Category: Music<br />
Subcategory: Alternative<br />
Size: 46.97 megabyte<br />
Ratio: 1 seeds, 0 leechers<br />
Language: Unknown<br />
Uploaded by: rhsiv
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The Antlers - Hospice - 2009 (rhsiv)
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The Antlers - Hospice (2009) [Lossless/FLAC]
Thanks to mrkiko!
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Email me if you are looking for an album in Lossless/FLAC (even obscure ones). I'd be willing to send you a link to it if you would share the album on publicbt/thepiratebay after you finish downloading it. My email: centroids1@gmail.com
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Lossless/FLAC
Includes: Log/Cue
REVIEW FROM INDIE SHUFFLE:
http://www.indieshuffle.com/?p=801
Sounds Like: bon iver, cursive, dm stith
what's so good?
Why do we like sad music? It’s a bit masochistic to enjoy feeling miserable. Maybe we’re just drawn to music that can relate to our darkest moments. After all, songs like the Beatles’ “She Loves You Yeah” can’t describe every day of your life. It can actually make you feel worse in the wrong context. Some times you need a good break-up album to snuggle up with, knowing someone felt as crappy as you did at one point.
But the Antlers’ Hospice is not your typical “Wah, my girlfriend dumped me” album. It actually speaks of a pain very few people can relate to. There’s a very loose story throughout based on the idea of caring for an abusive terminally ill loved one, investing total emotional strength and doing everything possible to no avail. It’s a unique sense of hopelessness spoken through singer Peter Silberman’s tragically beautiful lyrics backed by soft and swelling instrumentation and straining ambient textures that almost perfectly capture the desperate pain behind the words. From the haunting grind of the opening “Prologue” to the final notes of Silberman’s falsetto in “Epilogue,” this whole album left me absolutely floored. It’s not music to wallow in your sorrow to; it draws you into its own world with its own pain. And in the end, it’s all about overcoming rather than sulking.
The Antlers self-released Hospice earlier this year, but it was picked up by French Kiss records within months after receiving praise from the music world and selling out nearly every copy available. Despite its humble beginnings, Hospice easily ranks among the best albums of the year. I picked out the track “Bear” because it’s one of the best individual songs, but you should really listen to this album front to back to fully appreciate its beauty.
Sometimes you have to put yourself first, no matter how difficult that notion seems; no matter how much time and effort you’ve already put into this one person—the person who’s reduced your very being to its absolute core. Just ask Peter Silberman, the string-pulling founder of The Antlers, a solo project that suddenly went widescreen on the self-released Hospice LP (now receiving a proper widespread pressing through Frenchkiss). The first Antlers effort to feature two key permanent players—powerhouse drummer Michael Lerner and the layer-lathering multi-instrumentalist Darby Cicci—it’s an album with a sound that’s actually as ambitious as its concept.
“Hospice came from the idea of caring for a terminal patient who’s mentally abusive to you,” says Silberman. “You don’t have the right to argue with them, either, because they’re the one who’s dying here; they’re the one that’s been dealt a wrong hand. So you take it, but you can only take so much. Eventually, you realize that this person is just destroying you.” Appropriately enough, Hospice’s 10 distinct chapters resonate on debilitating sonic and lyrical levels, from the hypnotic harp and tension-ratcheting build of “Two” to the sing-or-sink choruses of “Bear” and the speaker-rattling peaks of “Sylvia,” easily one of the year’s most immediate epics.
It’s here, amidst contrasting shards of ambient noise, sweeping strings and smoky horns, where The Antlers truly transcend Silberman’s singer-songwriter beginnings—a striking escalation of expectations first hinted at on 2008’s New York Hospitals EP. The progression doesn’t end there, either. In a move that could be taken as the riff-raking extension of his thorough guitar training (from the age of 6 ‘til right before college), “Atrophy” and “Wake” delve into sheets of distortion, subtle shades of soul, cicada-like effects and enough movements to fill an entire EP. “We were going for something that’d be dense but not too complicated,” explains Silberman. “I hate the word ‘lush,’ but I guess that’s the best way of describing it.
