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The Man Who Died in His Boat

The Man Who Died in His Boat in Bloomington, MN
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Size: OS
Grouper
's
Liz Harris
recorded
The Man Who Died in His Boat
at the same time she was making her gorgeous breakthrough album
Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill
, which for many fans was an introduction to her remarkably emotive, hypnotic music. She followed it with the more abstract but just as lovely
A I A
, and her project with
Tiny Vipers
'
Jesy Fortino
,
Mirroring
. While this music is a little older than some of those projects,
feels connected to each of them. Part of what made
so remarkable was its softness, which seemed to allow the emotional vulnerability
Harris
displayed to sink in even more deeply. There is plenty of that brave gentleness on these songs, which are possibly even more melancholy; "Vital" and "Being Her Shadow" carry an almost palpable sense of loss and longing in their drifting melodies and blurred vocals. Once again,
uses just a handful of elements -- voice, acoustic guitar, the occasional piano, and lots of reverb and delay -- to convey a subtle but wide range of feelings impressively. She balances the album's darkest moments with surprisingly comforting ones such as the strummy "Clouds in Places" and "Difference (Voices)," which lets
' vocals circle and linger around the listener like a long embrace. Songs like these and "Cover the Long Way" suggest, as
the Cocteau Twins
did, that clarity is overrated, or at the very least, a voice doesn't need recognizable words to give it power. When her singing does come into focus, as on the title track, it's almost unbearably intimate, but beautifully so. Elsewhere, "Living Room" recalls
in its spare yet dreamy folk, and drone-based tracks like the album bookends "6" and "STS" tie everything together and also hint at the direction
took on
.
may be a smaller-scale album than either
or
, but it's no less lovely or moving because of that. ~ Heather Phares
's
Liz Harris
recorded
The Man Who Died in His Boat
at the same time she was making her gorgeous breakthrough album
Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill
, which for many fans was an introduction to her remarkably emotive, hypnotic music. She followed it with the more abstract but just as lovely
A I A
, and her project with
Tiny Vipers
'
Jesy Fortino
,
Mirroring
. While this music is a little older than some of those projects,
feels connected to each of them. Part of what made
so remarkable was its softness, which seemed to allow the emotional vulnerability
Harris
displayed to sink in even more deeply. There is plenty of that brave gentleness on these songs, which are possibly even more melancholy; "Vital" and "Being Her Shadow" carry an almost palpable sense of loss and longing in their drifting melodies and blurred vocals. Once again,
uses just a handful of elements -- voice, acoustic guitar, the occasional piano, and lots of reverb and delay -- to convey a subtle but wide range of feelings impressively. She balances the album's darkest moments with surprisingly comforting ones such as the strummy "Clouds in Places" and "Difference (Voices)," which lets
' vocals circle and linger around the listener like a long embrace. Songs like these and "Cover the Long Way" suggest, as
the Cocteau Twins
did, that clarity is overrated, or at the very least, a voice doesn't need recognizable words to give it power. When her singing does come into focus, as on the title track, it's almost unbearably intimate, but beautifully so. Elsewhere, "Living Room" recalls
in its spare yet dreamy folk, and drone-based tracks like the album bookends "6" and "STS" tie everything together and also hint at the direction
took on
.
may be a smaller-scale album than either
or
, but it's no less lovely or moving because of that. ~ Heather Phares