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Bloodflowers

Bloodflowers
  • List Price: $14.98
  • Buy New: $6.19
  • as of 5/26/2012 00:40 EDT details
  • You Save: $8.79 (59%)
In Stock
New (27) Used (12) from $3.20
  • Seller:RevisionNet UK
  • Sales Rank:134,800
  • Format:Import, Original recording remastered
  • Language:English (Original Language)
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
  • Dimensions (in):5.6 x 5 x 0.5
  • Release Date:February 21, 2000
  • MPN:6 3 05431232
  • UPC:731454312325
  • EAN:0731454312325
  • ASIN:B00004KDBH
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • CURE THE BLOODFLOWERS

Tracks
  • Out Of This World
  • Watching Me Fall
  • Where The Birds Always Sing
  • Maybe Someday
  • The Last Day Of Summer
  • There Is No If...
  • The Loudest Sound
  • 39
  • Bloodflowers


Editorial Reviews:
Album Description
Aussie reissue of 2000 album includes one bonus track 'Coming Up'. Polydor. 2004.
Amazon.com
No one revels in the sumptuous pleasures of melancholy like Robert Smith, the Cure's leading mopemeister. In Smith's world, it is always raining, comfort and happiness are fleeting, love is epic and torturous. On Bloodflowers, the band's 11th studio album, his lyrical prowess continues to astound. Considering the subject matter, Smith's always managed to steer clear of the clichéd, bad-high-school-poetry trap, and on Bloodflowers, the imagery is some of his most vivid and stabbing. On "The Loudest Sound," a story about a couple who are, of course, growing apart, he sings of their tension: "She dreams him as a boy / And he loves her as a girl / And side by side in the silence without a single word / It's the loudest sound I ever heard." The music grows out of the same dichromatic marriage of love's eternal hope and heartbreak's inevitable bleakness. Layers of the Cure's signature ethereal, buoyant guitar licks are paced at the momentum of a lava lamp, while melodies lurk only in an understated synth or distorted guitar. None of the songs scream "radio hit" like Wish's "Friday I'm in Love" anomaly; and although Bloodflowers is less abstract, comparisons to Disintegration are easily drawn. If this really threatens to be the last Cure album--no, really, the real end--it's a vision of loneliness and loveliness, a low note rarely surpassed in beauty and breadth. --Beth Massa

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