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Lynn Teeter Flower

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (75 ratings)
Lynn Teeter Flower album cover
01
A Good Start
4:13 $0.99
02
Clean Getaway
3:10 $0.99
03
Smile and Wave
2:35 $0.99
04
No Stars
4:45 $0.99
05
Replay
5:09 $0.99
06
Small Part of Me
4:18 $0.99
07
Irish Goodbye
3:24 $0.99
08
My Own Fault
2:53 $0.99
09
The Ballad of Sean Foley
3:57 $0.99
10
Lost Time
2:49 $0.99
11
Lynn Teeter Flower
1:12 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 38:25

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A favorite of mine

iamaperson

Amazing cd. A voice of an angel. She has an offbeat kinda rhythm but it still flows. Once you get into it it's one of those soul touching cds. Really amazing cd, one of those cds that make life more bearable and not simply a break from reality but a joy that it exists kind of reality.

user avatar

Great Indie Pop

cotafloata

Maria knows how to write hooks and has a gorgeous voice. I'm a huge Azure Ray fan, and I'd never thought I'd like anything as much as their debut, but this album is right up there. A nice mix of upbeat, midtempo, and ballads. Download this!

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They Say All Music Guide

The words “Lynn Teeter Flower” won’t mean much to anyone who wasn’t a part of Maria Taylor’s formative years in Birmingham, AL, but they have a way of imparting a sense of what the artist’s sophomore disc sounds like — pretty, charmingly off-kilter, this side of eccentric. Unlike 11:11, Taylor’s great debut disc, Lynn Teeter Flower, named for a onetime family friend, follows its own carefully considered path. Where the first album leaned hard on the jittery Bright Eyes sound, the second charts a course through sparer but still pillowy sounding territory. In ten songs (the eleventh is more a late-coming interlude than a song — it unspools a child’s sing-songy tribute to “Lynn Flower”), Taylor lays out tales of sadness, self-doubt and elusive love that seem hand-dunked in humanity — see “My Own Fault” and “Smile and Wave” for the best examples. Throughout, a cutback on shimmery electronic effects results in a lived-in sound; there’s a shabby chic-ness to these songs, and also a believability. Taylor’s voice is part Elizabeth Mitchell and part Sarah McLachlan, minus the syrup. Like the name “Lynn Teeter Flower,” it issues from somewhere plain and true and captivates fully. – Tammy La Gorce

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