Friday, March 6, 2009

Dan evans-goin all out-2008-mtd Anna nalick - wreck of the day (2005)

Part: 1 : Dan evans-goin all out-2008-mtd
Password: mov-world.net
Dan Evans - Goin' All Out

Artist.....: Dan Evans
Title......: Goin' All Out
Label......: EMG

Store Date.: 000-00-0000
Genre......: Country

Encoder....: Lame 3.97 / -V2 --vbr-new
Size.......: 59.9 MB


Track Listing:

01 - Goin' All Out                                   03:33
02 - All That's In My Head                           02:58
03 - Go On                                           03:35
04 - Good Thing Gone                                 03:06
05 - I Never Let You Go                              03:35
06 - Letter To My Addiction (Free At Last)           04:06
07 - Things You Can't Control                        03:28
08 - Where I Need To Go                              03:05
09 - Lost Without Your Love                          03:07
10 - Here I Am                                       04:05
11 - These Things I Pray                             04:22

                                                     ─────
                                                     39:00 min
Release Notes:

www.danevansmusic.com

Dan Evans from NBC's The Biggest Loser is making his musical debut
with his album entitled Goin' All Out! Recorded in Nashville, the
album is a composition from select songwriters and musicians
responsible for Keith Urban's album Love, Pain & the Whole Crazy
Thing as well as Rascal Flatts' Still Feels Good. Interlocking
both Pop music with Country arrangements and honest lyrics
depicting Dan's life experiences is the motivation behind the
album Goin' All Out.

Part: 2 : Anna nalick - wreck of the day (2005)
Anna Nalick - Wreck Of The Day (2005) Folk, pop, acoustic | MP3 | CBR 192 kbps | 57,1 MB | English | ZIP Anna Nalick is the rare artist who makes you want to grab pop music's wheels by the spokes so they'll stop spinning so fast. "Wait," the 11 songs on this debut disc say collectively to the newly initiated, "there's something substantial here.". Though each of these songs is distinctive enough to avoid congealing with the others into a gorgeous glop of introspection, heavy sighs, and reflection, leadoff track and first single "Breathe (2 A.M.)" works small wonders as a flagship song. Its simple, lonely piano swirls into guitars that stop just short of rocking, allowing plenty of room for Nalick's unaffected voice to spill in. When it does, the music turns forest-thick and dreamy.

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