Flowermouth | ||||
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Studio album by No-Man | ||||
Released | April, 1994 | |||
Recorded | September - December, 1993 at No Man's Land | |||
Genre | Trip hop Dream pop Art rock |
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Length | 57:26 | |||
Label | One Little Indian | |||
Producer | Tim Bowness, Steven Wilson | |||
No-Man chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Brum Beat | [2] |
Daily Mail | [3] |
Melody Maker | (favourable)[4] |
NME | [5] |
Flowermouth is the second studio album by British duo No-Man, released on April, 1994 on the One Little Indian Records label, and subsequently reissued on September, 1999 by 3rd. Stone Ltd, and in a deluxe format by Snapper Music in February 2005.
Flowermouth was considered the band's most ambitious album to date, and remains a fan favourite. Despite being the band's best selling release, it was obvious by now that No-Man couldn't continue along the path which their record company wanted them to follow. Following Flowermouth's release, No-Man parted company with both One Little Indian in Britain and Epic/Sony in the US.
Long-term band member Ben Coleman had left prior to the album's release and by 1994, the band had effectively retired from live performance.
Considered a vitally important evolution, the album realised the expansive promise of the band's earlier material. Combining dream pop, art rock and moody minimalism, with an epic orchestral scope, Flowermouth was well served by the guest performances of Japan/Rain Tree Crow's Jansen and Barbieri, King Crimson's Robert Fripp and Mel Collins, jazz trumpeter Ian Carr and eerie Dead Can Dance singer Lisa Gerrard.
The original One Little Indian version of Flowermouth features several slightly different mixes to the ones featured on the later reissues.
For this second reissue, Steven has delivered a definitive remaster and the band have added two bonus tracks to the running order ("Angeldust" and "Born Simple", both originally from the now-deleted "Flowermix" album and featuring extensive Soundscape contributions from Robert Fripp). The reissue also features improved digi-pack artwork and new sleevenotes containing a combined band interview/essay by music journalist Dann Chinn[6].
Contents |
with:
Region | Date | Label | Format | Catalog |
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United Kingdom | April 1994 | One Little Indian | CD | TPLP67CD |
United Kingdom | April 1994 | One Little Indian | Vinyl | TPLP67 |
United Kingdom | April 1994 | One Little Indian | Cassette | TPLP67MC |
Japan | April 1994 | One Little Indian | CD | COCY-78166 |
United Kingdom | September 1999 | 3rd Stone Ltd. | CD Remastered Edition | STONE 045CD |
United Kingdom | July 2003 | Hidden Art | CD Reissue | HI-ART 17 |
United Kingdom | October 2005 | Snapper Music | CD Remaster | SDPCD195 |