The structures are like pop songs—verse/chorus, verse/chorus—but the sound is a little more shoegaze-y or post-rocky.” It’s about to get even more complicated, too, as The Antlers’ Technicolor-tinged trio take all of Hospice’s songs—and three previous releases—in a completely different direction, jettisoning a note-for-note rendition of the record for “a massive sound” doused in delay, reverb and unrehearsed chaos. And to think Cicci was a stage actor with a desire to drop it all for music just a few years ago. “Hospice was the clear indication that this isn’t a singer-songwriter thing at all,” says Silberman. “Whatever we record next is going to define the three of us as a ‘band.’ He continues, “I always figured I’d be the ‘shredder’ in a group…But things somehow ended up this way.” We wouldn’t have it any other way, either.
TRACK LIST:
01. Prologue - 2:35
02. Kettering - 5:10
03. Sylvia - 5:27
04. Atrophy - 7:40
05. Bear - 3:54
06. Thirteen - 3:11
07. Two - 5:56
08. Shiva - 3:45
09. Wake - 8:44
10. Epilogue - 5:25
http://frenchkissrecords.com/bands/profile/the_antlers/
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RECOMMENDS, ONE(compilation album 2010) [INACABINWITH] (The Antlers, Kid Sam, The Gin Club and more)
Category: Music<br />
Subcategory: Compilation<br />
Size: 71.7 megabyte<br />
Ratio: 1 seeds, 0 leechers<br />
Language: English<br />
Uploaded by: INACABINWITH
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The Antlers - Hospice (2009)(Indie Folk Rock Dream Pop)(FLAC & H
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Listen Now: The Antlers in Concert - NPR
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The Antlers - Burst Apart (2011)(Retail)(FLAC)(Indie Rock Indie
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The Antlers - Burst Apart [2011] 320 kbps
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The Antlers - Burst Apart [2011] FLAC
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The Antlers - In The Attic Of The Universe (2007)(Indie Folk Roc
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The Antlers Discography
Discography of the American indie rock band "The Antlers"
[b]Artist:[/b] The Antlers
[b]Album:[/b] Various
[b]Producer:[/b] The Antlers
[b]Label:[/b] Fall Records/Frenchkiss Records/Transgressive Records
[b]Genre:[/b] Folk/Indie Rock
[b]Release Date:[/b] Various
[b]Bitrate:[/b] 128-320 Kbps
[b]Format:[/b] mp3
[b]Album List:[/b]
Uprooted 2006 128 Kbps
Cold War EP 2007 192 Kbps
In The Attic Of The Universe 2007 192 Kbps
New York Hospitals 2008 192 Kbps
Hospice 2009 256 Kbps
Burst Apart 2011 320 Kbps
Extra Tracks 160-192 Kbps
[b]Tracklist:[/b]
[b][u]Uprooted[/u][/b]
First Field
Keys
Flash Floods Don't Retreat
Nashua
It Seems Easy
Last Folk Song
Stone Thrower
Uprooted
I'm Hibernating
[b][u]Cold War EP[/u][/b]
East River Berlin Wall
Apple Orchard (Beach House Cover)
Cold War
[b][u]In The Attic Of The Universe[/u][/b]
In the Attic
Look!
On the Roof
Shh!
