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Hawksley Workman - Lover / Fighter (Deluxe 20th Anniversary) (2023)

Hawksley Workman - Lover / Fighter (Deluxe 20th Anniversary) (2023)

BAND/ARTIST: Hawksley Workman

  • Title: Lover / Fighter (Deluxe 20th Anniversary)
  • Year Of Release: 2023
  • Label: Universal Music Canada Inc.
  • Genre: Pop, Rock, Indie, Alternative
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
  • Total Time: 01:15:33
  • Total Size: 479 MB | 173 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist
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01. Hawksley Workman - We Will Still Need A Song
02. Hawksley Workman - Even An Ugly Man
03. Hawksley Workman - Wonderful And Sad
04. Hawksley Workman - Anger As Beauty
05. Hawksley Workman - No Reason To Cry Out Your Eyes
06. Hawksley Workman - Tonight Romanticize The Automobile
07. Hawksley Workman - The Future Language Of Slaves
08. Hawksley Workman - Smoke Baby
09. Hawksley Workman - Autumn's Here
10. Hawksley Workman - Ilfracombe
11. Hawksley Workman - Addicted
12. Hawksley Workman - Smoke Baby (Acoustic)
13. Hawksley Workman - We Will Still Need A Song (2023 version)
14. Hawksley Workman - No Reason To Cry Out Your Eyes (2023 version)
15. Hawksley Workman - Autumn's Here (2023 version)
16. Hawksley Workman - Anger As Beauty (2023 version)

There's a perverse sort of fascination watching an artist who received substantial early plaudits piddle away his critical goodwill with a series of puzzling follow-up releases. Even looking at Lover-Fighter from the perspective of a fan, it's hard to know what Hawksley Workman was thinking with some of the heavy-handed production choices, though. Right off the bat, "We Will Still Need a Song" -- by any other measure a classic Workman song -- is polished to a glassy sheen more reminiscent of U2 than Workman, a situation that's also true with the first single "Anger as Beauty." That's not to say that either of them are particularly bad songs, but there's something oddly generic about them, which is why this is such a frustrating release: Workman has already proven that he's capable of releasing unique material, both lyrically and musically, while still having pop appeal, and the glossy 80s-style production seems misplaced both in terms of necessity -- it's most certainly not necessary -- but also in terms of style -- why pick a sound this dated? It's also worth noting that lyrically there's a certain repetitiveness here; Workman name-checks whiskey on three separate songs (four if you count the hidden bonus tracks) and talks about being drunk on three others (though thankfully not on the two songs about automobiles). Scattered throughout the album are the more subdued and thoughtful numbers you expect on a Workman release: "Wonderful and Sad," "The Future Language of Slaves," and the official album-closer "Autumn's Here," which, despite the horn and string section, still seems more restrained than the big ol' rock numbers. The enhanced portion of the CD features a video on the making of the album, which gives a much more natural view of Workman the person, rather than playing up Workman the rock star. It's a much more appealing persona and it's too bad there wasn't more of that side of Workman in the music.~© Sean Carruthers /TiVo

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