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The Unsustainable Lifestyle

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Download links and information about The Unsustainable Lifestyle by Beauty Pill. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 49:46 minutes.

Artist: Beauty Pill
Release date: 2004
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 49:46
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Goodnight for Real 4:49
2. Lifeguard In Wintertime 4:32
3. The Mule On the Plane 4:38
4. Prison Song 3:10
5. The Western Prayer 3:40
6. Won't You Be Mine 3:27
7. Such Large Portions! 4:53
8. Nancy Medley, Girl Genius, Age 15 5:01
9. Quote Devout Unquote 5:00
10. Drive Down the Cost 4:15
11. I'm Just Gonna Close My Eyes for a Second 3:33
12. Terrible Things 2:48

Details

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Despite the hubbub surrounding the Cigarette Girl from the Future and You Are Right to be Afraid EPs, Beauty Pill's full-length The Unsustainable Lifestyle is not so much exciting as it is intellectual, reflecting the arch modernism that's been percolating in indie rock — mostly on the East Coast — since at least the late '90s. It also feels like a patchwork at times, though this is to be expected considering lineup fluctuations and the two-year recording span detailed in the liners. Lifestyle's vocal presence ends up split between Wurlitzer player Rachel Burke and BP main brain Chad Clark; the musical palette has its variations, but only gives the guitars any opportunity to be loud or crazy (see the warbling, chiming leads alternating with weird dubby breakdowns in "Such Large Portions!"). "The Mule on the Plane" and "Western Prayer" drive forward at different paces, but are conscious of the deliberateness and concision that have become hallmarks of Dischord, not to mention Yo La Tengo's work, which keeps wafting through Lifestyle. Burke adds to this deliberateness with her precise intonation; on the acoustic standout "Prison Song" as well as "Quote Devout Unquote," her detachment makes her sound a lot like Mary Timony. Another highlight is "Nancy Medley, Girl Genius, Age 15," where Clark's near whisper guides an ambling post-rock guitar line shifting gracefully between a soothing melody and an urgent teeter of dangling notes. After mentioning both bomb-sniffing and seeing-eye dogs during its duration, The Unsustainable Lifestyle ends with a subtly catchy solo guitar, references to Idi Amin, and a challenge for the listener to stop terrible things from happening. For its part, the album is certainly not terrible. The instrumentation might have made more of a statement, but its intellectualism and studied approach make Beauty Pill's next move intriguing.