LONG WAY FROM HOME
review
The Sun rises Blue on Lovespirals' new album, moving you into a contradictive state of swaying in groovy rhythms, inducing romantic notions of Blues Bars and Cocktail Lounges, while you discreetly wipe a tear from your eye.
This Lovespirals seeks to move you, not leaving out one layer of your Body: they reach out to the emotional, the physical, the intellectual, and even the spiritual, offering soothing empathy for our at-once universal and utterly personal... More...
LONG WAY FROM HOME
review
The Sun rises Blue on Lovespirals' new album, moving you into a contradictive state of swaying in groovy rhythms, inducing romantic notions of Blues Bars and Cocktail Lounges, while you discreetly wipe a tear from your eye.
This Lovespirals seeks to move you, not leaving out one layer of your Body: they reach out to the emotional, the physical, the intellectual, and even the spiritual, offering soothing empathy for our at-once universal and utterly personal pains of life, loss, lonliness, and love.
The Sun is Blue here because the sadness that is explored here is not darkness; it is Life.
It has been said that Chaos is simply the lack of recognition of patterns, and with just a bit of perspective, even the most Chaotic is again Beautiful. Sadness is the same.
So put on this Lovespirals album to help bring a beautiful pattern to the sadness we all have found at one point or another in our lives.
Long Way From Home is quite simply: Beautiful Sadness.
|
|
|