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Grouper - The Man Who Died In His Boat flac album

Grouper - The Man Who Died In His Boat flac album
  • Performer Grouper
  • Title The Man Who Died In His Boat
  • Date of release 2013
  • Country US
  • Style Ethereal, Drone, Folk Rock, Ambient, Experimental
  • Other formats MP3 VOX MIDI TTA AAC AIFF DXD
  • Genre Electronic / Rock
  • Size MP3 1705 mb
  • Size FLAC 1212 mb
  • Rating: 4.4
  • Votes: 346

His observation about the Fall captures a broader idea about music fandom, describing what it's like to follow along with a gifted artist who has created her own style but is no hurry to move outside of it. Always different, always the same. It's a phrase that comes to mind for me when I listen to the charred ambient music of Liz Harris' Grouper. Her body of work is of a piece. She layers ethereal vocals that feel less like floating in the clouds and more like sinking into the dark earth, possibly while inside of a coffin; her music is a downcast mix of strummed acoustic guitar.

The Man Who Died in His Boat.

It’s as if The Man Who Died in His Boat, the second album to feature any sign of life in its artwork, seeks to be that girl’s companion, offering a reflection piece on the journey behind Harris’s classic five years on. Dead Deer hasn’t been around that long, but its cult status only exists for the voice sinking behind the scenery. The Man Who Died in His Boat feels immediately of its time, a period we know to be completely unique.

Though drifting through The Man Who Died In His Boat at times feels melancholic, like the icy piano in the negative space of Vanishing Point, portions of the oceanic expanse ride on relatively warm currents. But this is an album that follows the drifting of a boat at sea, and discovers that even the most pleasant journeys can end in nothingness. As such, closer Living Room stares mortality and absence in its face,.

When dealing with someone as cryptic and perpetually uncertain as ambient musician Liz "Grouper" Harris, it would be too easy to simply write off The Man Who Died In His Boat as a collection of B-sides from her 2007 breakout Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill. Not to fault such a concept to begin with; the songs present here almost feel like they came from a completely separate album, with only occasional call-backs to compositions that would make the final cut and beyond

This album At A Glance. The Man Who Died In His Boat by Grouper (2013) Release date: 2013-02-04 Overall rank: 14,826th. The best album by Grouper is Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill which is ranked number 1640 in the list of all-time albums with a total rank score of 1,397. Grouper album bestography. Higher ranked (14,730th) This album (14,826th) Lower ranked (22,666th) Cover The Windows And WallsThe Man Who Died In His BoatGrid Of Points. Members who like this album also like: Bloom by Beach House, m b v by My Bloody Valentine and Veckatimest by Grizzly Bear. Listen to The Man Who Died In His Boat on YouTube. The Man Who Died In His Boat track list

Since then Harris’ interests have sprawled outwards again, spanning from long-form collage pieces (Violet Replacement) to comparatively unadorned songs (the Water People 7 ). But The Man Who Died In His Boat sees Harris returning to that moment, assembling an 11-track album from songs recorded at the same time as Draggin. .But by the same token there’s very little to distinguish this album from its counterpart. The Man Who Died In His Boat is, to put it simply, more of the same – and whether that’s a worthy thing for an album to be is largely down to your view on this period of Grouper’s output. For what it’s worth, it’s absolutely fine by me.

He mentioned the name Grouper and said he’d been listening to her a lot. I lit up and immediately went to hunt her down and found this gorgeous recording, Cover the windows and the walls. I walked around with it for the following week or two and became obsessed. I still listen to ‘Traveling Through a Sea’ from this album very regularly. It’s one of those life affirming songs where the chaotic rush and thrust of the world can make sense for a few minutes. Her music often reminds me of love and the inability to properly express it in our lifetime. With the release of ‘A I A’ in 2011, I was pretty certain she was my favourite artist of today. Grouper’s The Man Who Died In His Boat is out 4th February 2013 on Kranky. When I was a teenager the wreckage of a sailboat washed up on the shore of Agate Beach. The remains of the vessel weren’t removed for several days.

Tracklist

6
Vital
Cloud In Places
Being Her Shadow
Cover The Long Way
Difference (Voices)
Vanishing Point
The Man Who Died In His Boat
Towers
STS
Living Room

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
KRANK 177 Grouper The Man Who Died In His Boat ‎(LP, Album) Kranky KRANK 177 US 2013
796441817726 Grouper The Man Who Died In His Boat ‎(11xFile, FLAC, Album) Kranky 796441817726 UK 2013
KRANK 177 Grouper The Man Who Died In His Boat ‎(CD, Album) Kranky KRANK 177 US 2013


Talk about Grouper - The Man Who Died In His Boat


Taulkree
My copy unfortunally has a bad pressing quality, comes with annoying loud cracklings on one (!) channel.
Eigonn
Bought this on a whim and a few reviews/recommendations. Unfortunately after the first play the thing just grates on me. The guitar strumming at the same cadence on the 'strummy' tracks for some reason annoys me. I'm used to all sorts of music but I can't find the vital spark(s) in this one that makes me think there's any ideas lurking or mysteries to behold. Jettisonned and adrift in a fog of lo-fi nonsense, I've cut my losses. Nice cover though.
Flas
This review made me laugh. I needed to laugh today. Thank you. ????
kinder
In response to Dronesoul: Actually it was a flac download (the very entry you see here). Yes I suppose it is unusual but the risk/reward side of buying, listening and collecting music has always been that way for me since I was doing Saturday jobs in the 70s and apprentice wages in the 80s. I liked looking at covers, listening to opinions, making connections etc. Only a few percent never paid off. I like 'discovery'. I like tuning to random radio stations. Nowadays I have less time to indulge this (old) habit.Weird? Yes, but at least I supported the artist with my cash. Not all my reviews are favourable, and I don't get given the music gratis. Have you heard 'Fog Tropes / Gradual Requiem' by Ingram Marshall? I'd recommend that, every listen takes me deeper, might be a bit tangential at first listen but 'died in boat' made me want to play it.
Kata
To purchase a physical release before having heard at least a sample of it (they're videos in this very page ie) in 2017 seems to me very unusual at least.