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The Eternals

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Download links and information about The Eternals by The Eternals. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 51:59 minutes.

Artist: The Eternals
Release date: 2000
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 9
Duration: 51:59
Buy on iTunes $8.91

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Billions of People 5:47
2. Stirring Up Weather 6:42
3. Feverous Times 4:44
4. Phase 3 (of a Never Ending Transformation) 6:45
5. Eternally Yours 5:38
6. Forever People 5:02
7. Eternals 2000 6:00
8. Bewilderness 4:50
9. The Beginning and the End 6:31

Details

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The Eternals' impressive debut could just as easily be entitled "Sondheim in Dub" or "The Congos Meet the Headhunters Inna Midwest Soundclash." That alone should separate this from the remainder of Chicago-based records that feature the studio skills of John McEntire and Casey Rice. It could also be called the fifth Trenchmouth record; multi-instrumentalists Damon Locks and Wayne Montana were in that relatively rock-oriented (but still utterly unclassifiable) outfit together. Where their first three albums flirted with dub, their swan song was a bear hug. The extension served here is pretty logical, with a couple key developments. The just-as-central rhythms are more slackened, not as taut. Odd keyboard noises and random effects duke it out with the bass/drum axis, but the anchor is never lost. Locks has either seen a voice coach or is making a deliberate attempt to be more of a "proper vocalist" by using his voice in a more melodic and ranging sense; on "Eternally Yours," he even seems to sing a lost jazz standard. The loose vibe throughout is best indicated by "Stirring Up Weather"; it holds the record's fastest tempo, however it falls very short of being considered speedy on its own. Don't expect to enjoy the album if you're in a hurry or want to spin on your head. The sound might be thick, but it's not exactly molasses either — it's flows more like a constant faucet. There's simply too much going on to push the record into the background, although its leisurely pace can also work on a subliminal level. If anything, give them credit for resisting the need to title a song "Captain Beefheart Dub Plate."