#1 The Dreamer

I'll take you to the open countryside. You need to take your time. Gradually slow down your stream of thoughts, open the windows of your spirit, and let me seep deep inside. I'll lower your norepinephrine levels. Sit now on the little wall under the olive trees, lean your back against the concrete wall of the small house, and close your eyes. In a few hours, you can return to your ordinary (pre)occupations. Play me without pauses or fears from "Loved" to "Three Drums".

I know you usually get excited with hard rock and electric distortions, but believe me, sometimes it's better to lower the tone. You need peaceful patterns to relax your circuits, not sensory overloads. As the sun sets and at the end of "Three Drums", you'll see that you'll thank me and play me again in this or another secluded place. The wet vegetable fields and the gray sky from the day before will only be a memory. Returning home, you'll notice a rainbow making its way over the skyscraper of the American multinational. You'll understand that everything has settled.

#2 The Terrorist

It's called "Three" but in truth, it's the twelfth work by the English artist who, after several singles left along the way in recent years and various collaborations (with Burial and Skrillex among others), returns to take on the long distance. A complete work that summarizes the various souls from the club scene to the more ambient one that had taken the helm in the bold "Parallel," nearly a spin-off.

But now let's proceed with a professional track by track of all the tracks from this album and the previous four for a total of 97 tracks you were all waiting for. We start with "Loved," which after the first thirty seconds of calm at one minute thirty-eight seconds and four hundredths * this content has been obscured as it does not comply with Debaser's policy *

#3 The Rushed

The brightest nemesis of Burial for nice days outdoors returns to the square with short but decisive steps. "Loved," "Three Drums," and "Skate" already go straight among the best things. The dreamlike and yoga-friendly dimension flirts with the luminous dance of "Daydream repeat," before the first crushes the second in the fragrant night of "So Blue." But it is the monumental and cinematic semi title-track that wins by a margin. An emotional swing of a full eight minutes.

Update your playlist on Spotify.

#4 The Professional

I had other ideas when they talked about him to me. I didn't know who Kieran Hebden, aka Four Tet, was. I was forced under torture to listen to him every morning while having breakfast with bread, butter, and jam. They demanded I listen at least 600 times before I could speak about it.
They assured me that they would return all my 423 vinyl records, including the precious limited edition ones from the Doors and Creedence Clearwater Revival, afterward. I just had to do the review in time. No one wanted to take care of it. Now release me and give me back my memorabilia, the terms were clear. Please, I have seven cats, twenty chickens, twenty-two goats, and eleven sheep to take care of.

#5 The Laconic

I like it and I vote.







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