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When Life Hands You Lemons

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Download links and information about When Life Hands You Lemons by Piebald. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 36:06 minutes.

Artist: Piebald
Release date: 1997
Genre: Rock
Tracks: 10
Duration: 36:06
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Two Rocking Chairs on a Porch 2:50
2. Our Very Own Employment Office 3:19
3. One Hundred Percent Good 4:44
4. Small Town Outside of Boston 3:44
5. Piano Song in a Minor 2:05
6. Sandpaper Steering Wheel 3:56
7. The Sea and a Lifesaver 4:18
8. In Like a Lamb and out Like a Lion 2:24
9. New Coke 4:33
10. Part II: The Noreaster 4:13

Details

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The debut LP from Andover, MA's Piebald is characterized by a fresh attitude, a slight smirk, and plenty of rock energy. Led by singer Travis Shettel's almost unsettlingly high and, at times, off-key voice, the group manages to create off-kilter harmonies over varying time signatures with shockingly cohesive results. Pulled together by a strong rhythm section including the powerful yet aggressively tight drumming of Jon Sullivan, Piebald rummages their way through 11 tracks of high-energy emo-influenced rock & roll. Over their journey, they take on some surprisingly idealistic themes, but whether discussing their "personal politics," or dubbing themselves "the Humus generation," there is also a hint at the sense of humor that future releases would see brought (for better or worse) more toward the surface. When Life Hands You Lemons has more than a few high points, among them the grating but catchy "One Hundred Percent Good" and the anthemic "The Sea and a Lifesaver," but the chugging intensity and emotional viewpoint of "Holden Caulfield" may be the record's most ambitious moment. Packed with plenty of creative hooks and maybe a few too many lyrical clichés, Piebald's debut is exactly what any young band trying to make a standout record should take into account. When Life Hands You Lemons not only takes a noble stab at a few things that aren't guaranteed to work, it does so with enough attitude to see the effort through. ~ Peter D'Angelo, Rovi