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High as Hope

High as Hope in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $17.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
High as Hope

High as Hope in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
For
Florence + the Machine
's fourth full-length,
High as Hope
,
Florence Welch
digs deep, meditating on the highs used to fill the holes in our souls, be it drugs, alcohol, reckless love, or spirituality. Over the course of this concise and cohesive journey, she discovers life is about learning to live in the space between the extremes, embracing the normalcy of that middle ground between passionate highs and empty lows. Gone is the sun-splashed grandeur of
How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful
and the anthemic bombast of
Lungs
and
Ceremonials
. The
Patti Smith
ode "Patricia" and the stomping "100 Years" come the closest to past heights, but otherwise,
sticks close to the heart of a newly sober and reflective
Welch
. Arranged as a clean linear narrative, the album opens with "June," wherein
faces the loneliness of fame and her coping mechanisms. She reveals a teenage eating disorder and drug and alcohol addictions on "Hunger" and returns home to revisit where they all started on "South London Forever." On the string- and horn-drenched "Big God" -- featuring
Kamasi Washington
, among others --
even considers a higher power to fill the void. In the moments where her former vices are not the focal point, emotions swell on the tender apology/ode to her younger sister, "Grace," and the bittersweet "The End of Love," which features
's purest vocal performance on
. On the closing "No Choir," she confesses "it's hard to write about being happy cause the older I get/I find that happiness is an extremely uneventful subject." Yet, by the end of the song, she realizes that, in those "uneventful" moments of stillness and mundanity, happiness can be found in the simplicity. Straightforward and relatably human,
may not be the rousing version of
from previous albums, but as a document of her personal growth, it's an endearing and heartfelt study of truth and self-reflection. ~ Neil Z. Yeung
For
Florence + the Machine
's fourth full-length,
High as Hope
,
Florence Welch
digs deep, meditating on the highs used to fill the holes in our souls, be it drugs, alcohol, reckless love, or spirituality. Over the course of this concise and cohesive journey, she discovers life is about learning to live in the space between the extremes, embracing the normalcy of that middle ground between passionate highs and empty lows. Gone is the sun-splashed grandeur of
How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful
and the anthemic bombast of
Lungs
and
Ceremonials
. The
Patti Smith
ode "Patricia" and the stomping "100 Years" come the closest to past heights, but otherwise,
sticks close to the heart of a newly sober and reflective
Welch
. Arranged as a clean linear narrative, the album opens with "June," wherein
faces the loneliness of fame and her coping mechanisms. She reveals a teenage eating disorder and drug and alcohol addictions on "Hunger" and returns home to revisit where they all started on "South London Forever." On the string- and horn-drenched "Big God" -- featuring
Kamasi Washington
, among others --
even considers a higher power to fill the void. In the moments where her former vices are not the focal point, emotions swell on the tender apology/ode to her younger sister, "Grace," and the bittersweet "The End of Love," which features
's purest vocal performance on
. On the closing "No Choir," she confesses "it's hard to write about being happy cause the older I get/I find that happiness is an extremely uneventful subject." Yet, by the end of the song, she realizes that, in those "uneventful" moments of stillness and mundanity, happiness can be found in the simplicity. Straightforward and relatably human,
may not be the rousing version of
from previous albums, but as a document of her personal growth, it's an endearing and heartfelt study of truth and self-reflection. ~ Neil Z. Yeung

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