Search - Bows :: Blush

Blush
Bows
Blush
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

With lush, artful arrangements and vocals that float over hushed drum & bass beats, the debut record from Bows is like an unsettled dream filled with Freudian imagery and subconscious yearnings. Taking elements of Bj&#...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Bows
Title: Blush
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Too Pure / Beggars
Original Release Date: 8/24/1999
Release Date: 8/24/1999
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Styles: Drum & Bass, Trip-Hop, Techno, Indie & Lo-Fi
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 644918009023, 0644918009016

Synopsis

Amazon.com's Best of 1999
With lush, artful arrangements and vocals that float over hushed drum & bass beats, the debut record from Bows is like an unsettled dream filled with Freudian imagery and subconscious yearnings. Taking elements of Björk and Portishead, Bows give rise to something at once mysterious, disturbing, and beautiful. --Matthew Cooke

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CD Reviews

Great to work to
hmmmmmm | chicago | 10/14/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)

"i love listening to this on my headphones while at work....keeps me moving and motivated! i hate to compare...but these sound clips don't do it justice....so if you like bjork (which is a stretch for a comparison), mono, or portishead....this is fab! the beats are fantastic.......and the cd overall definitely has a mood about it---the vocals slightly melancholy, the beats slightly frantic...so what does that mean? dunno. good buy though!"
Really very good .
09/06/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)

"A big change from former / other project Long Fin Killie , Bows' Blush has a lot of layered electronic textures , just like all the reviews say . Sutherland isn't the leading vocalist on every song as I had expected , so I guess if that is the only part of Long Fin Killie which really interests you , which I see a lot of in interviews , don't get this . Actually , go ahead and listen to it as it's completely different , and not a departure from their sound but an embrace of and a look in an entirely different direction . Refreshing ."
Big wings, soft sound
E. A Solinas | MD USA | 08/09/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Somehow the sound of Bows' "Blush" is too earthy to be properly classified as dreampop. The stormy percussion and jazzy horns of the opening track set off the tone for a strange trip-hop experience -- mysterious and seductive, with the sense that you should wake up from this dream soon.



It starts off quietly with the gently peculiar "Big Wings," followed by the muted concert hubbub of "Troy Polenta's Big Break" and the lurching, aching title track. Subdued female vocals, sputtery drumbeats and dreamy string arrangements line songs like "King Deluxe," the elegantly ominous "Speed Marina." Stuck in the middle is a wickedly funny little advertisement for the band, a touch of humor that grounds all of it. It would have been better if placed at the beginning or end, though.



"Blush" comes across as a beautiful nightmare in the middle of a jazz club. Very sensuous and beautiful, but also surreal and disturbing. A feeling of unease runs all through the album, especially since the songs tend to run into one another, shifting and changing like dreams do.



The sound of the music is a mix of electronic beats, shimmers and soundscapes, layered smoothly with some very muted bass and solid percussion. The strings lift it up to the sky, and the jazzy horns pull it back down to earth. It's a surprisingly liquid sound, mixing gentle trip-hop with stormy underbeats.



The vocals come from three people -- Ruth Emond, whose voice is very sweet and airy; Signe Heirup Wille Jergesen, whose voice is a little less ethereal in songs like "Sleepyhead"; and frontman Luke Sutherland, with a sort of quiet falsetto that he keeps low. The feeling they give off is quite sultry, a bit like psychedelic torch singers.



"Blush" lives up to its name -- colorful and sweet. The lush instrumentation and dreamy vocals soften the uneasiness of Bows' debut, and make this a wonderful trip-hop album. Highly recommended."