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Masters of the Burial

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (106 ratings)
Masters of the Burial album cover
01
Bruised Ghosts
2:41 $0.99
02
Low Sail
2:39 $0.99
03
Old Perfume
3:15 $0.99
04
Towers
3:14 $0.99
05
Day To Day
2:25 $0.99
06
Bury This
3:03 $0.99
07
Finish Line
2:32 $0.99
08
Run For Me
3:12 $0.99
09
I Will Follow You Into The Dark
3:23 $0.99
10
Lost Compass
1:53 $0.99
11
Bound
3:13 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 31:30

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Growing on me

justino_dea

I'm still partial to the "honey from the tombs" but this one is growing on me too.

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Bring on a new Stars release

dcwizard

Even a plucky Death Cab cover does not lift this second solo effort out of its alt-country sameness.

user avatar

good, but not as good as the last

matttiej

this album is quite good, but i'm not getting into it nearly as much as i did her last album. i think the last one is better musically and lyrically, but perhaps it is me who has changed...

user avatar

very good effort

Juancho

i like it. old perfume is good

user avatar

Like an old perfume...

EMUSIC-0061DB3A

Familiar but rarely mundane, melancholic but... pretty. Oh so very, very pretty. This album is probably more accessible to fans of her pop work than Millan's earlier solo album. Still country-twinged, but not twanged. Bury this and Bruised Ghosts are my standout favourites... and Finish Line... and Old Perfume!

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They Say All Music Guide

Singer/songwriter Amy Millan (Sixteen Tons, Stars and Broken Social Scene) crafted a painterly debut with 2006′s Honey from the Tombs, a soft and wistful Sunday drive of a record that was equal parts folk and country, with a hint of indie rock despair. 2009′s Masters of the Burial opens the bedroom blinds a tad wider, bathing the room in a dusky glow that echoes late-period Sam Phillips and ex-Pulp guitarist-turned-modern-day Roy Orbison Richard Hawley. Millan offers up a sparse cover of the latter’s “Run to Me” on Burial, an 11-track postcard from “a room or two away from the edge” that showcases the Canadian’s impossibly warm voice and simple but effective melodies. Joined here and there by fellow “Great White North” crooners Evan Cranley, Dan and Jenny Whiteley, Leslie Feist, and Liam O’Neil, Millan’s “plain jane” delivery may be occasionally sleep inducing, but it’s comfort, not boredom that delivers the serotonin. – James Christopher Monger

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