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Homesick and Happy to Be Here (Deluxe Edition)

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Download links and information about Homesick and Happy to Be Here (Deluxe Edition) by Aberdeen. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:30:29 minutes.

Artist: Aberdeen
Release date: 2002
Genre: Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:30:29
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Handsome Drink 3:19
2. Sink or Float 3:26
3. Clouds Like These 3:52
4. Sunny in California 3:50
5. Thousand Steps 5:22
6. Homesick 5:21
7. Cities & Buses 4:43
8. Drive 4:15
9. In My Sleep 4:50
10. That Cave That Moon 5:54
11. Sink or Float (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 3:27
12. Drive (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 4:06
13. Handsome Drink (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 3:17
14. Cities and Buses (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 5:24
15. Clouds Like These (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 3:54
16. Sunny in California (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 3:49
17. Coffeepop (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 5:21
18. Monochrome Sunday (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 5:26
19. In My Sleep (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 4:56
20. That Cave That Moon (David Newton Mix) [David Newton Mix] 5:57

Details

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Release a couple of EPs, split up, and re-form seven years later to record your debut album — it isn't usual practice, but that's exactly what Aberdeen did. In the face of their circumstances, or because of them, Homesick and Happy to Be Here is a roomy, positively beaming sort of record of diamond-sharp mid-tempo indie pop, a uniquely delayed first attempt that runs somewhere between Jeepster earnestness and the flagrant sparkle of the Trash Can Sinatras' Cake. "In My Sleep" and "Thousand Steps" are easy to write off as boringly ineffectual, but there's a wealth of charm here, particularly in "Cities and Buses," a choir-backed whisper behind the bushes, and "Handsome Drink," which floats by with golden acoustic guitars, shimmering doorbell keyboards, and an understated but hardly twee male/female vocal exchange. Maybe overdue, but shockingly worth the wait.