Ty Segall – Harmonizer (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Ty Segall - Harmonizer (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz] Download

Artist: Ty Segall
Album: Harmonizer
Genre: Rock
Release Date: 2021
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 48 kHz
Duration: 35:23
Total Tracks: 10
Total Size: 441 MB

Tracklist:

1-01. Ty Segall – Learning (01:46)
1-02. Ty Segall – Whisper (03:38)
1-03. Ty Segall – Erased (04:39)
1-04. Ty Segall – Harmonizer (04:48)
1-05. Ty Segall – Pictures (04:51)
1-06. Ty Segall – Ride (03:12)
1-07. Ty Segall – Waxman (03:08)
1-08. Ty Segall – Play (02:23)
1-09. Ty Segall – Feel Good (02:57)
1-10. Ty Segall – Changing Contours (03:56)

Download:

His first album in forever (two years)! Ty glides smoothly into a wild area with a synthtasm of production redesign, dialing up a wealth of new guitar and keyboard settings. A seething statement of emotional austerity, Harmonizer enraptures the ear, while enabling Ty to cut through dense undergrowth, making groove moves for the body, mind and soul.It’s been two years since the last Ty Segall record-which wouldn’t be a big deal for anyone else, but we’re talking about one of the most prolific musicians of this century (or any other time?). Segall has released 13 records since his start in 2008, not counting ones from his side projects Fuzz and GOGGS, the C.I.A. collaboration with wife Den’ee, live albums, EPs, cover albums, his production work, the Harry Nilsson and T. Rex tributes, or TV theme compositions. The slight lull hasn’t really changed the direction of Segall, a stalwart of the modern California garage rock scene; you can still hear his primary influences on Harmonizer: delightful Skip Spence folk weirdness, Marc Bolan’s melodic strut, Syd Barrett’s acid damage.

While in the past Segall’s been known to make the occasional acoustic turn (2013’s Sleeper), this time it’s cover-to-cover fuzz. (It’s also not a mellow record like Goodbye Bread-no ballads allowed here.) There are echoes of Love’s woozy-melody psychedelia on “Whisper,” and Segall dips pretty faithfully into his garage-noise roots for “Feel Good,” letting Den’ee take over vocals (she sings it like how some ’60s futurist would have imagined a 21st-century robot sounding). “Erased” is positively hypnotizing-a warning siren blaring, tattoo drums and a crazy-heavy undertow. “Pictures” travels from freak-out to drone, with a breakdown of video game bloops in between. “Waxman” is ’70s metal sludge cut through with blazing guitar, while “Play” sounds like it’s borrowing (and deliciously warping) a guitar riff from Free. If that makes it seem all over the place, well, that’s what Segall does best, but there’s always a magical throughline that makes his songs feel like a collection of companions rather than disconnected strangers. – Shelly Ridenour

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