The Same As a Flower

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The Same As a Flower album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 50:41

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The very same

vonretro

Beautiful album. Excellent production, effects used sparingly and effectively, good folky guitar work. Great vocals too just don't know what they're saying. Something sublime I trust. Pure bliss.

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On The Beach with Nagisa Ni Te

Ponyboy

I'm so glad to see Nagisa Ni Te on 'emusic' - I've been telling anyone who'll listen all about them for months. I got into them just before this record came out and got the Japanese import. The packaging is amazing and so is the music. Beautiful guitars, fragile male and female vocals. Entrancing simple songs... Nagisa Ni Te is Japanese for 'On The Beach', a tribute to Neil Young, whose influence is evident on this record. If you like Maher Shalal Hash Baz, the tenniscoats and The Pastels, you'll love these magical folk-psyche songbirds. The title track is my favourite on this album, I also love Bramble, but the whole album is great. Hope you all enjoy it!

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They Say All Music Guide

Nagisa Ni Te’s fifth album, The Same As a Flower, is their most assured and melodically interesting record yet. The Japanese indie pop/free folk duo have never been about songs as much as about sounds and fragile emotions. This album is not that different. There are scant hooks or singalong choruses to be found (with one exception to be discussed later). In their place are meandering, lazy meditations that drift and eddy like lazy mountain streams. Much like their previous record, Feel, the subtle use of a wide range of instrumentation gives the songs a feeling of a late-night casual musical get-together. That impression is illusory, however, because Masako Takeda and Shinji Shibayama have strict control over the sound and their very precise playing and arranging are stronger than ever. The usual excellent folky ballads like the delicate and exquisite “A Light” and the loping “The Same As a Flower” predominate, but there are a couple of surprises, such as the epic ballad “Bramble.” Sung tenderly by Shibayama and Takeda, the track spreads languorously over 11 and a half minutes, culminating in a spiraling guitar solo and great washes of Mellotron strings and brass. They have never sounded so compelling before. The group also makes a tentative step toward pop songcraft with “After a Song,” which features an actual straight 4/4 drumbeat, fully strummed guitars, a dual slide guitar lead break, and a sweetly sung, very poppy chorus. The shock after almost 40 minutes of pastoral drift is a very pleasant one. If they wanted, the band could head in this direction and make a very good straight indie pop record. As it is, they have made an inventive, daring, and warmly satisfying record that should please anyone who already dug them and should win them some new fans as well. – Tim Sendra

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