• logo

Jesse Malin ‎- The Heat (Deluxe) (2016)

Jesse Malin ‎- The Heat (Deluxe) (2016)

BAND/ARTIST: Jesse Malin

  • Title: The Heat
  • Year Of Release: 2016
  • Label: One Little Indian
  • Genre: Alt-Country, Indie Rock, Singer/Songwriter
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 1:25:04
  • Total Size: 498 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1

01. Mona Lisa (2:46)
02. Swinging Man (4:07)
03. Silver Manhattan (4:33)
04. Arrested (4:02)
05. Since You're In Love (4:06)
06. Going Out West (For Jenny) (2:24)
07. Scars Of Love (3:27)
08. New World Order (3:04)
09. About You (4:05)
10. Block Island (4:33)
11. Basement Home (2:54)
12. Hotel Columbia (3:24)
13. Indian Summer (3:23)
14. God's Lonely People (4:12)

CD 2

01. Holy Ghost (3:16)
02. Cigarettes & Violets (4:02)
03. Death Or Glory (3:05)
04. Red Eye (3:39)
05. Questioningly (Live Bootleg) (3:23)
06. Basement Home (Live Bootleg) (3:22)
07. Everybody's Talkin' (Live Bootleg) (2:52)
08. New World Order (Alt Mix) (3:07)
09. Almost Grown (Live Bootleg) (3:32)
10. Stranger Than Fools (Studio B Side) (3:47)

With New York City in his back pocket once again, Jesse Malin continues his serenade to lost loves and forgotten opportunities on his second album, The Heat. He kicks his best buddy, Ryan Adams, out of the production seat to take care of things himself and once more cuts apart his honest heart. Isn't that why most become musicians, to deal with the fear of loss and regret? Their wounded soul becomes their art and a way of dealing with the bad hand they got dealt. It's good therapy for most artists and a cold-water cure for a lot of music fans, but relying on that formula itself doesn't automatically make a great record. The Heat goes through the motions of telling stories and Malin is a charmer with his self-pitying poetics. Songs such as the false sexual gratification of "Arrested," the rompish skip and run of "Mona Lisa," and the haunted political errors of "New World Order" are loaded in affection and raw roots rock. Malin's drag racer-like desire to find some kind of solace with love is even more fierce on "Hotel Columbia," an excellent piano-guitar dalliance that never lets up. But no matter how much The Heat yearns for common ground, Malin's songwriting suffers somewhat. He's skilled and inventive with his work as a musician, but the aches and pains of songs like "Swinging Man" and "God's Lonely People" fall short of what Malin delivered on The Fine Art of Self-Destruction. It's as if he's reaching for something, but uncertain of what he's supposed to be reaching for. That's okay. The Heat is only Malin's second album and shouldn't be categorized as a slump. Sonically, he's progressing into a real cowboy balladeer without dismissing his punk days. The desperation of "Since You're in Love" makes this evident; however, lyrics like "I'm still sad over you" aren't poignant enough. Malin has what it takes to write a really beautiful love song, one full of love's usual blood and guts. Perhaps he's terrified -- like most people are -- of owning up to the fear of losing it or never having it?




As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 00:26
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.
  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 12:05
    • Like
    • 0
Many Thanks