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Funeral Car

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Download links and information about Funeral Car by Desert City Soundtrack. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 48:03 minutes.

Artist: Desert City Soundtrack
Release date: 2003
Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 48:03
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. My Hell (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 2:24
2. Drowning Horses (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 4:05
3. Drawn and Quartered (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 3:12
4. Dying Dawn (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 4:45
5. Take You Under (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 4:21
6. These Games We Play (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 6:09
7. Second Sickness (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 2:40
8. Fields Landing (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 3:31
9. Casket (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 4:40
10. Something About a Ghost (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 3:50
11. Traction and Temperature (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 2:30
12. Westpoint (featuring Desert City Sountrack) 5:56

Details

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Desert City Soundtrack sets itself apart from the bulk of its indie rock contemporaries by putting Corin Gray's piano and trumpet skills out in front of Funeral Car. Built around songs about loss and mourning, the quartet's debut launches with the sad, lush "My Hell." Hushed, pensive keyboards remain prominent on the pensive ballad "Drowning Horses," which crescendos with vocalist/guitarist Matt Carillo's cathartic rants. The Portland outfit's emotional purging carries over into "Drawn and Quartered," a piano-pounding, drum-thumping take on hardcore. Easing up for the moody "Dying Dawn," the horn-laced number hints at acceptance, but the band's compelling sound never swerves from being overcast, as brooding, bleak orchestration meets apocalyptic drama on "Take You Under." Death for Desert City takes on a number of forms, be it loss of love, loss of sanity, or loss of life. Funeral Car is a sad and eerie vehicle worth taking a trip in. Just leave the razor blades in the medicine cabinet. ~ John D. Luerssen, Rovi