The Universe is Going to Catch You
The Carrying Arms
In the Snow
Stairs to the Attic
[b][u]New York Hospitals EP[/u][/b]
Nothing Matters When We're Dancing
Sylvia (An Introduction)
Tears Are In Your Eyes
[b][u]Hospice[/u][/b]
Prologue
Kettering
Sylvia
Atrophy
Bear
Thirteen1
Two
Shiva
Wake
Epilogue
[b][u]Burst Apart[/u][/b]
I Don't Want Love
French Exit
Parentheses
No Widows
Rolled Together
Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out
Tiptoe
Hounds
Corsicana
Putting the Dog to Sleep
[b][u]Extra Tracks[/u][/b]
Tongue Tied (Bonus Track)
When You Sleep (My Bloody Valentine Cover)
[url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Antlers_(band)"]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Antlers_(band)[/url]
Thankyou to all original uploaders
Enjoy :)
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The Antlers-Undersea e.p. 2012 320kbps mp3 (sizzler)
[IMG]http://i1125.photobucket.com/albums/l595/sizzler46/79736483.jpg[/IMG]
Artist: The Antlers
Album: Undersea
Released: 2012
Style: Indie pop
Format: MP3 320 Kbps
Size: 52.3 Mb
Tracklist:
01 – Drift Dive
02 – Endless Ladder
03 – Crest
04 – Zelda
PLEASE ENJOY AND SEED THANK YOU
[IMG]http://i1125.photobucket.com/albums/l595/sizzler46/55cf82da180a31c9c5349cc8c52a43a3.gif[/IMG]
[url="//kat.ph/user/Sizzler/"][img]//kat.ph/userwidget/Sizzler.png[/img][/url]
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The Antlers - Hospice (2009)
[u]The Antlers - Hospice[/u]
[img]http://image.bayimg.com/ca8709082620c5720441a397bbd59444aad0b09a.jpg[/img]
My thanks to cenkota for an upload of this album on TPB in FLAC format. This upload is a redistribution of that torrent in OGG (q9). It's also on TPB
Encoded in Vorbis, VBR q9. Average bit rate of 312kbps, should be much smoother than a 320kbps CBR MP3. A high-res JPG cover is in there as well.
01 - Prologue - 2:35
02 - Kettering - 5:10
03 - Sylvia - 5:27
04 - Atrophy - 7:40
05 - Bear - 3:54
06 - Thirteen - 3:11
07 - Two - 5:56
08 - Shiva - 3:45
09 - Wake - 8:44
10 - Epilogue - 5:25
Very emotional album. Hope you like it.
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The Antlers - In the Attic of the Universe (2007) [OGG q9]
[u]The Antlers - In the Attic of the Universe[/u]
[img]http://image.bayimg.com/80220d054dae5aacb7704ca52ebc6509b05fc4ed.jpg[/img]
Another re-encoded album from an FLAC source. My thanks to SoundbaronPirateBay on TPB for his lossless upload.
This is in OGG VBR q9. The average bitrate is 304kbps, though it should sound of a better quality than that of an MP3 at 320kbps in CBR. I've got the album tagged, and provided a 1000x1000 JPG from a higher-res PNG on the web.
1 In The Attic - 5:02
2 Look! - 1:48
3 On The Roof - 3:46
4 Shh! - 3:16
5 The Universe Is Going To Catch You - 3:55
6 The Carrying Arms - 1:48
7 In The Snow - 2:31
8 Stairs To The Attic - 4:38
Great album by the way. It's from the time when The Antlers was only Peter Silberman. Have fun.
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The Antlers - Uprooted (2006) [M4A ~254kbps]
[u]The Antlers - Uprooted[/u]
[img]http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-eDVPzVdwkCE/ThmJ25ZyZQI/AAAAAAAABeQ/ZSFhVKkK_T8/s320/Antlers_2006_Uprooted.jpg[/img]
Not my rip. The files were taken from an obscure archive site, I forget which it's from. Though I've scanned it with avast!, and it's fine. Since the only other torrent I know of this album is in 128kbps MP3, I'm uploading this higher quality one. A cover's included. Files are tagged properly.
Good stuff from The Antlers when it was only Peter Silberman in. Sounds very nice if you ask me.
So seed once you're finished, and comment if you please. Enjoy, thanks!
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The Antlers - Hospice (2009) [OGG q9]
[u]The Antlers - Hospice[/u]
[img]http://image.bayimg.com/ca8709082620c5720441a397bbd59444aad0b09a.jpg[/img]
My thanks to cenkota for an upload of this album on TPB in FLAC format. This upload is a redistribution of that torrent in OGG (q9). It's also on TPB
Encoded in Vorbis, VBR q9. Average bit rate of 312kbps, should be much smoother than a 320kbps CBR MP3. A high-res JPG cover is in there as well.
01 - Prologue - 2:35
02 - Kettering - 5:10
03 - Sylvia - 5:27
04 - Atrophy - 7:40
05 - Bear - 3:54
06 - Thirteen - 3:11
07 - Two - 5:56
08 - Shiva - 3:45
09 - Wake - 8:44
10 - Epilogue - 5:25
Very emotional album. Hope you like it.
