List Price: €19.55(EUR)
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CD: 90 CD
RELEASE DATE: 1986
LABEL: NORMAL
01. Slow Pulse Boy
02. Maps In Her Wrists & Arms
03. The Dwelling Place
04. Vincent Craine
05. Jack
06. The Headless Clay Woman
07. Gone ... Like The Swallows
08. Virus Meadow
For their second full album, the Trees developed an even more arty approach
than before, establishing what would become their basic sound for a number of
years to come. Stripping down the instrumentation on most of the songs to a
dark rhythm drive from Burrows and Havas, Justin Jones here concentrates on
a series of electric guitar parts which combine the liquid touches of flange
effects and folky runs on the frets, avoiding crunch in favor of delicacy, to
create marvelously evocative musical shadings, rich in atmosphere. Along with
Simon Jones' sometimes extravagant lyrical images of an older, more rustic and
mystic time, with hints of Wordsworth's early Romantic poetry throughout - "The
Headless Clay Woman" and "The Dwelling Place" give a hint as
the at once nostalgic and dramatic direction - it gives Meadow a unique flavor
for Eighties British rock. While some of the Trees' aesthetic may spring from
the same creative well as a number of moodier British folk-based artists from
earlier days - some of Nick Drake's more metaphoric numbers sprung to mind -
the goth-tinged feel of the music makes Meadow all the more distinct. One could
easily imagine it soundtracking an adaptation of Wuthering Heights, if not something
even older. Some numbers, like "Vincent Craine, " have a more conventional
rock approach, but this is counterbalanced by the album's highlight, "Gone...Like
the Swallows, " a richly textured, powerful song featuring all the band
members at their best.
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