Graham Hunt // Timeless World Forever CD [PRE-ORDER]

Graham Hunt // Timeless World Forever CD [PRE-ORDER]

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アメリカ・ウィスコンシンのインディー作家Graham Huntが、2025年6月に同国インディーレーベルRun For Cover Recordsからリリースしたアルバムです。

インディーポップ10曲を収録。

レーベルその他作品はこちら /// Click here to see more Run For Cover Records releases available at Tobira. 

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releases June 13, 2025

CD in jewel case. 

Tracklist:

1. I Just Need Enough 02:31
2. East Side Screamer 02:18
3. Robot World
4. Spiritual Problems
5. Been There Done That 03:18
6. Power Object
7. Frog in the Shower
8. Cave Art
9. CRC
10. Movie Night

Text excerpt by Run For Cover Records:

"...The album comes to life immediately with its expansive opening track, “I Just Need Enough.” The song introduces the core elements of Hunt’s sound: a collage style that’s equal parts intricate and immediate, and it’s defined as much by the songwriting as the recording choices. “I tried to approach the recording process like I was making a modern pop record,” he says. “I cut and paste things together to build a song as if I’m using MIDI instruments, but instead I use clips that I recorded of myself or my friends playing real instruments. I see it like the DAW is a canvas where you can paint a picture of an imaginary band.”

About those songs: “Power Object” is an Upper Midwest pop masterclass that hits like a lost jam session between Morris Day and Paul Westerberg; the Beck-like “East Side Screamer” sits next to “Ego Trippin’ (Part Two)” by De La Soul in the pantheon of songs with great screams; “Frog In The Shower” has three separate sections good enough to be a chorus. Timeless World Forever is filled with those little pop moments, the ones that separate a decent song from a great song; in aggregate, they add up. These are songs that trigger compulsive listening habits.

Hunt’s lyrics are often as intricate as the songs they’re contained in. “This record's biggest theme is acceptance,” he says. “If If You Knew Would You Believe It? was cynical and Try Not To Laugh was speculative, then this one accepts the existence of both worldviews under the same sky.” The song’s characters are preoccupied trying to find peace within their circumstances: they’re accepting change in interpersonal relationships, accepting a confusing and upsetting world, accepting an ass whoopin’, accepting indecisiveness, endings, failure – even accepting acceptance itself...."

Artist : Graham Hunt

Label : Run For Cover Records

cat no : RFC292cd

アメリカ・ウィスコンシンのインディー作家Graham Huntが、2025年6月に同国インディーレーベルRun For Cover Recordsからリリースしたアルバムです。

インディーポップ10曲を収録。

レーベルその他作品はこちら /// Click here to see more Run For Cover Records releases available at Tobira. 

------------------------------------

releases June 13, 2025

CD in jewel case. 

Tracklist:

1. I Just Need Enough 02:31
2. East Side Screamer 02:18
3. Robot World
4. Spiritual Problems
5. Been There Done That 03:18
6. Power Object
7. Frog in the Shower
8. Cave Art
9. CRC
10. Movie Night

Text excerpt by Run For Cover Records:

"...The album comes to life immediately with its expansive opening track, “I Just Need Enough.” The song introduces the core elements of Hunt’s sound: a collage style that’s equal parts intricate and immediate, and it’s defined as much by the songwriting as the recording choices. “I tried to approach the recording process like I was making a modern pop record,” he says. “I cut and paste things together to build a song as if I’m using MIDI instruments, but instead I use clips that I recorded of myself or my friends playing real instruments. I see it like the DAW is a canvas where you can paint a picture of an imaginary band.”

About those songs: “Power Object” is an Upper Midwest pop masterclass that hits like a lost jam session between Morris Day and Paul Westerberg; the Beck-like “East Side Screamer” sits next to “Ego Trippin’ (Part Two)” by De La Soul in the pantheon of songs with great screams; “Frog In The Shower” has three separate sections good enough to be a chorus. Timeless World Forever is filled with those little pop moments, the ones that separate a decent song from a great song; in aggregate, they add up. These are songs that trigger compulsive listening habits.

Hunt’s lyrics are often as intricate as the songs they’re contained in. “This record's biggest theme is acceptance,” he says. “If If You Knew Would You Believe It? was cynical and Try Not To Laugh was speculative, then this one accepts the existence of both worldviews under the same sky.” The song’s characters are preoccupied trying to find peace within their circumstances: they’re accepting change in interpersonal relationships, accepting a confusing and upsetting world, accepting an ass whoopin’, accepting indecisiveness, endings, failure – even accepting acceptance itself...."

Artist : Graham Hunt

Label : Run For Cover Records

cat no : RFC292cd