Transparent Block
Cover NOT yet available in 4k icon
Join Patreon for 4K upload/download access


Your Rating (Click a star below)

Star off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off icon











3:53
6:22
4:10
4:15
4:57
4:33
11:13
6:21

Data Complete
percentage bar 60%

Total Rating

Star Icon (0 users)

Back Cover
Transparent Block

CD Art
Transparent Icon

3D Case
Transparent Icon

3D Thumb
Transparent Icon

3D Flat
Transparent Icon

3D Face
Transparent Icon

3D Spine
Transparent Icon

First Released

Calendar Icon 2017

Genre

Genre Icon Alternative Rock

Mood

Mood Icon ---

Style

Style Icon Rock/Pop

Theme

Theme Icon ---

Tempo

Speed Icon Medium

Release Format

Release Format Icon Album

Record Label Release

Speed Icon Epitaph

World Sales Figure

Sales Icon 0 copies

Album Description
Available in:
"How Did I Find Myself Here?" is the fifth full length studio album from The Dream Syndicate, released September 8th, 2017 on the Epitaph label. The first studio release in 29 years for the rock band led by Steve Wynn was produced with Chris Cacavas.
At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, the album received an average score of 81, based on 7 reviews, indicating "Universal acclaim ".
wiki icon


User Album Review
The Dream Syndicate were once on a par with R.E.M. as revivers of 60s rock’s dark and pretty essences in the hostile 80s. Their small, fervent cult stayed steady enough to encourage a live reunion in 2012 with rejigged personnel, and now this first album since 1988.
Band leader Steve Wynn is a fine solo songwriter. 80 West is nasty LA noir with a body surely in the boot, haunted by Mickey Spillane’s Kiss Me Deadly and Mulholland Drive; in contrast, Like Mary is a quiet vignette of breaking lives, mourning a woman who wants to get lost. This band, though, offer something he can’t find elsewhere. You can hear it in the creepy, lovelorn surrealism of Filter Me Through You’s hazy dream-pop. Then the eleven minute title track, with its ruefully fated protagonist, spidery keyboards, jaggedly interlocked parts and mantric end, proves decisively that this Dream isn’t over.
Reviewed by Nick Hasted for teamrock.com



External Album Reviews
None...



User Comments
seperator
No comments yet...
seperator

Status
Locked icon unlocked

Rank:

External Links
MusicBrainz Large icontransparent block Amazon Large icontransparent block Metacritic Large Icon