lydian Loveless is wearing clean polished cowboy boots, without the scuffs and dust necessary for sonic integrity.

Indestructible Machine, 2011. Bad Way to Go, 02:59. Can't Change Me, 04:14.

Ladies and Gents, Lydia Loveless came here to kick ass and chew bubblegum. Bad news is she's all out of bubblegum. Indestructible Machine. Label: Bloodshot Records. On her Bloodshot debut - full of distorted guitar, racing banjo lines and unaffected adoration of ng mid-'90s alt-country - Lydia Loveless' penchant for ranch, booze and rock 'n' roll is as timeless as her music is refreshing. On one tune, she rages through an alcoholic bender and contemplates atheism; on another, she channels Loretta Lynn and guzzles cheap wine. Steve Earle" is all about how the godfather of alt-country keeps making pervy advances

Tracklist

1 Bad Way To Go
2 Can't Change Me
3 More Like Them
4 How Many Women
5 Jesus Was A Wino
6 Steve Earle
7 Learn To Say No
8 Do Right
9 Crazy

Credits

  • Backing Vocals – Todd May
  • Banjo – Rob Woodruff
  • Bass – Ben Lamb
  • Drums – Parker Chandler
  • Lead Guitar – Todd May
  • Lead Vocals – Lydia Loveless
  • Pedal Steel Guitar – Barry Hensley
  • Rhythm Guitar – Lydia Loveless
  • Violin – Adrian Jusdanis

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 7 44302 0188 2 9

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
BS 188 LP Lydia Loveless Indestructible Machine ‎(LP, Album, Ltd) Bloodshot Records BS 188 LP US 2011
BS188 Lydia Loveless Indestructible Machine ‎(CD, Pro) Bloodshot Records BS188 USA & Canada 2011

Talk about Lydia Loveless - Indestructible Machine


Helo
When I asked Lydia Loveless if there was a theme that ran though Indestructible Machine she said, “You know, I talk so much shit that I often forget who I’m talking to, so I’d have to say no. I don’t even have a theme for my life, or a direction for that matter, which I’ve been told isn’t going to help move me through a music career, but then, music is just something I do, have been since I was a teen. I might not be here tomorrow, or I might be here blazing under an entirely different persona.”It’s kind of strange to hear someone so young talk about themselves so disjointedly, but then, as Lydia said, she’s been doing this for a very long time already, laying down a fine mix of country meets punk in a manner that is unique and all her own, set to a passion and maturity that’s going to take her far as she refines and develops her style. Most artists don’t consider being themselves on stage, and this was what Lydia was laughing about when she talked to me regarding personas, because Lydia doesn’t hide behind a persona or a character, she gets her actual hands dirty, sings songs about an actual life biographically and shamelessly … extolling the attitude of “this is who I am, take it or leave it, I don’t care.”Loveless has been accused of over-singing, which others feel leads to burying her musical content, but I love her relentless dialog, her banter, her intelligence, her wit, and her candor. On the other hand, some critics have said that while her music is engaging, that her ever present droning electric guitar draws a lot of space out of the project. These same critics with no musical background other than being critics go on to explain the common practice of recording parts of songs and reassembling them later, and then profess that her songs become busy and lose the groove. So, in Lydia’s defense, let me assure you that what she’s done she’s done on purpose, the music you here are the sounds of Lydia’s life, one that’s perhaps seen and experienced more than most people of her age, with these attributes being deemed as more worthy as she gets older and develops her presentation more, though the so-called confusion found here rests on solid ground and has purposely been constructed in this manner … as if she’s trying to catch that white knuckled feeling of riding in the back of an open pickup truck with no seatbelt, and bouncing out onto the road more than once.Why so many seem destined to punch so many holes in her music is beyond me, because it’s really fun. You’re going to see so much of yourself, aspects of yourself that you deny, though when Lydia sings lines that pull back the curtains, you’re gonna laugh right out loud at both yourself and the fact that you ever felt compelled to try and engage in secrets … because all truth eventually seems out. This is a really fine album, and anyone who talks about potential regarding Lydian Loveless is wearing clean polished cowboy boots, without the scuffs and dust necessary for sonic integrity. Review by Jenell Kesler