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Losenges - It Breaks My Back download mp3 flac


Performer: Losenges
Genre: Funk / Soul
Album: It Breaks My Back
Released: 2009
Style: Rhythm & Blues, Soul
MP3 version ZIP size: 1201 mb
FLAC version RAR size: 1776 mb
WMA version ZIP size: 1234 mb
Rating: 4.3
Votes: 104
Other Formats: DTS VQF VOX AAC MP2 TTA MMF

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Losenges - It Breaks My Back
MP3 version .RAR archive

1201 downloads at 17 mb/s
Losenges - It Breaks My Back
FLAC version .RAR archive

1776 downloads at 13 mb/s
Losenges - It Breaks My Back
WMA version .RAR archive

1234 downloads at 14 mb/s

Tracklist

1 Stop-Press
2 It Breaks My Back

Notes

The two tracks were intended to be put out as a single, but for some reason it never materialised. I seem to remember there was some speculation about interest from Stiff records at the time, and I think we turned down a couple of local labels (including Recreational), hoping for a "real" deal. The band was in somewhat of an identity crisis at the time, having recently started an offshoot from the long-standing Juan Foote 'n' the Grave, the Losenges Soul Revue, which was rapidly usurping the JF's in popularity.

The single reflects the changing style of the band, from post-punk thrash to blue-eyed soul, and was intended to echo the great Stax/Atlantic singles of the late sixties/early seventies. The two songs were originals, written by myself, and the lead vocals should have been shared, one song each, by myself and Stuart Gibb. Unfortunately, on the recording days allotted, Stuart had been suffering severe laryngitis, so I sang both guide-leads, with a view to Stuart re-recording his vocal at a later date. (This never happened).

The recording disappeared off the radar shortly after (near) completion. I think this may have had something to do with the fact that the sound engineer and financial support, Liam Henshall, went off to London and subsequently found fame and fortune with the band Londonbeat, who later had a big hit with a single called "9 am (on a New York Subway)". I certainly didn't get a copy of the final mix for maybe a year or so after it was completed, and by this time, the Juan Foote arm of the band had ceased to exist, the band embarking on a series of style and name changes before arriving at today's version, Los Yanquis, a country/tex-mex/Americana seven-piece outfit.