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The Antlers - Hospice (2009)
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The Antlers - Hospice (2009) V0
Hospice is the critically acclaimed third studio album by American indie rock group The Antlers, and their first concept album. It was initially self-distributed by the band in March 2009, and was eventually remastered and re-released once they signed to Frenchkiss Records in August of the same year.[2][3]
Hospice tells the story of a relationship between a hospice worker and a female patient suffering from terminal bone cancer, their ensuing romance, and their slow downward spiral as a result of the woman's traumas, fears, and disease. Frontman Peter Silberman has been reluctant to divulge explicit details regarding the meaning of the record, and the extent to which it is autobiographical.
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The Antlers - Familiars (2014)
Artist: The Antlers
Title Of Album: Familiars
Year Of Release: 2014
Genre: Indie Rock
Quality: mp3
Bitrate: 320Kbps
Total Time: 53:26
Total Size: 124 Mb
Tracklist:
01 – Palace
02 – Doppelganger
03 – Hotel
04 – Intruders
05 – Director
06 – Revisited
07 – Parade
08 – Surrender
09 – Refuge
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The Antlers - Familiars 2014 320kbps CBR MP3 [VX] [P2PDL]
[center][img]http://ultraimg.com/images/1ASsT.jpg[/img]
[b]The Antlers - Familiars 2014 320kbps CBR MP3 [VX] [P2PDL][/b]
==================================================================================
This (MP3) album was uploaded for your enjoyment, If you liked it, I suggest you to support the artist by buying the album.
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ARTIST: The Antlers
ALBUM: Familiars
FORMAT: MPEG Audio (MP3)
GENRE: Indie
Release Date: 2014-06-08
Source: CD
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GENERAL MUSIC SPECS:
Format : MPEG Audio (MP3)
Overall bit rate : 320 Kbps
Sampling rate : 44.1 KHz
Mode : CBR, Stereo
Track number/Total : 9
Writing library : MP3 Encoder v1.36
Copyright : No
Cover : Yes
Cover type : Cover (front)
Cover MIME : image/jpeg
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CONTAINS:
9 MP3 (Audio) Tracks, CD Cover and an NFO file.
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TRACK LIST:
The Antlers - Palace (5:37)
The Antlers - Doppelganger (7:04)
The Antlers - Hotel (5:00)
The Antlers - Intruders (5:25)
The Antlers - Director (6:14)
The Antlers - Revisited (7:42)
The Antlers - Parade (5:11)
The Antlers - Surrender (6:16)
The Antlers - Refuge (4:57)
==================================================================================
[img]http://www.ultraimg.com/images/jSot.png[/img]
[URL=http://www.facebook.com/p2pdl][IMG]http://img560.imageshack.us/img560/9459/clickherefacebook.jpg[/IMG][/URL]
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(2014) The Antlers - Familiars [FLAC,tracks] {100.XY}
[center][b](2014) The Antlers - Familiars[/b][/center]
[b]Wikipedia:[/b]
The Antlers is an indie rock band currently based in Brooklyn, New York. The band’s lyrics are written and sung by Peter Silberman. Their music is composed and performed by Silberman, Darby Cicci (trumpet, upright/electric bass, keyboards, synths, vocals) and Michael Lerner (drums). The Antlers’ makeup has developed from a lo-fi, bedroom recording folk project into a heavily lush and orchestrated rock group with an aptitude for melodious experimentation and layering. The instrumentation consists of vocals, electric guitar, keyboards/synths, drums and an array of other instruments including piano, horns, strings, and electronic elements.[1] Silberman has said that the band's name is taken from The Microphones' song, "Antlers".
[b]Review:[/b]
The term “achingly beautiful” is such a go-to phrase in cultural criticism that there is even a Twitter account dedicated to pointing out its overuse. As cliché as it is, “achingly beautiful” seems fundamental in describing the songs of a band like the Antlers. The trio’s music is sometimes so personal and so graceful that it can be heartrending to listen to. That the Antlers have made significant stylistic leaps with each release, from 2009’s Hospice to 2011’s Burst Apart and to new album Familiars, while never once failing a sense of blistering elegance is hugely impressive. Familiars is perhaps the Antlers’ most affirmative release, but it’s also their most complex to date, filled with moments of profundity and reflection. To some, its lack of immediacy may make Familiars feel as out of time as reading verse poetry by a stream, but listeners who remain patient will likely end up enlightened and fulfilled.
