Artwork/Morrissey - World Peace Is None Of Your Business (CD).png
1.82 MB
Artwork/Morrissey - World Peace Is None Of Your Business (Digipack Front).png
7.98 MB
Artwork/Morrissey - World Peace Is None Of Your Business (Digipack Inside).png
8.00 MB
folder.jpg
199.84 kB
Morrissey - World Peace Is None Of Your Business.log
14.77 kB
Morrissey - World Peace Is None Of Your Business.m3u
380.00 B
World Peace Is None Of Your Business.cue
2.02 kB
Similar torrents
No similar torrents were found.
Morrissey - World Peace Is None Of Your Business (2014)
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 411 Mb
Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (png) -> 19 Mb
Arriving on the heels of Autobiography, a 2013 memoir that reveled in the cadences of revelation without ever laying bare his soul, World Peace Is None of Your Business feels curiously bereft of Morrissey's lyrical elegance. This, like so many of Moz's moves, is certainly deliberate. There is a directness to the lyrics on World Peace Is None of Your Business that initially feels unsettling, contradicting Morrissey's long history of obfuscation and sly winks. Such broad strokes accentuate his political beliefs -- he has no desire to be part of the voting process, he stands firm on animal rights, he disdains conventional masculinity while still feeling a pull toward pugilism -- while dulling the edges of his typical wistfulness. Perhaps Morrissey decided to wield his words as blunt instruments to offset the wildly off-kilter music of World Peace.
Coming after a decade of albums where Morrissey's consistency was almost a fault, the untidiness of World Peace feels rather thrilling, holding the attention even when the record doesn't necessarily work. Producer Joe Chiccarelli -- an alt-rock vet whose credits run from Oingo Boingo to Alanis Morissette and Café Tacuba -- gives the record a big, forceful sound that is occasionally too crisp (it's possible to see the digital guitar effects push into the red on "Neal Cassidy Drops Dead"), but he also allows Moz to indulge his every whim, whether it's the ominous, churning heavy rock of the title track and "Istanbul," or the flamenco flourishes of "Earth Is the Loneliest Planet" and "The Bullfighter Dies." Elsewhere, Morrissey sticks to some tried and true -- "Staircase at the University" hearkens back to Viva Hate -- but the album is characterized by its aural eccentricities, which infect even relatively staid pop songs like "Kiss Me a Lot." Such willful weirdness is oddly endearing even when it doesn't hold together, which it often doesn't; it'll develop a head of steam that quickly dissipates as it veers in another direction, playing almost like a series of conjoined EPs. Perhaps this doesn't add up to a record as forceful or coherent as either You Are the Quarry or Years of Refusal but that messiness is also its charm: Morrissey isn't living up to what he should do, he's doing whatever he wants to, whether it makes sense or not. That fearlessness may be reckless but it's also welcome.
01 - World Peace Is None Of Your Business
02 - Neal Cassady Drops Dead
03 - I'm Not A Man
04 - Istanbul
05 - Earth Is The Loneliest Planet
06 - Staircase At The University
07 - The Bullfighter Dies
08 - Kiss Me A Lot
09 - Smiler With Knife
10 - Kick The Bride Down The Aisle
11 - Mountjoy
12 - Oboe Concerto
Comments need intelligible text (not only emojis or meaningless drivel). No upload requests, visit the forum or message the uploader for this. Use common sense and try to stay on topic.