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Variations (Deluxe Video Edition)

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Download links and information about Variations (Deluxe Video Edition) by Hundreds. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Electronica, Alternative genres. It contains 23 tracks with total duration of 01:40:17 minutes.

Artist: Hundreds
Release date: 2011
Genre: Electronica, Alternative
Tracks: 23
Duration: 01:40:17
Buy on iTunes $13.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Solace 4:54
2. Grab the Sunset 4:03
3. Happy Virus 3:19
4. Fighter 5:08
5. I Love My Harbour 4:53
6. Blank 2:15
7. Machine 4:03
8. Song for a Sailor 3:04
9. Walking On Rails 1:30
10. Wait for My Raccoon 5:21
11. Let's Write the Streets 5:08
12. Little Heart 4:46
13. I Love My Harbour (Small Panthers Version) 5:18
14. Fighter (Rue Royale Version) 3:18
15. Song for a Sailor (Monta Version) 4:05
16. Machine (Bodi Bill Version) 4:28
17. Wait for My Raccoon (Sheahan Drive Version) 3:42
18. Happy Virus (Phon.o Version) 3:03
19. Grab the Sunset (Styrofoam Version) 4:36
20. Little Heart (Einar Stray Version) 4:59
21. Let's Write the Streets (Get Well Soon Version) 4:55
22. Solace (Touchy Mob Version) 7:59
23. Wait for My Raccoon 5:30

Details

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The German electronic-pop duo Hundreds step it up with this special packaging of Variations. The deluxe video edition features 12 bonus remixes and the official video for “Wait for My Raccoon.” The piano-based “Solace” opens with Eva Milner singing through lo-fi distortion before abruptly switching to an upfront and intimate presence. It sounds like she’s singing you a personal serenade over Philipp Milner’s accompanying orchestrations. With the following “Grab the Sunset,” her smooth inflections float over pitter-patter beats before the more playful “Happy Virus” pulses like an outtake from Ivy’s 2011 album All Hours. The duo uses children’s toy instruments in the innovatively crafted “I Love My Harbour,” where Milner croons over an even balance of studio wizardry and scratchy fidelity to inadvertently recall moments from Portishead’s celebrated 1994 debut album, Dummy. The haunting “Little Heart” closes with Milner whisper-singing alongside spare accompaniment. The song slowly snowballs into a delicately layered ballad where self-sung vocal harmonies blossom like a snow flower.