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The Glorification Of Sadness [Indie Exclusive Limited Edition Clear LP]
Artist:
Paloma Faith
Format: Vinyl
New: Available online or call for in-store availability $29.98
Wish
Formats and Editions
1. Sweatpants
2. Pressure (feat. Kojey Radical)
3. God in a Dress
4. How You Leave a Man
5. There’s Nothing More Human Than Failure
6. Bad Woman
7. Cry on the Dance Floor
8. Say My Name
9. Let it Ride
10. The Big Bang Ending
11. Eat Shit and Die
12. Divorce
13. Hate When You’re Happy
14. Enjoy Yourself
15. I am Enough
16. Mirror to Mirror
17. Already Broken
More Info:
"The Glorification of Sadness" is more than an album about relationships. The celebration of finding your way back after leaving a long term relationship, being empowered even in your failures and taking responsibility for your own happiness. It is her most personal album to date, drawing on her own experiences with Paloma acting as the anchor to direct a deeply personal narrative and album.”
Produced by award winning producer and composer Martin Wave and co-written with JKash, Andrew Wells, Ellie King and Charlie Puth. It has ALL the makings of a new era of Paloma. It’s confident. It’s cinematic. It’s empowering. It’s compelling from beginning to end, all powered by the kind of anthems that transformed her into an icon. The single is about finding the confidence of walking away from a relationship and being empowered with your own happiness, its limitless expression of pop allows it to sit comfortably next to Paloma’s many chart successors and then some.”
Produced by award winning producer and composer Martin Wave and co-written with JKash, Andrew Wells, Ellie King and Charlie Puth. It has ALL the makings of a new era of Paloma. It’s confident. It’s cinematic. It’s empowering. It’s compelling from beginning to end, all powered by the kind of anthems that transformed her into an icon. The single is about finding the confidence of walking away from a relationship and being empowered with your own happiness, its limitless expression of pop allows it to sit comfortably next to Paloma’s many chart successors and then some.”