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Flowers Rot, Bring Me Stones
Moundabout is a new folk project from Paddy Shine of Gnod and Phil Masterson of Los Langeros/Damp Howl/Bisect, but the words ânewâ and âfolkâ need to be treated with care here. Listening to âFlowers Rot, Bring Me Stonesâ is like entering a trance state while staring at one of the Knowth spiral carvings at BrĂș na BĂłinne in Ireland - the megalithic art in the neolithic âpassage tombsâ which also contain the oldest known representation of the moon made by man. As the album moves the listener, they are taken on a geographical and geological journey as well as psychological and spiritual, traveling inwards from the coast as well as down beneath the strata. And when you have been primed, it takes you all the way back to commune with older gods on the albumâs epic centrepiece, âDick Dalys Danceâ, creating the kind of prehistoric drones and trance-inducing rhythms that the echoing, celestially aligned corridors of the BrĂș na BĂłinne were built to amplify. This is not new music but the deep sensations it provokes will be new to most listeners. Imagine for a few minutes something as glorious as a Nurse With Wound List for the 21st Century - were I given such a formidable task as to organise such a collection of mind-bending music, Flowers Rot, Bring Me Stones by Moundabout would be one of the first records I would include.
$9.74
Original: $32.47
-70%Flowers Rot, Bring Me Stonesâ
$32.47
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Description
Moundabout is a new folk project from Paddy Shine of Gnod and Phil Masterson of Los Langeros/Damp Howl/Bisect, but the words ânewâ and âfolkâ need to be treated with care here. Listening to âFlowers Rot, Bring Me Stonesâ is like entering a trance state while staring at one of the Knowth spiral carvings at BrĂș na BĂłinne in Ireland - the megalithic art in the neolithic âpassage tombsâ which also contain the oldest known representation of the moon made by man. As the album moves the listener, they are taken on a geographical and geological journey as well as psychological and spiritual, traveling inwards from the coast as well as down beneath the strata. And when you have been primed, it takes you all the way back to commune with older gods on the albumâs epic centrepiece, âDick Dalys Danceâ, creating the kind of prehistoric drones and trance-inducing rhythms that the echoing, celestially aligned corridors of the BrĂș na BĂłinne were built to amplify. This is not new music but the deep sensations it provokes will be new to most listeners. Imagine for a few minutes something as glorious as a Nurse With Wound List for the 21st Century - were I given such a formidable task as to organise such a collection of mind-bending music, Flowers Rot, Bring Me Stones by Moundabout would be one of the first records I would include.