The album’s first song and lead single, “Palace”, eases the listener into the album’s world. The song feels like a direct outgrowth of the band’s 2012 EP, Undersea, with its slowly unfolding power, but it soon becomes apparent that Familiars is going to be a much jazzier ordeal. Although synthesizers and keyboards have a presence on all of the songs, they have taken a backseat to multi-instrumentalist Darby Cicci’s trumpet, a gamble that pays off nicely. The emphasis on soulful brass, as well as a couple of frontman Peter Silberman’s sparkling clean guitar lines, imbue the songs with a throwback quality while still feeling present, a move which lends very nicely to Familiars’ theme of entering into a conversation with an embodiment of you that has experienced your past as well as your future. Familiars’ second track, “Doppelganger”, serves as a fine example of the level the Antlers are working on here. It’s another deliberately paced song, gray and smoky in the places where “Palace” is light. Most startling is Silberman’s choice of briefly abandoning his falsetto for a much lower, crawling, register that still holds a lot of drama.
In general, Silberman’s vocals are one of Familiars’ greatest assets, with his varied deliveries benefiting each song’s story and never overpowering the arrangements. With songs like “Revisited”, “Surrender”, and “Refuge” almost adopting melody lines similar to those of old standards, it would be so easy for a lesser singer to do variations on crooning for nine songs, but Silberman’s singing is far too heartfelt for that nonsense. It would likewise be easy to describe his singing as operatic or theatrical, but all vocal decisions feel as though they are coming from a pure, uncalculated place.
Likewise, songs that require a more uplifting angle are filled with a naturalism which makes the happiness feel hard-earned and sincere. “Parade” is perhaps the most immediate moment on Familiars. It’s bittersweet and optimistic and brassy all at once, and all the emotions it evokes and the images it conjures have yet to cheapen with repeat listens (and I’ve easily listened to “Parade” 20 or so times by now). It’s hard to really describe its triumph out of context, as the three tracks which precede it, “Intruders”, “Director”, and “Revisited”, make up the “heavy emotions” portion of Familiars. Despite its bobbing rhythms, “Intruders” the lines, “I’ll beg for answers to all my questions / like, ‘what happened’?” are presented so baldly, you may feel a small corner of your heart breaking and crumbling. “Director” has the cinematic atmospherics its title requires, with a climax that gives a sensation of Silberman calling out to his other self in the fog. “Revisited” is funereal, but has another nice build and, again, its solemnity makes “Parade”—as well as closing tracks “Surrender” and “Refuge”—shine all the more.
After listening to Familiars for two weeks straight, I spent a week away from it to see how its appeal held up after emotional investments faded. The ability to become lost in Familiars had only grown in that time, something which bodes well for both its running as one of 2014’s strongest releases and my argument that the album rewards patient listening. However, it also means that a silly catchall such as “achingly beautiful”, or even saying the Antlers’ music is deliberate and sad, threatens to box in compositions that are far more versatile than those terms suggest. So, if you listen to Familiars—and you probably should because it is very great—it is crucial to do so with an open heart and an open head. Your reaction may not be as strong as mine, but your feelings will have benefited all the same.
Review by Maria Schurr
Rate 9/10
[center][image=cWrRfQLgKp][/center]
[b]Track List:[/b]
01. Palace (5:36)
02. Doppelgänger (7:04)
03. Hotel (4:59)
04. Intruders (5:24)
05. Director (6:13)
06. Revisited (7:41)
07. Parade (5:11)
08. Surrender (6:15)
09. Refuge (4:56)
[b]Summary:[/b]
Country: USA
Genre: Indie rock, folk, dream pop, post-rock
[b]Media Report:[/b]
Source : CD
Format : FLAC
Format/Info : Free Lossless Audio Codec, 16-bit PCM
Bit rate mode : Variable
Bit rate : ~763-885 Kbps
Channel(s) : 2 channels
Sampling rate : 44.1 KHz
Bit depth : 16 bits
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