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Snowbird - Moon (2014) [FLAC]
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Audio > FLAC
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28
Size:
602.49 MiB (631753790 Bytes)
Tag(s):
politux flac 16.44 rock ambient.pop indie alternative dream.pop 2010s 2014 london england
Uploaded:
2014-02-02 13:46 GMT
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politux
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5F8E58C8B3D392D7E83B23BBF054C9A2F31A440F




Snowbird - Moon (2014) [FLAC]

  Genre: Pop/Rock
  Styles: Ambient Pop, Alternative, Indie
  Source: CD (log + cue)
  Codec: FLAC
  Bitrate: ~ 900 kbps
  Bit Depth: 16
  Sampling Rate: 44,100 Hz

  01 I Heard The Owl Call My Name
  02 All Wishes Are Ghosts
  03 Charming Birds From Trees
  04 Where Foxes Hide
  05 Amelia
  06 Bears On My Trail
  07 Porcelain
  08 Come To The Woods
  09 We Carry White Mice
  10 In Lovely
  11 Heart Of The Woods

  Disc 2 - Snowbird vs. Rx Gibbs (Luna)

  01 I Heard The Owl Call My Name (RX Gibbs Remix)
  02 All Wishes Are Ghosts (RX Gibbs Remix)
  03 Charming Birds From Trees (RX Gibbs Remix)
  04 Where Foxes Hide (RX Gibbs Remix)
  05 Amelia (RX Gibbs Remix)
  06 Bears On My Trail (RX Gibbs Remix)
  07 Porcelain (RX Gibbs Remix)
  08 Come To The Woods (RX Gibbs Remix)
  09 We Carry White Mice (RX Gibbs Remix)
  10 In Lovely (RX Gibbs Remix)
  11 Heart Of The Woods (RX Gibbs Remix)

  On Snowbird's full-length debut, Moon, singer Stephanie Dosen is in the company of members of the Cocteau Twins, Radiohead, and Midlake, yet her voice is unquestionably the album's focal point. She's blessed with a remarkably pure soprano that, not coincidentally, bears more than a passing resemblance to Simon Raymonde's former Cocteau Twins bandmate Elizabeth Fraser, especially when her vocals are wreathed around each other as on "I Heard the Owl Call My Name" and "Amelia." But where Fraser's vocals are almost inhumanly gorgeous, Dosen's are more down to earth, and Snowbird makes the most of that. Moon's instrumentation is dominated by piano -- Raymonde wrote most of the music on one that he purchased after Dosen left the U.K. when her visa expired -- and the contributions by Ed O'Brien, Phil Selway, McKenzie Smith, and the rest of the supporting crew are subtle, adding to Moon's feeling of being safe and cozy on a cold winter night. 

  The album's intimacy is even more remarkable considering that Dosen and Raymonde constructed it while they were separated by an ocean, but it speaks to the depth of their connection. It took Raymonde a long time to find the right collaborator after the Cocteau Twins broke up in 1997, and even after he met Dosen while working on her 2007 album, A Lily for the Spectre, it took a while for this project to get off the ground. To his and Dosen's credit, Snowbird sounds less like Cocteau Twins part two and more like the spare yet surprisingly warm ruminations of another 4AD project, This Mortal Coil, as well as Goldfrapp's more acoustic side on songs such as the heart-stoppingly beautiful ballad "Porcelain" and "Charming the Birds from the Trees," where the way the pedal steel melds with her voice is sublime. Moon's classic-sounding melodies and instrumentation have a timeless if deceptively simple beauty that's different in all the right ways from Raymonde's former band, and that's exactly what makes Snowbird such a worthy successor.