Louis Cole & Metropole Orkest - nothing (zip 2024) {Mp3 Rar Album} +Download

08 August 2024

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Louis Cole & Metropole Orkest nothing rar Torrent Full Album zip mp3 m4a Mediafire 320 kbps MEGA m4a

ALBUM HERE.⏩⏩ https://goo.su/iAopRZP

TRACKLIST:

01 Ludovici Cole Est Frigus
02 Things Will Fall Apart
03 Life
04 It All Passes
05 Cruisin’ for P
06 A Pill in the Sea
07 nothing
08 Who Cares 1
09 Who Cares 2
10 Wizard Funk
11 Weird Moments
12 High Five
13 These Dreams are Killing Me
14 Shallow Laughter: Bitches (orchestral version)
15 Let it Happen (orchestral version)
16 Doesn’t Matter
17 You Belonged

Louis Cole is a US drummer with virtuoso skills and an open mind. Signed to Brainfeeder, the cult Los Angeles label run by electronic musician Flying Lotus, he shares characteristics with labelmate and occasional collaborator, the bassist Thundercat. Dazzling technique is combined with laid-back irreverence. Eclecticism shades into quirkiness, as with his 2017 viral hit “Bank Account”, a memeable jingle about being afraid to check his bank balance.

Nothing belies its negative title by providing Cole with his largest sound palette to date. It has been made with Metropole Orkest, a Dutch orchestra specialising in pop and jazz, conducted by Jules Buckley. The 17 tracks are based on live recordings of Cole’s European tour with his band and the 50-strong Orkest in 2023. The music has been written, arranged, mixed and produced by the Californian. He sings in a wispy high voice and moves between background and foreground roles with his supple drumming.

In “Life”, the Metropole Orkest sets up a staccato routine reminiscent of Bernard Herrmann’s Psycho score. Cole and his bassist Sam Wilkes cut across it with pinpoint fast rhythms. The next four minutes resemble a high-octane contest between different orchestral sections and Cole’s band, including a volatile sax solo by David Binney and singing led by Genevieve Artadi, his partner in the jazz-funk duo Knower. “Disgraceful,” a British voice, presumably Buckley, says drily at the end. “All right, let’s move on.”

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