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Avril Lavigne - Goodbye Lullaby (Expanded Edition) (2011)

Avril Lavigne - Goodbye Lullaby (Expanded Edition) (2011)

BAND/ARTIST: Avril Lavigne

  • Title: Goodbye Lullaby (Expanded Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 2011
  • Label: Epic
  • Genre: Pop, Pop Rock
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:15:43
  • Total Size: 174 mb | 552 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Avril Lavigne - Black Star
02. Avril Lavigne - What the Hell
03. Avril Lavigne - Push
04. Avril Lavigne - Wish You Were Here
05. Avril Lavigne - Smile
06. Avril Lavigne - Stop Standing There
07. Avril Lavigne - I Love You
08. Avril Lavigne - Everybody Hurts
09. Avril Lavigne - Not Enough
10. Avril Lavigne - 4 Real
11. Avril Lavigne - Darlin
12. Avril Lavigne - Alice (Extended Version)
13. Avril Lavigne - Remember When
14. Avril Lavigne - Goodbye
15. Avril Lavigne - What The Hell (Acoustic Version)
16. Avril Lavigne - Push (Acoustic Version)
17. Avril Lavigne - Wish You Were Here (Acoustic Version)
18. Avril Lavigne - Bad Reputation
19. Avril Lavigne - What The Hell (Bimbo Jones Remix)
20. Avril Lavigne - What The Hell (Instrumental)
21. Avril Lavigne - Wish You Were Here (Instrumental)

Maturity already proven to be Avril Lavigne’s bugaboo way back in 2004 when she stumbled through a Chantal Kreviazuk co-written sophomore set called Under My Skin, the former mall punk once again returns to reflection for her fourth album, 2011’s Goodbye Lullaby. The occasion for introspection is Lavigne’s divorce from Sum 41 singer Deryck Whibley, who has some presence as a producer and phantom on Goodbye Lullaby, sometimes even standing at the helm for a lovelorn, regretful tune. Lavigne has songwriting credits on every cut here, bearing sole responsibility for half of the tunes. These are not the ones that stick. The ones that stick are Max Martin productions that he co-wrote, including first single “What the Hell,” which approximates Avril’s irrepressible brattiness only without seeming much fun at all. Despite Martin’s immense skill, he can’t quite get Avril to crack a smile here and her sorrow feels affected in a way that, say, P!nk’s never did on her comparable Funhouse. Lavigne once again seems to be grappling with emotions just beyond her reach, never articulating her angst or crafting a melancholy melody, making Goodbye Lullaby feel affected, not genuine.


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  • User offline
  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 18:34
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Thank you so much!!!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 01:14
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Many thanks for Flac.