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Lene Lovich - Flex...Plus (Reissue) (1979/1991)

Lene Lovich - Flex...Plus (Reissue) (1979/1991)

BAND/ARTIST: Lene Lovich

  • Title: Flex...Plus
  • Year Of Release: 1979/1991
  • Label: Rhino Records
  • Genre: Post Punk, New Wave, Pop Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 01:06:44
  • Total Size: 162/451 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Lene Lovich - Flex...Plus (Reissue) (1979/1991)


Tracklist:

01. Bird Song 04:29
02. What Will I Do Without You 03:35
03. Angels 03:08
04. The Night 04:31
05. You Can't Kill Me 03:47
06. Egghead 02:27
07. Wonderful One 04:28
08. Monkey Talk 03:22
09. Joan 03:18
10. The Freeze 04:45

Bonus Tracks:
11. New Toy 03:18
12. Savages 03:51
13. Special Star 03:11
14. Never Never Land 04:07
15. Cat's Away 03:43
16. Details 03:12
17. It's You, Only You (Mein Schmerz) 03:38
18. Blue Hotel 03:45

Lene Lovich's sophomore album, 1980's Flex, found her still dabbling in her own quirky wave-driven waters. Her second full-length release in less than a year, it was packed with another handful of brilliantly composed songs of neo-wave intention. Unfortunately, it also marked the end of the British public's love affair with Lovich's admittedly edgy art. The octave-scaling "Bird Song," released some months ahead of the main attraction, should have been a smash, but failed absurdly. The innocent and singalong-able (except for Lovich's record-shattering instrumental vocal additions, of course) "Angels" followed it into obscurity, and that despite standing as one of Flex's best offerings. A delicious cover of Frankie Valli's "The Night" rounds out the album's most spellbinding moments, but elsewhere, things get sticky. Flex's biggest drawback is that it suffers somewhat from Lovich's own success. Stateless...Plus was remarkable because its sounds were so new. Flex merely reiterates them, and Lovich relies a little too heavily on rehashing earlier triumphs, most notably on the too-gimmicky "Monkey Talk," a Stateless...Plus-era outtake that had previously been released on a giveaway promo album, and the gratuitously irritating "You Can't Kill Me." Lovich herself appeared to share her audience's ill ease over the album's lack of progression; not only did Flex mark the end of her commercial era, it also prefaced two years of public silence and private re-evaluation before she would return.


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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 06:04
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    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.
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  • jmucc69
  •  wrote in 12:52
    • Like
    • 1
Thanks a million!