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Artist: Jason Isbell
Album: Something More Than Free
Bitrate: 211kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: Southeastern / Alive
Genre: Rock
Size: 69.20 megs
PlayTime: 0h 43min 31sec total
Rip Date: 2015-07-23
Store Date: 2015-07-17

Track List:
--------
01. If It Takes a Lifetime           3:40
02. 24 Frames                        3:13
03. Flagship                         3:50
04. How to Forget                    4:04
05. Children of Children             5:49
06. The Life You Chose               4:03
07. Something More Than Free         3:30
08. Speed Trap Town                  4:02
09. Hudson Commodore                 3:24
10. Palmetto Rose                    4:03
11. To a Band That I Loved           3:53

Release Notes:
--------
With his honeysuckle drawl and unrivaled knack for lyrical detail, Jason Isbell
is arguably the most revered roots-rock singer-songwriter of his generation. On
his latest, Isbell, 36, sings plenty about romantic dedication and past
recklessness, familiar territory that the singer mined to great success on his
2013 breakthrough, Southeastern. But this time around, he trades in that album's
personal tales of crisis and redemption for a more nuanced, wide-angled form of
storytelling, packed to bursting with evocative specifics: "Jack and Coke in
your momma's car/You were reading The Bell Jar."

The Alabama-raised songwriter's new collection, set to his trademark
country-tinged soft rock, is populated with everyday snapshots from the modern
South ù from the young man fleeing his too-small hometown in "Speed Trap Town"
to the law-defying South Carolinian telling a "bullshit story about the Civil
War" on the murky blues rocker "Palmetto Rose." On the latter, Isbell ponders
hundreds of years of national history with conflicting shame and pride, before
arriving at a very American conclusion: "I follow my own free will," he sings,
"and I take in my fill." It's a master class in songwriting from an artist who's
never sounded more confident.



This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net

Artist: Jason Isbell
Album: Something More Than Free
Bitrate: 211kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: Southeastern / Alive
Genre: Rock
Size: 69.20 megs
PlayTime: 0h 43min 31sec total
Rip Date: 2015-07-23
Store Date: 2015-07-17

Track List:
--------
01. If It Takes a Lifetime           3:40
02. 24 Frames                        3:13
03. Flagship                         3:50
04. How to Forget                    4:04
05. Children of Children             5:49
06. The Life You Chose               4:03
07. Something More Than Free         3:30
08. Speed Trap Town                  4:02
09. Hudson Commodore                 3:24
10. Palmetto Rose                    4:03
11. To a Band That I Loved           3:53

Release Notes:
--------
With his honeysuckle drawl and unrivaled knack for lyrical detail, Jason Isbell
is arguably the most revered roots-rock singer-songwriter of his generation. On
his latest, Isbell, 36, sings plenty about romantic dedication and past
recklessness, familiar territory that the singer mined to great success on his
2013 breakthrough, Southeastern. But this time around, he trades in that album's
personal tales of crisis and redemption for a more nuanced, wide-angled form of
storytelling, packed to bursting with evocative specifics: "Jack and Coke in
your momma's car/You were reading The Bell Jar."

The Alabama-raised songwriter's new collection, set to his trademark
country-tinged soft rock, is populated with everyday snapshots from the modern
South — from the young man fleeing his too-small hometown in "Speed Trap Town"
to the law-defying South Carolinian telling a "bullshit story about the Civil
War" on the murky blues rocker "Palmetto Rose." On the latter, Isbell ponders
hundreds of years of national history with conflicting shame and pride, before
arriving at a very American conclusion: "I follow my own free will," he sings,
"and I take in my fill." It's a master class in songwriting from an artist who's
never sounded more confident.



This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net


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