Thursday, September 26, 2013

Alex Hvorostyan - "falling rose, but"

The sixth "Star Factory" was surprisingly stingy Pribytki for domestic show business. A year after graduation solo album was just a group of "Chelsea", which included the four guys from the draft Victor Drobysh. Dima Koldun lights on "Euro Vision" that saved him. The rest is either killed or tried unsuccessfully to get through on your own. Therefore, the album Alexis Hvorostyana is a slap in the face Drobysha disbelief could be in their community. Sam Drobysh is to be not so badly beaten. Two songs on the album and counseling - that's the only difference. However, these two songs, the title and "I'm serving Russia" are - big hits album. So it's really not a slap. Alex Hvorostyan - "falling rose, but" Media: CD. Genre: Rock Style: Pop-Rock, Russian pop, disco anthem. Subject: Friendship, social relationships, love, patriotism, citizenship. Mood: Poetry, power, memories, love and responsibility. Hits: "fall but rose." How to not get out and second Hvorostyana Rastorgueva. Django then repeat it on all fronts. And the thing is that the album with tears in his songs is filled - can not believe he sings their dusty brutal macho, rather than the typical golden youth doroguschego with a glass of whiskey in his hand. All efforts Drobysha (lined impeccable sound alike "Chelsea") disintegrate. The boy wanted to write songs myself and for my money (like the Liar) they wanted to publish. He published here. The whole picture has gone to pieces. The style of the album is built around a straight bass drum and just gitarizma. What does the inclusion in the Russian pop unobtrusive guitar strokes. Whether unused arranger ideas remained Drobysha working with Dima Koldun or to write him another Finnish arrangers not familiar sound. Slightly nasal vocals Alexis shines not, frankly, a vocal exercise. And that he had given this pop? Why compete with accounting and Lazarev? It is obvious that the son of the main fighters of drugs has a large radio audience, "Chanson", and I would sing it on alcohol "at the KGB General", as formulated recently Shevchuk. But no - the Pop-Rock wanted. Rating: 4 out of 10. Ken Guru, a business newspaper "The View" National Music Corporation, CD Land, 2007. Code:

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