Derek Hoke - Bring The Flood FLAC

Tracklist
| 1 | Little Devil |
| 2 | Destination Unknown |
| 3 | Heavy Weather |
| 4 | Bring The Flood |
| 5 | I'm Just A Man |
| 6 | Right Kind Of Woman |
| 7 | When The Darkness Comes |
| 8 | She Never Loved Me |
| 9 | So Tired |
| 10 | Love Don't Live Around Here |
Credits
- Producer – Dex Green
Barcodes
- Barcode: 04232645006
Album
Album 2017 10 Songs. Bring the Flood. Derek Hoke. Rock , 2017. Bring the Flood Derek Hoke. free to Derek Hoke Bring the Flood Love Don't Live Around Here, Little Devil and more. 10 tracks 37:24. Right Kind of Woman, 02:43. So Tired, 03:43. Now playing . On Bring the Flood, Hoke reflects on the political climate through menacing tones and metaphors of impending disaster floods, darkness, destruction that could just as easily apply to a broken heart as it could 2017. Slick, bluesy and mature, Bring the Flood is as much Chris Isaak and Dire Straits as it is Dwight Yoakam, showing an inventive take on modern roots straight from a tastemaker himself. View Complete List. Southern Moon. Waiting All Night. Goodbye Rock n Roll. слушайте с пользой. Provided to YouTube by TuneCore Bring the Flood Derek Hoke Bring the Flood 2017 Little Hollywood Records Released on: 2017-10-13 Auto-generated by Hoke. 217 Shazams. Open in. Top Songs By Derek Hoke. Love Don't Live Around Here. Bring The Flood. Gone Gone Gone. Derek Hoke is a singer-songwriter based in East Nashville but this is not a straightforward Nashville album. A vague country rock feel permeates the disc but their are some quite gorgeous moments that grab the listener. A grower of an album as Hokes often reverb-soaked guitar gets into the head. Certainly worth investigating. Your album, Bring the Flood is a rather gloomy but old-time rocknroll soundfeel to it, which is personally something I really enjoy. Is there a certain message that you are trying to tell your listeners through these songs on the album Hopefully, Im conveying what some people are feeling right now. I wrote most of the record in last December and January. At least thats how East Nashville based singersongwriter Derek Hoke sees it. On his new album, the portentously titled Bring the Flood Little Hollywood, Hoke dives into a sound far more ominous, threatening, and anxiously introspective than the music on his previous three full length releases would suggest




















