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Lost Loves (CD)
The follow up to 21012âs Infinity Overhead, which reached #31 on the Billboard 200 as Minus The Bearâs highest charting album to date, Lost Loves lives up to its title quite literally as a collection of hard to let go songs pulled from the bandâs past seven odd years of writing, recording and releasing records. âInevitably some of your favorite songs are going to be cut in the necessity of creating the right sequence for that particular time,â says bassist Cory Murchy. âRegardless of the reason they werenât included, it wasnât for lack of love and appreciation of the songs themselves.â Somewhat by chance the black sheep that didnât quite fit in with Planet of Ice, OMNI, and Infinity Overhead coalesce among their once regretfully forsaken peers. âPerhaps itâs because they didnât make the past albums that they fit so seamlessly together,â muses Murchy.
The follow up to 21012âs Infinity Overhead, which reached #31 on the Billboard 200 as Minus The Bearâs highest charting album to date, Lost Loves lives up to its title quite literally as a collection of hard to let go songs pulled from the bandâs past seven odd years of writing, recording and releasing records. âInevitably some of your favorite songs are going to be cut in the necessity of creating the right sequence for that particular time,â says bassist Cory Murchy. âRegardless of the reason they werenât included, it wasnât for lack of love and appreciation of the songs themselves.â Somewhat by chance the black sheep that didnât quite fit in with Planet of Ice, OMNI, and Infinity Overhead coalesce among their once regretfully forsaken peers. âPerhaps itâs because they didnât make the past albums that they fit so seamlessly together,â muses Murchy.
$4.20
Original: $13.99
-70%Lost Loves (CD)â
$13.99
$4.20Description
The follow up to 21012âs Infinity Overhead, which reached #31 on the Billboard 200 as Minus The Bearâs highest charting album to date, Lost Loves lives up to its title quite literally as a collection of hard to let go songs pulled from the bandâs past seven odd years of writing, recording and releasing records. âInevitably some of your favorite songs are going to be cut in the necessity of creating the right sequence for that particular time,â says bassist Cory Murchy. âRegardless of the reason they werenât included, it wasnât for lack of love and appreciation of the songs themselves.â Somewhat by chance the black sheep that didnât quite fit in with Planet of Ice, OMNI, and Infinity Overhead coalesce among their once regretfully forsaken peers. âPerhaps itâs because they didnât make the past albums that they fit so seamlessly together,â muses Murchy.











