other titles...
Vinyl
A1. We Can Have It
A2. Who Are You, Defenders of the Universe?
A3. Lost in the Plot
B1. The Second Part
B2. Don't Lose the Faith
B3. Expect the Worst/'Cos She's a Tourist
C1. Pinned Together, Falling Apart
C2. Never Destroy Us
C3. Warm and Sunny Days
D1. 22: The Death of All the Romance
D2. Postcard From Purgatory
D3. No Cities Left
Download Bonus Tracks
1. We Can Have It
2. Who Are You, Defenders of the Universe?
3. Lost in the Plot
4. The Second Part
5. Warm and Sunny Days
6. Pinned Together, Falling Apart
The Dears
No Cities Left: The Definitive 20th Anniversary Edition
OUTSIDE MUSIC
A double LP pressed on white vinyl alongside a digital download card with 6 previously unreleased acoustic tracks.
The acoustic versions showcase Murray Lightburn's moving vocals and offer a look behind the curtain of The Dears' signature synth-laden and cinematic arrangements, revealing their powerful and heartfelt songwriting. "Let's just keep fighting the end of the World. We will hold hands and we will make plans - for life." Twenty years ago, Montreal indie darlings, The Dears', sophomore album "No Cities Left" left off with those words followed by an instrumental marriage of heavenly chorus and symphonic cacophony - symbolic of the journey down a darkened path that finally brought The Dears to promise. Twenty years on, those words still ring true for fans of the band from around the world.
"The Dears, a six-piece orchestral rock treat from Montreal, Canada, led by the enigmatic Murray Lightburn and sounding like Marvin Gaye fronting The Smiths while the London Philharmonic Orchestra has a stab at the Burt Bacharach songbook, are probably the best new band in the world right now." - NME
"There isn't a tune on "No Cities Left", the Dears' gorgeous second album, that's not pitched at a minor state of emergency." - SPIN
"Sad music has never sounded so uplifting" - Tiny Mix Tapes // "An astoundingly complex, deeply evocative pop record" - Filter
“The greatest and grandest work from a band for whom ‘epic’ seems too cheap a descriptor [...] a seminal album that refines the band’s notorious unhinged onstage catharsis with their lushly-arranged studio sophistication." - Stuart Berman, 2004