A Perfect Circle - Emotive -flac- Now
Below is the tracklist of the album, with notes on the original artists and the unique audio textures that an audiophile format like FLAC can reveal.
: FLAC preserves the "breathing room" between the quietest whispers in "Annihilation" and the soaring crescendos of "Passive." A Perfect Circle - EMOTIVe -FLAC-
The album, a collection of reimagined protest songs, felt like a broadcast from a different timeline—one where the world was still worth fighting for, or perhaps one where the fight had already been lost. As "Imagine" began, the familiar melody was twisted into something somber and spectral. Elias looked up at the arrivals board. The red LED text reflected in his eyes, listing delays and cancellations like a tally of small, modern tragedies. Below is the tracklist of the album, with
Here’s a useful feature set for to organize, tag, or share it effectively: Elias looked up at the arrivals board
Following this is the most controversial track on the album: a cover of John Lennon’s "Imagine." While Lennon’s original is a hopeful piano ballad, A Perfect Circle’s version is dark and ominous. Played in a minor key, it features a ""–like, heavy, trudging drum beat (courtesy of Josh Freese), stripping away the optimism and replacing it with a sense of mourning for a peace that seems unattainable. This single was released as the album’s lead single on September 28, 2004.