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The Human Demands Amy Macdonald

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2020

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
30.10.2020

Label: Infectious Music

Genre: Pop

Subgenre: Pop Rock

Interpret: Amy Macdonald

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1 Fire 04:15
  • 2 Statues 03:46
  • 3 Crazy Shade of Blue 04:13
  • 4 The Hudson (48 kHz) 04:59
  • 5 The Human Demands 03:53
  • 6 We Could Be So Much More 03:57
  • 7 Young Fire, Old Flame 03:43
  • 8 Bridges 03:59
  • 9 Strong Again 04:08
  • 10 Something in Nothing 03:39
  • Total Runtime 40:32

Info zu The Human Demands

Amy Macdonald hat große internationale Erfolge erzielt, während sie nach wie vor unbeirrt ihren eigenen Weg geht. Welttourneen vor insgesamt 3,3 Millionen Menschen, über 200 Millionen Streams, vier Top-5-Alben (einschließlich zweier Nr. 1 Alben), sechs Millionen verkaufte Alben und der überwältigende Hit "This Is The Life", der in zehn Ländern die Charts anführte. Am 30. Oktober 2020 wird Amy Macdonald nun ihr fünftes und bisher bestes Album "The Human Demands" veröffentlichen. Es ist ihr erster Album-Release im Rahmen des neu geschlossenen Vertrags mit Infectious/BMG.

Produziert von Jim Abbiss (Arctic Monkeys, Kasabian), lässt das neue Album jenen magischen Moment der jugendlichen Sturm und Drang-Zeit wieder aufleben, mit der wir uns alle identifizieren können. Amy findet wieder zu ihren anfänglichen Indie-Wurzeln zurück wenngleich in neuer Bruce-Springsteen-ähnlicher Grandeur einer Großbildleinwand und einem Drive, der zu ihrer kraftvollen, resonanten Alt-Stimme passt. Zu den Themen des Longplayers gehören das Älterwerden, der Umgang mit Depressionen und das Verliebtsein in jemanden, mit dem man den Rest seines Lebens verbringen möchte.

