تحميل Eliza Doolittle - Eliza Doolittle 2010

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تحميل Eliza Doolittle - Eliza Doolittle 2010





Artist.................: Eliza Doolittle
Album................: Eliza Doolittle
Genre................: Pop
Source...............: CD
Year..................: 2010
Ripper................: NMR

(FLAC)
Codec...............: Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC)
Version..............: FLAC 1.2.1 20070917
Quality..............: Lossless, (avg. bitrate: 812kb/s)
Channels...........: Stereo / 44100 HZ / 16 Bit
Tags.................: VorbisComment
Included............: Audiochecker, M3U
Covers..............: Front





(MP3)
Codec...............: LAME 3.98
Version.............: MPEG 1 Layer III
Quality..............: Insane, (avg. bitrate: 320kbps)
Channels...........: Joint Stereo / 44100 hz / 16 Bit
Tags................: .ID3 v2.3
Included...........: M3U
Covers..............: Front

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2010 debut album from the British singer/songwriter. Eliza Doolittle - strong of
opinion, smiley of face, loud of tights - was born in Camden, north London 21
years ago. Informed by the stresses of modern city life, teenage aggro,
classic pop, old soul and the appeal of simple, strong melodies built from
clanking percussion and jazzy licks, Eliza's album is bursting at the seams with
life and enthusiasm and vigour - just like its creator. Parlophone.

Charismatic young female singer from London. Bouncy and breezy pop songs
that sound made for summer. Lyrics with a hint of snark to them. Is this
beginning to sound familiar?

While it may be lazy, and no doubt, sexist to start throwing Lily Allen
comparisons at Eliza Doolittle, it's pretty much unavoidable at first listen. And
when you discover that her grandmother is Sylvia Young, she of the
legendary stage school, some cynical alarm bells may start to ring.

Yet that would be rather unfair to the Camden girl who was actually born
Eliza Caird. While she certainly follows the Allen template of cheeky, bright
pop songs with a twist, there's a lot more here than a stage school alumnus
trying to become famous.

For a start, she has a strong voice. In fact, on jazzy ballad A Smokey Room,
she sounds a dead ringer for Adele. Yet even on her poppier tracks there's a
vibrancy and strength to her vocals that mark her out from the rest of the
crowd.

The vast majority of tracks on this debut album are airy, reggae influenced
pop songs - sometimes, they work brilliantly, as on Skinny Genes, which is
devastatingly catchy, features rather saucy lyrics ("I really don't like your
skinny jeans, so take them off for me...show me what you've got
underneath") and even includes a healthy bout of whistling. It all add up to
perfect summertime listening.

Pack Up is equally delightful, having the balls to base the chorus on 1930s
marching song Pack Up Your Troubles In Your Old Kit Bag while remaining
utterly contemporary. It's so infectious that you don't notice that Eliza even
starts to tweet halfway through, without sounding (entirely) ridiculous.
Moneybox features a skanking melody and topical lyrical references to the
recession, while Missing has a nicely unsettling '50s doo-wop style
introduction.

Ultimately, this is a nice, pleasant debut album which will make the perfect
accompaniment to a fair few summer barbecues this year. There's enough
promise here to prevent Eliza Doolittle being dismissed as another Lily Allen
clone.

Coming as she does from a respected West End family, I suppose it was
inevitable that Eliza Sophie Caird should adopt the name of the celebrated
cockney flower girl whose crude, rough edges are famously smoothed out by
top-hatted Edwardian gent, Henry Higgins, but given the current market
demand for chirpy East End chicks whose privileged upbringings are routinely
buried beneath two inches of lipgloss and more dropped aitches than a Chas
n Dave Scrabble party, you have to assume theres somekind of clever
post-modern irony going on. But even if parallels could be drawn between
this and the likes of Lily Allen and Kate Nash, theyd clearly be at a superficial
level only. So before we shoot off on the usual Pygmalion-in-reverse
trajectory favoured by critics of Allen, rest assured that Elizas self-titled
debut is something a little different. Out goes the customary faux-rap of
Nash and Allens Islington-beat and in come some classic fifties doo-wop,
some trad jazz and bucketloads of skiffle. And what a delightful and rather
playful, boundary-bucking brew it all is too. Moneybox and Pack Up have
the loose and baggy charm of classic British music hall and Rollerblades does
for skates what Rehab did for Betty Ford; like Winehouse but with more
bubblegum, more fizz and more brightly coloured tights. Noveau rockabilly
birds like Imelda May and mavericks like Theresa Andersson probably offer a
more accurate musical context, but neither of these artists have the same
instinctive grasp of the goods or the sheer ebullience of Eliza.

Punchy, mischievous and bouncing along with the kind of energy more
commonly associated with children consuming too many vitamin pills, Doolittle
wraps her rubbery, husky vocals around a bakers dozen songs about sex,
make-up, downloads and missing dogs meted out with practically any musical
instrument that comes to hand. It's a rites of passage story with balloons,
party-poppers and without any of the cynical hostility and petulance that
typifies her contemporaries. Hip-hop in the truest sense of the word a
carnivalesque mish-mash of styles and genres slurped up and spat out with a
firm lump of modern phlegm. Happy music for happy people doing all manner
of happy activities and quite possibly one of the most cheerfully confident
debuts you are likely to hear all year.

Eliza Doolittle: as cute as a bagful of puppies and with the tonsils to match.
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1. (00:03:03) Eliza Doolittle - Moneybox
2. (00:03:02) Eliza Doolittle - Roller Blades
3. (00:02:56) Eliza Doolittle - Go Home
4. (00:03:04) Eliza Doolittle - Skinny Genes
5. (00:03:26) Eliza Doolittle - Mr. Medicine
6. (00:03:41) Eliza Doolittle - Missing
7. (00:03:40) Eliza Doolittle - Back To Front
8. (00:02:52) Eliza Doolittle - A Smokey Room
9. (00:02:40) Eliza Doolittle - So High
10. (00:02:59) Eliza Doolittle - Nobody
11. (00:03:09) Eliza Doolittle - Pack Up
12. (00:03:20) Eliza Doolittle - Police Car
13. (00:03:04) Eliza Doolittle - Empty Hand

Playing Time.........: 00:40:57
Total Size...........: 240.00 MB (FLAC)
Total Size...........: 95.40 MB (MP3)

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(FLAC)
كود:
	http://rapidshare.com/files/407820687/EZDooF.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/407820388/EZDooF.part2.rar (MP3)
 	
	http://rapidshare.com/files/407817866/EZDooM.rar
 

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