Lewis taylor rar




















It sounds nothing like Taylor. Graycap23 said: sunlite said: Graycap23 said: What project is this from? Life's an elevator can't you dig the sound? That's the thing about Lewis Taylor.

His influences are so vast and deep. He went all the way to the other side when he recorded this cover disc. It would be cool to see Prince do something with zero commercial potential.

Something would've made Zappa say damn! The other side? Dude must have been on something. This is the 1st project of his that I don't care 4 at all. You have pics of this? Tweet Share Message. I have yet to hear his shit. We deeply care about the security of your files.

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Otherwise, our office support solve all of your questions. I can see why he was hard to sell, because the material is like "Dusk Til Dawn" - changes genre halfway through. So for me, there were as many bits not to like as to like. In the same tune. I find it a frustrating listen, but YMMV. I'll up it tonight if you cannae find it on slsk and such. I have some, will put up later assuming it hasn't already been covered by others. Junior 4, Posts. I still love his first album the most but understand the feels for the second.

Unfortunately, learning those handfuls of fans at a time may no longer be enough to keep feeding us the artists and music we love and it certainly will never allow us to experience the magnum opus some of these artists are capable of creating.

Last year Lewis Taylor announced he was retiring from the music industry and that indie label, Hacktone Records, release of The Lost Album is indeed to be his swansong.

Retirement after a long and torturous career of being publicly ignored outside of the UK and misunderstood and mis-categorized by Island Records Taylor's major label foray , all while being our critical darling. Though Hacktone's release of The Lost Album is a glorious auditory gem, its finality in the pre-mature end of a promising artist's career should also alert us to this distressing trend of losing artists from the marketplace who've not yet achieved their artistic peaks.

The continuance of losing artist of Lewis Taylor's caliber could mean the loss of our generation of soul legends and the iconic works that can make them so. Sermon aside, Brit-born Lewis Taylor has already created seminal works starting at 30 with his self-titled UK debut, back when he was labeled the blue-eyed soul savior of soul music.

Back then he rejected such labels and created The Lost Album , a hallmark to 70's progressive rock and California soul pop, as a direct response to critics who compared him to-and a label that marketed him as the next-Al Green and Curtis Mayfield.

Island promptly dismissed Taylor's submitted demo cuts of The Lost Album. Defeated, Taylor's half-hearted attempt at industry concession with the sublime, yet highly experimental Lewis II effectively ended his Island tenure once the album failed to capture Island's marketing department or the buying public's attention.

That this album's material was conceived over a decade ago and still sounds as fresh is a testament to the timelessness of Taylor's music.

Hacktone's release of this fourteen track classic has been remixed, remastered and repackaged since its independent release on Taylor's own label, Slow Reality, with three stunning acoustic versions of songs from 's Lewis Taylor.



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