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The Skints - Part & Parcel mp3 download

The Skints - Part & Parcel mp3 download
Singer: The Skints
Title: Part & Parcel
Released: 2012
Country: UK
Style: Reggae, Ska
Genre: Reggae
Rating: 4.5
Votes: 169
Formats: MPC WAV VQF TTA XM AUD AU
MP3 size: 1603 mb

The Skints - Part & Parcel mp3 download

Tracklist

A1 Rise Up
A2 Ratatat
A3 Can't Take No More
A4 Live East, Die Young
A5 Ring Ring
A6 Lay You Down
A7 Sunny Sunny
B1 Rub-a-dub (Done Know)
B2 Up Against The Wall Riddim
B3 Soundboy
B4 You Better

Companies, etc.

  • Distributed By – Code 7
  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Bomber Music Ltd.
  • Copyright (c) – Bomber Music Ltd.
  • Licensed From – Penny Drop Recordings
  • Recorded At – The Ironworks
  • Mixed At – The Ironworks

Credits

  • Art Direction, Design, Layout – Cree$e*
  • Bass Guitar – Jonathan Doyle
  • Drums, Glockenspiel, Vocals – Jamie Kyiakides
  • Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals – Joshua Waters Rudge
  • Mastered By – Chris Potter
  • Percussion – Horseman
  • Piano, Electric Piano [Wurlitzer], Organ [Hammond & Wellson], Keyboards [Clav], Alto Saxophone, Flute, Toy [Game Boy], Melodica, Vocals – Marcia Richards
  • Recorded By [Additional Vocal Recording] – Max Gilkes, Nick 'Mutant HiFi' Coplowe*, Nick Nielsen
  • Recorded By, Mixed By, Producer – Prince Fatty
  • Vocals [Reggae Deejay] – Parly B

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 5024545635713

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
none The Skints Part & Parcel ‎(CDr, Album) Bomber Music none UK 2013
ABS101 The Skints Part & Parcel ‎(LP, Album, Red) Asbestos Records ABS101 US 2012
ASB101 The Skints Part & Parcel ‎(LP, Album, Ltd, RE, Red) Bomber Music Ltd., Asbestos Records ASB101 US 2014
UXB010-BLP The Skints Part & Parcel ‎(2xLP, Album, Exp) Bomber Music UXB010-BLP UK 2013
SBR025 The Skints Part & Parcel ‎(CD, Dig) Soulbeats Records SBR025 France 2013

The Skints - Part & Parcel mp3 album free



Gabar
It may have been a long time coming, but the second Skints album, Part and Parcel, is here and in a word it is Skintastic. I am aware, of course, that isn’t a real word, but I feel in this case it is appropriate. It hit me when listening to the album, sitting out in the beautiful spring sunshine (where it is in its element may I add) that a new word in this case is entirely necessary; the Skints really are in a class of their own at the moment. Despite having its weak links, fundamentally this is a superb collection of great songs that invoke a rich melting pot of summery feelings and is well worth your attention.Rise Up, the opening track, is one of the albums strongest songs but also representative of the album as a whole. More Reggae/Ska than the Ska/Punk of their past, Part and Parcel is much more accessible than their similarly brilliant debut Live.Breathe.Build.Believe. But longstanding Skints fans, like myself have nothing to fear. This still sounds and feels like a Skints record but an evolution on what has come before. Rather than the guitar providing the weight to their sound, the bass takes over. Produced by reggae legend Prince Fatty, the production is rich and fully fleshed out and really does the songs justice. Rise Up is dubby, skanking and really demonstrates how the Skints distribute their vocals so successfully. Marcia’ soft, almost venerable voice contrasts beautifully against the slightly harsher tones of Josh and Jamie. Ranging from rapping on the track Soundboy, to the harmonies on Can’t Take No More, the Skints have excelled themselves in this respect.Ratatat, the lead single, is fantastic and probably the most progressive sounding track on the album. Part and Parcel does sees the Skints resting back on their influences much more than on their debut. Sometimes this approach doesn’t really work like on Ring Ring, Sunny Sunny and You Better, the weakest tracks on the album, but the absolute tune Lay You Down and the brilliant Rubadub (Done Know), whilst harking back, they are so well written and fun that it becomes irrelevant what other thing it is trying to sound like. Despite a more classically reggae structure, this still sounds like a product of 2012, such as one of the standout tracks, Live East Die Young, which really is an exceptional song and one that has stuck with me.I know for certain I shall be returning to songs on this album all summer and beyond, this isn’t a perfect album but if you want great reggae for the twenty-first century look no further than The Skints of London Town.9.0/10http://1000goodintentions.wordpress.com
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