Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion -2009- 320kbps [extra Quality]
The glowing green-and-grey patterns on the screen seemed to pulse, mimicking the optical illusion of the album art. It was 2009, and the internet felt like a vast, wild frontier of blogspots and rapidshare links. I sat in my dimly lit bedroom, watching the download bar crawl across the screen: Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion - 320kbps.
This 320kbps rip ensures the complex, frequency-heavy production retains its full depth and dynamics, preserving the "bubbly" bass lines and crisp vocal layering that define the record.
Here are a few options for developing that text, depending on where you intend to use it (e.g., a blog post, a file directory, a review, or a download description). The glowing green-and-grey patterns on the screen seemed
- Title: Summertime Clothes
- Artist: Animal Collective
- Album: Merriweather Post Pavilion
- Album Artist: Animal Collective
- Year: 2009
- Track: 1
- Genre: Indie Rock
- Comment: 320 kbps MP3 — Live/Official (replace with "Live" only if actually live)
- Composer: Avey Tare / Panda Bear / Deakin / Geologist
- Publisher: Domino Recording Co.
- BPM: 120
- Disc: 1/1
- Copyright: ℗ 2009 Domino Recording Co.
- Encoder: LAME 3.99r (or your encoder)
- Cover Art: Use the official album artwork (600x600 JPEG or PNG)
From the opening arpeggios of “In the Flowers” to the triumphant fade-out of “Brothersport,” the album is a tapestry of:
Production: Co-produced by Ben H. Allen and recorded at Sweet Tea Recording Studio in Oxford, Mississippi . 2. Critical Reception & Impact From the opening arpeggios of “In the Flowers”
Cultural Impact: It was the most critically acclaimed album of 2009 on Metacritic and peaked at No. 13 on the Billboard 200 . Audio Quality: 320kbps Standard
Visuals: The cover art, based on the work of Japanese psychologist Akiyoshi Kitaoka, uses repeating "leaf" patterns to create an illusory motion effect. Reviewers note that this effect is particularly striking in the larger vinyl format. a blog post
is widely regarded as the magnum opus of the Baltimore-formed experimental group Animal Collective