![No-Man - Flowermouth [2009 reissue] No-Man - Flowermouth [2009 reissue]](images/noman-flowermouth.jpg)
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List Price: €13.55(EUR)
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* in stock
CD: KSCOPE111X
RELEASED: 2009
LABEL: Kscope
01. Angel Gets Caught in the Beauty Trap
02. You Grow More Beautiful 
03. Animal Ghost
04. Soft Shoulders 
05. Shell of a Fighter
06. Teardrop Fall
07. (Watching) Over Me
08. Simple
09. Things Change
10. Angeldust *
11. Born Simple *
* bonus tracks
Digitally remastered 2009 reissue expanded with 2 previously unreleased bonus tracks. Things were better honed for No-Man on Flowermouth, released a year after
the band's debut. Minus Ben Coleman (although you'd never guess because he appears
on seven of nine tracks), Tim Bowness and Steven Wilson were aided by Robert
Fripp, Ian Carr, Steve Jansen, and Richard Barbieri. Beginning with the epic
"Angel Gets Caught in the Beauty Trap, " which is almost ten minutes
on the original and even longer on the reissue, things flow as Bowness' soothing
vocal gives way to solos by Carr and Fripp. "You Grow More Beautiful"
is another hit that might have been, while "Animal Ghost" is what
Arthur Ransom, the author of Swallows and Amazons, might have sounded like had
he chosen music instead of literature, a very English affair with a meandering
piano line and flute solo. "Soft Shoulders" is the closest to a throwaway,
but "Shell of a Fighter" restores order, an enthralling piece expanding
to nearly eight minutes of lilting pastoral verse, quiet passages of electronics,
and an all out storm of squally guitars and ferrocious drumming. "Teardrop
Falls, " one of their best, is a paced yet graceful pop dance tune. Flowermouth
has serenity, too, in "Watching Over Me, " which may have been better
following "Shell." "Simple" uses a sample courtesy of Lisa
Gerrard of Dead Can Dance, roaming through contemporary club beats to reach
a haunting climax. "Things Change" is the endgame, with the lyrics
"You're leaving me behind you, I hate the way things change" sung
in earnest. Gentle again, giving way to Wilson's emotionally wrought guitar
mimicking the gut wrenching agony of love lost. A masterpiece of writing and
playing recommended beyond reason.
Influences / Similar Artists:
Blackfield, Talk Talk, Perry Blake, Japan, The Blue Nile, Porcupine Tree
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