Oops! Looks like we're having trouble connecting to our server.
Refresh your browser window to try again.
Informazioni su questo prodotto
Product Identifiers
Record LabelRfcr, Run for COVER
UPC0811408033466
eBay Product ID (ePID)9046040373
Product Key Features
FormatCD
Release Year2019
GenreRock
ArtistTurnover
Release TitleAltogether
Dimensions
Item Height0.25 in
Item Weight0.12 lb
Item Length5.61 in
Item Width4.91 in
Additional Product Features
Number of Discs1
Number of Tracks10
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States
Tracks1.1 Still in Motion 1.2 Much After Feeling 1.3 Parties 1.4 Number on the Gate 1.5 Sending Me Right Back 1.6 Ceramic Sky 1.7 Valley of the Moon 1.8 No Reply 1.9 Plant Sugar 1.10 Temporary Love
NotesThere is a closeness at the heart of Turnover's aptly titled new album, 'Altogether.' Though it's the first collection the trio has written while living on opposite coasts, the record actually represents the group's most collaborative and connected work to date, showcasing the intuitive, near-telepathic relationship frontman Austin Getz has developed over the years with his bandmates. Turnover first emerged roughly a decade ago in Virginia Beach, VA, but the group's critical and commercial breakthrough didn't arrive until six years later, when they cracked the Top 5 on the Billboard Heatseekers Chart with their acclaimed sophomore album, 'Peripheral Vision.' The band-which consists of Getz, his brother Casey on drums, and their childhood friend Danny Dempsey on bass-followed it up in 2017 with 'Good Nature,' a streaming smash that racked up roughly 40 million plays on Spotify alone and which Vice proclaimed to be "their best album yet." 'Altogether' demonstrates the band's eclectic mix of personalities from the very start, opening with a lo-fi, jazzy intro that quickly gives way to the driving drums and delay-drenched guitar of "Still In Motion." Like much of the album to come, the song is a meditation on change and perspective, on learning to quiet your mind and appreciate the moment before it's gone. The bittersweet "No Reply" reckons with guilt over failing to be present with a loved one, while the effervescent "Much After Feeling" recognizes the sacrifices we make to stay connected across geographical distance, and the breezy "Parties" grapples with the kind of self-consciousness that can leave us prisoners of our own design.