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Black Flowers Vol. 1-2

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Download links and information about Black Flowers Vol. 1-2 by Lynn Miles. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:14:18 minutes.

Artist: Lynn Miles
Release date: 2010
Genre: Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:14:18
Buy on iTunes $19.80
Buy on Amazon $13.98
Buy on Songswave €2.09

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. A Thousand Lovers 3:34
2. I Give Up 4:12
3. Map of My Heart 4:46
4. Night Drive 3:45
5. You're Not Coming Back 2:33
6. I'm The Moon 4:40
7. Surrender Dorothy 4:07
8. Over You 4:42
9. Try Not To Be So Sad 3:47
10. When My Ship Comes In 3:05
11. All I Ever Wanted 3:59
12. Eight Hour Drive 3:46
13. Rust 3:15
14. Flames Of Love 3:39
15. Hide Your Heart 2:09
16. Last Night 3:46
17. When Did The World 4:41
18. I Always Told You The Truth 3:21
19. Black Flowers 3:27
20. The People You Love 3:04

Details

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Canadian singer/songwriter Lynn Miles bases all of her tunes for this double-CD set on the lonely times, lost love, and downhearted feelings that stem from personal experience. It seems she expresses that fish-out-of-water state of being universally acknowledged by all thinking human beings plagued with emptiness. Yet this is not a blues-based music, but a folkish, introspective, storytelling type of sound so deeply ingrained that only she can express or experience it. Playing mainly acoustic, or occasionally electric guitar while singing, Miles has a crystal-clear approach to these songs, with little or no mystery involved, but instead a definite message of solitude within isolation. In a distant viewpoint, songs like "Map of My Heart," replete with echo and reverb guitar, the rambling "I'm the Moon," with a reference to a cheap hotel, and the faux denial of "Over You" as she's heading for New Mexico, show Miles in an escapist mood. There's a more hopeful sentiment in spoken phrases during "When My Ship Comes In" and the midtempo "All I Ever Wanted," while Miles plays harmonica for "Eight Hour Drive," even sounding Bob Dylan-ish during the more connected "Flames of Love." On occasion she puts aside the guitar for a piano, in Joni Mitchell-type reflection for "The People You Love" or "You're Not Coming Back." Honest to a fault, Lynn Miles wears her heart on her sleeve 100-percent of the time in a frequently painful but forthright musical portrayal of her soul. ~ Michael G. Nastos, Rovi