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Nine Horses, Snow Borne Sorrow CD cover artwork

Nine Horses, Snow Borne Sorrow

Audio CD

Disk ID: 607765

Disk length: 58m 55s (9 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2005

Label: Unknown

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Tracks & Durations

1. Wonderful World 6:02
2. Darkest Birds 5:03
3. The Banality of Evil 7:59
4. Atom And Cell 7:06
5. A History of Holes 8:02
6. Snow Borne Sorrow 6:23
7. The Day the Earth Stole Heaven 3:19
8. Serotonin 5:54
9. The Librarian 9:00

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Snow Borne Sorrow is released under the name Nine Horses, but make no mistake--this is a David Sylvian CD, his best in two decades. After the dislocated dissonance of Blemish, Sylvian returns to songs and melody, recalling the jazz and ambient inflected work of earlier CDs like and Secrets of the Beehive. But far from retrenching, Sylvian expands on his earlier themes with electronica rhythms and textures from his brother, drummer Steve Jansen, and electronica artist Burnt Friedman from Flanger. Their efforts lend Sylvian's often bleak and forlorn songs a dark, film noir mood. In particular, the opening track, "Wonderful World," is like a counterpoint to the Louis Armstrong favorite, with a menacing 6/8 groove and the disembodied Greek chorus of Stina Nordenstam. Songs of regret and loss are sung in Sylvian's smooth chocolate croon, a voice bathed in melancholy. Although Sylvian always seems like an artist in turmoil, he's gone through many changes in the last year, from spiritual awakening to marriage and divorce from singer Ingrid Chavez. His previous CD, the dissonant and angular Blemish, was supposed to be part of his grieving process, but he's clearly not over it yet. But this time, his laments are suffused by intoxicating melodies and detailed, probing arrangements. --John DilibertoProbably the most commercial release that David Sylvian has ever been involved with, Nine Horses still manages to sound unlike any other album out there at the moment. Breaking boundaries, fusing styles and yet delivering beautiful pop melodies and stunning vocals on songs that Sylvian fans everywhere are bound to fall in love with. Nine Horses brings together Sylvian, his brother Steve Jansen (ex-Japan), and the well respected Burnt Friedman and they have created a suite of remarkably poignant songs that are part social commentary and part self-analysis. Sylvian and his collaborators have never sounded better nor the material more immediate. Other guest contributors include: Ryuichi Sakamoto, Stina Nordenstam, Arve Henriksen and many more. Samadhi Sound. 2005.

Other Versions

Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.

Snow Borne Sorrow

Tracks: 10 (+1 tracks), Disk length: 1h 6m 6s (+7m 11s)

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