Glee: The Music Vol. 2 (2009)
Posted by Mr.Fingg | Posted in Glee Cast | Posted on 10:48 AM
Summary:
Artist : Glee Cast
Album : Glee: The Music Season One Vol. 2
Release Day : Dec 08, 2009
Genre : Stage & Screen
Styles : TV Soundtracks, Cast Recordings, Soundtracks
Size : 130 MB
Track List:
01. Mercedes, Artie, Rachel & Tina - Proud Mary
02. Will & Rachel - Endless Love
03. Finn - I'll Stand By You
04. Will - Don't Stand So Close To Me/Young Girl
05. Rachel - Crush
06. Finn - (You're) Having My Baby
07. Artie & Mercedes - Lean On Me
08. Mercedes - Don't Make Me Over
09. Mercedes, Artie, Finn & Rachel - Imagine
10. Tina - True Colors
11. Finn, Rachel, Artie & Mercedez - Jump
12. Rachel & Finn - Smile (Cover Of Lily Allen Song)
13. Rachel, Finn & Mercedes - Smile (Cover Of Charlie Chaplin Song)
14. Mercedes - And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going
15. Rachel - Don't Rain On My Parade
16. Rachel, Finn, Artie & Mercedes - You Can't Always Get What You Want
17. Rachel, Finn, Tina & Mercedes - My Life Would Suck Without You
Link Download MP3 High Quality Album:
http://hotfile.com/dl/23417810/399dbad/016_Glee_The_Music_Vol._2.rar.html
Review:
The second Glee soundtrack feels a bit rushed, arriving no less than four weeks after Vol. 1’s release and featuring songs from half as many episodes. Returning fans will still find a lot to enjoy here, though, as Jenna Ushkowitz (the faux-stuttering Tina) gets her first solo and supporting characters Amber Riley (Mercedes) and Kevin McHale (Artie) enjoy a healthier chunk of airtime. Nevertheless, Lea Michele and Matthew Morrison continue to steal the show, with Morrison delivering one of the album’s most inventive songs -- a mash-up of “Don’t Stand So Close to Me” and “Young Girl” -- and Michele singing the absolute pants off of “My Life Would Suck Without You.” As before, this album sometimes strays away from choral arrangements and sounds more like a collection of karaoke recordings, and the use of Auto-Tune (most noticeably during Lily Allen’s “Smile,” where Cory Monteith sounds like an R&B robot) proves that nothing -- not even songs ostensibly performed in a classroom by high-school students -- is holy in today’s music biz. When the cast rearranges “Jump” by replacing Eddie Van Halen’s keyboard riff with sprightly harmonies, however, it’s hard not to throw up your jazz hands and sing along.
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