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Ulver: Flowers of Evil 12"
Flowers of Evil, the new studio album from Ulver, finds the wolf pack exploring the fear and wonder of mankindâs fall from redemption. The threads of haunted places and images entwine. Have Ulver discovered new pastures under the sun? Or scoured the ruins of their own moonlit past? The truth is, theyâre closer to their previous purlieu than perhaps ever before. âDoom danceâ, someone dubbed their last studio album, the critically acclaimed, Impala Award-winning The Assassination of Julius Caesar (2017). Flowers of Evil comes across as an unfeigned progression along the course set by that album, revealing a band moving deeper into beats and grooves, hooks and choruses, synths and guitars, yet sounding more stripped back, making room for the distinctive detail. Once again Michael Rendall (The Orb) and legendary producer Martin âYouthâ Glover have taken crystalline care of the mix. With Flowers of Evil Ulver have fled a burning Rome, only to confront further crime and corruption. âRussian Dollâ, the albumâs first single, moves determinedly through the night, with a story of unfolding tragedy and misery. âMachine Guns and Peacock Feathersâ brings fiery end-time imagery â âbarrels are burning / great art will be destroyedâ â with a disco beat and flashy â80s synths. Dismal cries resound on âHour of the Wolfâ; echoing Bergmanâs classic film, the song is dedicated to the hour between night and dawn, âwhen most people die, when sleep is deepest, when nightmares are most realâ. âApocalypse 1993â reveals Ulver at their catchiest, its bounding-goat groove running hand in hand with a grand chorus depicting the catastrophic events at Waco, Texas, during the winter of that year â the very same winter that saw the birth of Ulverâs first incarnation. From that thorny undergrowth, this is what they have become: an eclectic, many-headed beast, chanting the ecstasies of the spirit and the senses. Flowers of Evil unfolds with the shattering second single, âLittle Boyâ. A mysterious beat moves the track towards its thunderous climax, and here Michael J. Yorkâs ominous pipes melt into the softer, moodier âNostalgiaâ, a â70s soul shuffle, and the heart-breaking Talk Talk-esque balladry of âA Thousand Cutsâ. Finally, the wolves are back in the palace of excess, waltzing the night away. Yet around them, the wilderness rises, triumphant; âgrass will grow over your citiesâ, as the Bible says.
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Ulver: Flowers of Evil 12"
Ulver: Flowers of Evil 12"
Flowers of Evil, the new studio album from Ulver, finds the wolf pack exploring the fear and wonder of mankindâs fall from redemption. The threads of haunted places and images entwine. Have Ulver discovered new pastures under the sun? Or scoured the ruins of their own moonlit past? The truth is, theyâre closer to their previous purlieu than perhaps ever before. âDoom danceâ, someone dubbed their last studio album, the critically acclaimed, Impala Award-winning The Assassination of Julius Caesar (2017). Flowers of Evil comes across as an unfeigned progression along the course set by that album, revealing a band moving deeper into beats and grooves, hooks and choruses, synths and guitars, yet sounding more stripped back, making room for the distinctive detail. Once again Michael Rendall (The Orb) and legendary producer Martin âYouthâ Glover have taken crystalline care of the mix. With Flowers of Evil Ulver have fled a burning Rome, only to confront further crime and corruption. âRussian Dollâ, the albumâs first single, moves determinedly through the night, with a story of unfolding tragedy and misery. âMachine Guns and Peacock Feathersâ brings fiery end-time imagery â âbarrels are burning / great art will be destroyedâ â with a disco beat and flashy â80s synths. Dismal cries resound on âHour of the Wolfâ; echoing Bergmanâs classic film, the song is dedicated to the hour between night and dawn, âwhen most people die, when sleep is deepest, when nightmares are most realâ. âApocalypse 1993â reveals Ulver at their catchiest, its bounding-goat groove running hand in hand with a grand chorus depicting the catastrophic events at Waco, Texas, during the winter of that year â the very same winter that saw the birth of Ulverâs first incarnation. From that thorny undergrowth, this is what they have become: an eclectic, many-headed beast, chanting the ecstasies of the spirit and the senses. Flowers of Evil unfolds with the shattering second single, âLittle Boyâ. A mysterious beat moves the track towards its thunderous climax, and here Michael J. Yorkâs ominous pipes melt into the softer, moodier âNostalgiaâ, a â70s soul shuffle, and the heart-breaking Talk Talk-esque balladry of âA Thousand Cutsâ. Finally, the wolves are back in the palace of excess, waltzing the night away. Yet around them, the wilderness rises, triumphant; âgrass will grow over your citiesâ, as the Bible says.
$39.00
Ulver: Flowers of Evil 12"â
$39.00
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Description
Flowers of Evil, the new studio album from Ulver, finds the wolf pack exploring the fear and wonder of mankindâs fall from redemption. The threads of haunted places and images entwine. Have Ulver discovered new pastures under the sun? Or scoured the ruins of their own moonlit past? The truth is, theyâre closer to their previous purlieu than perhaps ever before. âDoom danceâ, someone dubbed their last studio album, the critically acclaimed, Impala Award-winning The Assassination of Julius Caesar (2017). Flowers of Evil comes across as an unfeigned progression along the course set by that album, revealing a band moving deeper into beats and grooves, hooks and choruses, synths and guitars, yet sounding more stripped back, making room for the distinctive detail. Once again Michael Rendall (The Orb) and legendary producer Martin âYouthâ Glover have taken crystalline care of the mix. With Flowers of Evil Ulver have fled a burning Rome, only to confront further crime and corruption. âRussian Dollâ, the albumâs first single, moves determinedly through the night, with a story of unfolding tragedy and misery. âMachine Guns and Peacock Feathersâ brings fiery end-time imagery â âbarrels are burning / great art will be destroyedâ â with a disco beat and flashy â80s synths. Dismal cries resound on âHour of the Wolfâ; echoing Bergmanâs classic film, the song is dedicated to the hour between night and dawn, âwhen most people die, when sleep is deepest, when nightmares are most realâ. âApocalypse 1993â reveals Ulver at their catchiest, its bounding-goat groove running hand in hand with a grand chorus depicting the catastrophic events at Waco, Texas, during the winter of that year â the very same winter that saw the birth of Ulverâs first incarnation. From that thorny undergrowth, this is what they have become: an eclectic, many-headed beast, chanting the ecstasies of the spirit and the senses. Flowers of Evil unfolds with the shattering second single, âLittle Boyâ. A mysterious beat moves the track towards its thunderous climax, and here Michael J. Yorkâs ominous pipes melt into the softer, moodier âNostalgiaâ, a â70s soul shuffle, and the heart-breaking Talk Talk-esque balladry of âA Thousand Cutsâ. Finally, the wolves are back in the palace of excess, waltzing the night away. Yet around them, the wilderness rises, triumphant; âgrass will grow over your citiesâ, as the Bible says.












