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The Trolleyvox Present the Karaoke Meltdown

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Download links and information about The Trolleyvox Present the Karaoke Meltdown by Trolleyvox. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 40:55 minutes.

Artist: Trolleyvox
Release date: 2006
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 13
Duration: 40:55
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Preamble 1:15
2. Just You Wait 2:05
3. I Am Annabelle 3:17
4. I Know That You're High 2:53
5. Deep Blue Central 3:10
6. Stoplight Roses 2:35
7. A Summer Without You 2:57
8. Onion Is Missing 5:06
9. Twilight Hotel 3:16
10. Joyride 3:32
11. Baby You Were Lied To 2:17
12. Whisper Down the Lane 4:49
13. Pale Star Land Line 3:43

Details

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The third album by Philadelphia's the Trolleyvox (now basically down to singer Beth Filla and guitarist-songwriter Andrew Chalfen, plus a rotating cast of guests) is a huge leap beyond their already impressive earlier work. The album kicks off with the impassioned call to arms "Just You Wait," a textbook example of how to write a politically charged pop song without preachy name-calling. The urgency of that two-minute opening blast seems to energize the rest of the album, because unlike the relatively mellow jangle pop of 2003's Leap of Folly, The Trolleyvox Present the Karaoke Meltdowns has a full-on rock & roll kick even on mid-tempo tracks like the harmony-heavy "I Know That You're High." Even the handful of acoustic tunes, including the lovely "Deep Blue Central" (which makes surprisingly effective use of a field recording of a horse and carriage for its rhythm track), sound more direct and engaged. Matching a uniformly excellent set of tunes to Filla's alluring vocals — as always, she's the best thing about the band — The Trolleyvox Present the Karaoke Meltdowns is the sound of a group ready to make an impact beyond the tiny power pop scene. It might work, too: the not-at-all-subtle get out the vote video for "Just You Wait" was a YouTube favorite passed around the left-leaning blogs just prior to the 2006 mid-term elections.