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Back In Your Life

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Download links and information about Back In Your Life by Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers. This album was released in 1979 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 46:22 minutes.

Artist: Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers
Release date: 1979
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 16
Duration: 46:22
Buy on iTunes $12.99
Buy on Amazon $11.49
Buy on Songswave €1.32

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Abdul and Cleopatra 3:16
2. (She's Gonna) Respect Me (featuring Jonathan Richman, The Modern Lovers) 2:49
3. Lover Please (featuring Jonathan Richman, The Modern Lovers) 1:55
4. Affection 4:05
5. Buzz Buzz Buzz 1:56
6. Back In Your Life 2:12
7. Party In the Woods Tonight 3:00
8. My Love Is a Flower (Just Beginning to Bloom) (featuring Jonathan Richman, The Modern Lovers) 2:20
9. I'm Nature's Mosquito 2:43
10. Emaline (featuring Jonathan Richman, The Modern Lovers) 2:05
11. Lydia 3:08
12. I Hear You Calling Me 2:49
13. Oh Carol (Bonus Track) (featuring Jonathan Richman, The Modern Lovers) 2:26
14. Astral Plane (Bonus Track) (featuring Jonathan Richman, The Modern Lovers) 3:39
15. Hospital (Live Version) [Bonus Track] (featuring Jonathan Richman, The Modern Lovers) 5:17
16. Chapel of Love 2:42

Details

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Sweet, fun, and honest aptly describe this 1979 long-player by Jonathan Richman. And while some singers badly fumble at being innocently possessed, Richman keeps it all engaging with his unbridled enthusiasm, wit, and crack songs. This was Richman's first solo venture since forming the Modern Lovers in the early '70s, and the newfound freedom shows on loose doo wop rockers like "Party in the Woods Tonight" and such Sesame Street-issue nature odes as "Buzz Buzz Buzz"; the breezy tone is further plied on surf-toned instrumental "Lover Please" and a harmony and handclapping-rich "Lydia." But it's not all passing fancy, as Richman also waxes sincere and lonely on strong, yet often hushed sides like "Affection," "Emaline," and the title track, his terminally congested vocals and jangly guitar chords perfectly echoing the wistful sentiment. Recent Modern Lovers graduates: start here.