10 JUL 2026 - Back up to full speed! Let's be honest: for the last few months, TorrentFunk was painfully slow. Pages crawled, searches dragged, and just loading the site tested everyone's patience. We hunted the problem down to our network and rebuilt it from the ground up — smarter caching, a much bigger and faster connection, and a lot of fine-tuning under the hood. The difference is night and day: the site now loads in a fraction of a second. No more waiting around. Thanks for sticking with us through the slow spell. Now go discover your funk!
TORRENT DETAILS
Cold Specks - 2012 - I Predict A Graceful Expulsion
TORRENT SUMMARY
Status:
All the torrents in this section have been verified by our verification system
Cold Specks - 2012 - I Predict A Graceful Expulsion [320K/CBR]
Details:
Artist: Cold Specks
Album: I Predict A Graceful Expulsion
Genre: Indie, Pop
Label: Broken Hertz Records under exclusive licence to Mute Artists Ltd
Language: English
Release Date: Expected Release: 21 May 2012
Number of Tracks: 11
Total Length: 00:37:04
Total Size: 86.66 MB
Format: MPEG 1 Layer III (mp3), Joint Stereo
Quality: 320 KBPS, 44 KHz, CBR
Webstore: http://itunes.apple.com/gb/preorder/i-predict-graceful-expulsion/id520598041
Narratives:
Cold Specks is Al Spx, a 24-year-old singer/songwriter from Etobicoke, Ontario who was signed to Mute earlier this year on the strength of an arresting demo. Spx-- the peculiar name is a pseudonym, invented to protect a devout and apparently disapproving family-- has the disoriented air of someone who's come further than she expected, and sooner: In interviews, she's shown some difficulty recalling the names of all her new bandmates and confesses she still occasionally gets ill before live performances.
When she begins singing, you understand the fuss: If you were, say, Frankie Sharp from Sharp Records, this is the sort of voice that makes you whip the big limo around. Rough-edged and dark but still velvety, with fluid hints of gospel-- it's a transfixing instrument, and it's the single ember glowing at the center of her chilly debut, the enigmatically titled I Predict a Graceful Expulsion. Her band, with the ingrained tact of session pros, defer to her, surrounding her with muted-gray washes of piano, guitar, cello, and distant horns. The songs gather weight slowly and gracefully, and the atmosphere feels instantly familiar from the last two National records. It's similarly comforting; this is a peerless Sunday-afternoon record, the kind you cradle like a chipped mug of tea in a heatless apartment.
What elevates I Predict a Graceful Expulsion above pure comfort food, however, is how it subtly tugs against the big, major-network-drama payoff for which it feels custom-built. There's a naggingly elusive quality to the songs that troubles as much as it soothes; Spx's voice is elemental, and her pleas tap into universal language-- bad seeds, sons and daughters, dying leaves. But there's a sense of snow-blind disorientation, of standing in the middle of a featureless expanse, that deepens the record's loneliness and heightens the sense of emotional stakes.
Track Listing:
01. The Mark (02:16), 5.37 MB
02. Heavy Hands (02:29), 5.86 MB
03. Winter Solstice (04:05), 9.52 MB
04. When The City Lights Dim (03:20), 7.81 MB
05. Hector (02:35), 6.07 MB
06. Holland (03:50), 8.94 MB
07. Elephant Head (04:14), 9.84 MB
08. Send Your Youth (03:49), 8.89 MB
09. Blank Maps (03:12), 7.50 MB
10. Steady (04:02), 9.38 MB
11. Lay Me Down (03:12), 7.48 MB