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CD
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RPTD 022CD
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Postcards is a dream pop/indie rock band formed in Beirut, Lebanon by four friends in the summer of 2012. After a series of well-received EPs through 2013-2017, I'll Be Here In The Morning is their debut full-length, teaming up once again with producer Fadi Tabbal of Tunefork Studios. Defined by hushed, introspective vocals floating over expansive sonic spaces that shift between harsh noise and dreamy soundscapes. The constant oscillation between the opposite states of mind that the band deals with in Lebanon runs deep within the album both musically and lyrically. The music alternates between repeated cycles of calm and unrest, anger and surrender, simplicity and intricacy as Julia Sabra -- the band's singer and lyricist -- tackles this recurrent theme of duality. The songs see her struggle with feelings of sadness, indifference, deception, femininity, and empowerment. The end result is the most sincere and personal project the quartet has produced so far. "The feelings Postcards project live are a true representation of life here, a city of youth, love and life, with an underlying, unspoken sense of dejection and gloom" --Get Out Blog Lebanon.
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LP
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RPTD 022LP
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LP version. Postcards is a dream pop/indie rock band formed in Beirut, Lebanon by four friends in the summer of 2012. After a series of well-received EPs through 2013-2017, I'll Be Here In The Morning is their debut full-length, teaming up once again with producer Fadi Tabbal of Tunefork Studios. Defined by hushed, introspective vocals floating over expansive sonic spaces that shift between harsh noise and dreamy soundscapes. The constant oscillation between the opposite states of mind that the band deals with in Lebanon runs deep within the album both musically and lyrically. The music alternates between repeated cycles of calm and unrest, anger and surrender, simplicity and intricacy as Julia Sabra -- the band's singer and lyricist -- tackles this recurrent theme of duality. The songs see her struggle with feelings of sadness, indifference, deception, femininity, and empowerment. The end result is the most sincere and personal project the quartet has produced so far. "The feelings Postcards project live are a true representation of life here, a city of youth, love and life, with an underlying, unspoken sense of dejection and gloom" --Get Out Blog Lebanon.
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