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Little Songs About Raindrops

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Download links and information about Little Songs About Raindrops by Lullatone. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica, Rock, Pop genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 41:48 minutes.

Artist: Lullatone
Release date: 2004
Genre: Ambient, Electronica, Rock, Pop
Tracks: 10
Duration: 41:48
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. my petit prelude 0:42
2. yesterday 1:28
3. wake up wake up 6:23
4. leaves falling 4:12
5. puddles on the playground 3:40
6. morning coffee 5:55
7. afternoon nap (for pets) 4:45
8. pitter patter interlude 1:15
9. drip drops jumping on an umbrella 7:14
10. a miniature finale 6:14

Details

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The meandering, atmospheric compositions that make up Little Songs About Raindrops (they're little in scale and scope, not necessarily in length or complexity) branch out from Lullatone's predominantly electronic debut, Computer Recital, to include an impressive collection of toys: a tiny toy metalophone, a toy piano, a toy cassette tape recorder, and a programmable music box, whose glockenspiel-like tones dominate the album nearly as much as computer-generated sine waves did Recital. There's also some accordion, ukulele, viola, and delicately plucked (and rather toy-sounding) acoustic guitar. Virtually all of these instruments seem to personify the titular raindrops, which these songs are not so much "about" as wholly comprised of, figuratively speaking — and so, come to think of it, do Yoshimi Tomida's vocals, at least on the onomatopoeic "Pitter Patter Interlude." Needless to say, there's a considerable amount of cuteness and whimsy on display here — but that's not to suggest that this music is simplistic or overly precious. Apart from that admittedly cutesy interlude, the album is largely instrumental (Tomida's vocals appear on three other tracks, but they're either considerably muffled or substantially processed and manipulated), and largely concerned with gently building up layers of sound to create lush and lazy soundscapes that are wistful and winsome but still majestic in their quiet way. If the song titles and instrumentation make the childlike qualities of Lullatone's music inescapable, and perhaps suggest a whiff of gimmicky novelty, the music itself reveals that essence to be much more fundamental — even performed entirely on "adult" synthesizers and classical instruments and given banal, non-descriptive titles (which these pieces are both abstract and accomplished enough to accommodate), the music's simple beauty and sense of wonder would remain undeniable. ~ K. Ross Hoffman, Rovi