The Black Keys Rubber Factory Album Download Torrent
Tysoft easypat keygen torrent. The word 'keygen' means a small program that can generate a cd key, activation number, license code, serial number, or registration number for a piece of software.

The Black Keys 8/27/2012

Download The Black Keys - Rubber Factory (2004) torrent or any other torrent from Audio > Music Direct download via magnet link.
Review
Black Keys Rubber Factory Torrent
- Rubber Factory is the third studio album by American rock duo The Black Keys.It was self-produced by the band and was released on September 7, 2004 on Fat Possum Records.
- 2004 release, the third album from the acclaimed Alt-Rock/Blues duo. Rubber Factory continues the Black Keys' tradition of raw, heavily blues-influenced indie rock. Rubber Factory was recorded in an abandoned coal burning power plant in the Black Keys' hometown of Akron, Ohio, and like Thickfreakness, was recorded and produced.
- Rubber Factory is the third studio album by American rock duo The Black Keys. It was self-produced by the band and was released on September 7, 2004 on Fat Possum Records. The album was recorded in an abandoned tire-manufacturing factory in the group's hometown of Akron, Ohio.
- Free Download The Black Keys - Rubber Factory (2004) Retail CD Covers and Album Art available on AllCDCovers.
- Aug 27, 2012 If they're not quite kissing cousins, they're certainly kindred spirits, and they're following surprisingly similar career arcs, as the Keys' third album, Rubber Factory, is neatly analogous to the Stripes' third album breakthrough, White Blood Cells.
It's easy to think of the Black Keys as the flip side of the White Stripes. They both hail from the Midwest, they both work a similar garage blues ground and both have color-coded names. If they're not quite kissing cousins, they're certainly kindred spirits, and they're following surprisingly similar career arcs, as the Keys' third album, Rubber Factory, is neatly analogous to the Stripes' third album breakthrough, White Blood Cells. Rubber Factory finds the duo expanding, stretching, and improving, coming into its own as a distinctive, original, thoroughly great rock & roll band. With 2003's Thickfreakness, guitarist/vocalist Dan Auerbach and drummer/producer Patrick Carney delivered on the promise of a raw, exciting debut by sharpening their sound and strengthening the songwriting, thereby upping the ante for their next record, and Rubber Factory doesn't disappoint. Instead, it surprises in a number of delightful ways, redefining the duo without losing the essence of the band. For instance, the production has more shades than either The Big Come Up or Thickfreakness -- witness the creepy late-night vibe of the opening 'When the Lights Go Out' or how the spare, heartbroken, and slide guitar-laden 'The Lengths' sounds like it's been rusted over -- but it's also harder, nastier, and uglier than those albums, piled with truly brutal, gut-level guitar. Yet through these sheets of noise, vulnerability pokes through, not just on 'The Lengths,' but in a lazy, loping, terrific version of the Kinks' 'Act Nice and Gentle.' And, like their cover of the Beatles' 'She Said, She Said' on their debut, 'Act Nice and Gentle' illustrates that even if the Black Keys have more legit blues credentials than any of their peers, they're nevertheless an indie rock band raised with not just a knowledge of classic rock, but with excellent taste and, most importantly, an instinct for what makes great rock & roll. They know that sound matters, not just how a band plays but how a band is recorded, and that blues sounds better when it's unvarnished, which is why each of their records feels more like a real blues album than anything cut since the '60s. But they're not revivalists, either. They've absorbed the language of classic rock and the sensibility of indie rock -- they're turning familiar sounds into something nervy and fresh, music that builds on the past yet lives fearlessly in the moment. On a sheer gut level, they're intoxicating and that alone would be enough to make Rubber Factory a strong listen, but what makes it transcendent is that Auerbach has developed into such a fine songwriter. His songs have enough melodic and lyrical twists to make it seem like he's breaking rules, but his trick is that he's doing this within traditional blues-rock structures. He's not just reinvigorating a familiar form, he's doing it without a lick of pretension; it never seems as if the songs were written, but that they've always existed and have just been discovered, which is true of any great blues song. Carney gives these songs the production they deserve -- some tunes are dense and heavy with guitars, others are spacious and haunting -- and the result is the most exciting and best rock & roll record of 2004. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
The Black Keys Rubber Factory
Read More Read LessBlack Keys Rubber Factory Lyrics
- #TrackArtistLength
- 1When the Lights Go OutThe Black Keys3:21
- 210 A.M. AutomaticThe Black Keys2:58
- 3Just Couldn't Tie Me DownThe Black Keys2:57
- 4All Hands Against His OwnThe Black Keys3:17
- 5The Desperate ManThe Black Keys3:53
- 6Girl Is on My MindThe Black Keys3:27
- 7The LengthsThe Black Keys4:52
- 8Grown So UglyThe Black Keys2:25
- 9Stack Shot BillyThe Black Keys3:20
- 10Act Nice and GentleThe Black Keys2:42
- 11Aeroplane BluesThe Black Keys2:49
- 12Keep MeThe Black Keys2:51
- 13Till I Get My WayThe Black Keys2:31