The Cure - Songs Of A Lost World (zip 2024) {Rar Album Mp3} ++Download

31 October 2024

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The Cure Songs Of A Lost World rar mp3 320 kbps MEGA Mediafire zip Full Album Torrent m4a

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TRACKLIST:

01 Alone
02 And Nothing Is Forever
03 A Fragile Thing
04 Warsong
05 Drone:Nodrone
06 I Can Never Say Goodbye
07 All I Ever Am
08 Endsong

The real beauty of life is its impermanence. It takes a while to work this out, but it’s true. Nothing is forever, and things can’t (and shouldn’t) stay the same, no matter how hard we try to rally against uncertainty and change. Some elements radiate with longevity while others slip by like tears in the rain if we’re fortunate enough to be able to learn to let them go.

The one absolute certainty of life is its ending, and The Cure‘s Songs of a Lost World is about exactly this – mortality and the passing of time. It’s an astonishing record, with Robert Smith nestling deep within the subject matter where he most excels, exposing layers of vulnerability like never before. There are (thankfully) no attempts at radio friendly songs here, but there are plenty of hooks, melodies and lyrics that stay with you long after the album’s over. Condensing the record to a single phrase is best left to its creator, and Smith sums it up perfectly on the opening line of “Warsong” where he declares “Ah, it’s misery”. It’s life-affirming misery, though.

We all know it’s been a long time between these eight songs seeing the light of day and the band’s last album, the middling 4:13 Dream. Sixteen years and five days to be exact, but who’s been counting? That record was rightly no better received commercially or critically than the few that preceded it, and The Cure looked destined to agonisingly transmogrify into a heritage band that would tour now and again to a hardcore fan base and BBC 6 Music centrist dads who would pop along out of a nostalgia for something they’d never really lived or loved the first time around and would just want “the hits”.

Thankfully, we finally have this record which is up there with their best. I’ll die on the hill arguing that here’s no such thing as a bad Cure album, but for many (this jaded hack included) the band’s creative heights dwell in the darker recesses of their work – the bleak Faith, the even bleaker Pornography, and the sumptuous melancholy of Disintegration. Gratifyingly, ​​Songs of a Lost World dials up the bleak to 11. None more bleak.

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