Amy Macdonald




Amy Macdonald
lives a life that's ordinary in every way but one. The 28 year old has sold over 9 million records, conquered Europe and won countless awards. Yet when she arrives at a restaurant in Glasgow to discuss her glorious new album, Life In A Beautiful Light, no one bats an eyelid. Which is precisely how she likes it. 2014 has seen Amy play at the opening of the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow with Rod Stewart, play at the Ryder Cup opening ceremony and win Scottish Fashion Icon 2014, as well as headlining sold out shows across Europe. Macdonald has been famous since the age of 18, when she burst in to the charts with a debut album, This Is The Life, that bore the hallmarks of her homeland. Rootsy folk-rock might describe it, or just gutsy pop played on real instruments. There were no tricks or trying to keep up with trends. Live, Macdonald didn't need dancers, props or expensive light shows. Her image was as honest as her songs, in which real tales of real lives became stomping singalongs. Nine years on, Macdonald insists that little has changed. She looks sleeker and dresses smarter, she has bought her own home and the band with which she toured non-stop until the end of 2013 feels like a second family. But when it comes to her job as a songwriter, Macdonald remains a simple storyteller, albeit one with an ear for a magnificent melody and a striking way with words. One song for Life In A Beautiful Light is the heady, air-punching anthem "In The End," which closes the album. It was written at the tail end of Macdonald's last tour, when she found herself questioning whether being a musician was a worthwhile occupation. "It's very rare that I write about myself," she laughs. "But that song is me pondering what I'm doing with my life. My sister's a doctor, she helps people every day. Do I help people? I thought about it and realised that making music is a contribution. I get so many letters from fans saying they feel better when they listen to my songs. So I'm not as bad as I thought!" The other was the sprightly, strings-soaked "Human Spirit," which Macdonald wrote about the Chilean miners' nail-biting rescue. "How could you not be inspired by that story?" she says. "I felt compelled to write about it. I've always been a narrative songwriter, inspired by actual events. Every human emotion was etched on the faces of those miners' families. I went through most of them myself." Macdonald's great gift is not only to capture those emotions in song, but to describe real events in a way that relates to the lives of her fans, be they in Britain or abroad, where her honesty and earthiness has won her armies of fans and seen her sell out stadiums. Life In A Beautiful Light does precisely what the title suggests -- it's a life-affirming set of songs steeped in optimism. Hope seeps from the majestic, shimmering "Across The Nile," a song inspired by Egyptians celebrating the recent downfall of President Mubarak. Joy drives the raucous, rollicking "4th Of July," on which Macdonald recalls a childhood trip to New York with her family on Independence Day. "I was watching the 10th anniversary of 9/11 on the news," recalls Macdonald. "I'm a very emotional person, I could cry at anything. But what I remember about my first visit to New York was watching the fireworks and feeling incredibly happy. So much bad has happened to the city since, but it's still an amazing place. I wanted to write an upbeat song to celebrate New York." A lifelong Rangers fan, Macdonald was twice inspired by football. "The Green And The Blue," which features football crowd chants, is an optimistic ode to the rivalry between Celtic and Rangers. "Football is a big part of my life, of anyone's who lives in this city," says Macdonald. "I have friends who support both teams, all of whom get on. I wanted to say that there is a positive side to the rivalry, not just the bad that folk always focus on." Pride is a classic Macdonald track that 50,000 Scottish football fans will claim as their own. It could be an anthem for the Olympics, but in fact it was penned about the singer performing at Hampden Park. "I've been asked loads of times to sing for the Scotland team," says Macdonald. "I did the whole campaign for the European qualifiers. It's an amazing feeling, so emotional, but I never get nervous. There are 50,000 people singing and you are leading them, literally covered in goose bumps. It's an honour." Heart breaking ballad "Left That Body Long Ago" deals with the devastating disease Alzheimers, from which Macdonald's gran suffered before her death a decade ago. "When my nan was still alive, my mum would always say, 'Don't worry, it's not your nan anymore, she's left that body.' That made it easier for me to deal with. So many of my friends now have relatives with the disease. I wrote the song for them, because it might help. One of them burst in to tears when they heard it. They knew exactly what it was about." Revealing the stories behind the songs is typical of Macdonald. She doesn't want to be oblique, to appear mysterious. She'll happily admit that album opener "Slow It Down" is about nothing more meaningful than her being a petrol head. "I've done track days at Silverstone and at Mercedes Benz World in Surrey," she says. "I adore fast cars. I'm addicted to 'Top Gear.' I've been asked numerous times if I'd like to work towards getting a racing license." The 27-year-old is as full of life as her songs, or perhaps her songs simply reflect her own happiness. She has never felt better about being a singer, and never sung better. Her fans will notice her range on this record -- there are songs, such as bluesy, strings and brass-backed belter "The Game," that she couldn't have attempted in her teens. "I've definitely grown in to my voice," she agrees. "My range has gone crazy, probably from all the touring and singing every night. My voice is much more powerful and I can control it a lot more. I never get sore throats. I can sing higher songs and hit lower notes. "'The Game' is a song I wouldn't have tried to sing when I started out. It's a different style of song for me, but everyone who heard it insisted I include it." Life in a beautiful light was recorded in Surrey with Macdonald's long time producer Pete Wilkinson. There are no-co-writes. Earlier this year, the album was mixed by Bob Clearmountain, who worked on Macdonald's debut. "It's always good to have a man who mixes Bruce Springsteen," says Macdonald, a Springsteen devotee, who now also counts Noah & The Whale and Lana Del Rey among her iPod favourites. "Bob was such a fan that he sent me over all this equipment -- brilliant mics, software and stuff. But I'm such a technophobe, I have no idea how to use them. "I like the simple life. I like songs you can sing along to, songs that say something. Oh, and racing cars. And running in the sunshine, listening to great music. Although living in Glasgow, I'm usually running in the rain."



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