Things were better honed for
No-Man on
Flowermouth, released a year after the band's debut. Minus
Ben Coleman (although you'd never guess because he appears on seven of nine tracks),
Tim Bowness and
Steven Wilson were aided by
Robert Fripp,
Ian Carr,
Steve Jansen, and
Richard Barbieri (who recorded the excellent set
Flame with
Bowness in the same year). Beginning with the epic
"Angel Gets Caught in the Beauty Trap," which is almost ten minutes on the original and longer on the reissue, things flow as
Bowness' soothing vocal gives way to solos by
Carr and
Fripp.
"You Grow More Beautiful" is another hit that might have been, while
"Animal Ghost" is what
Arthur Ransom, the author of
Swallows and Amazons, might have sounded like had he chosen music instead of literature -- a very English affair with a meandering piano line (removed on the reissue) and flute solo.
"Soft Shoulders" is the closest to a throwaway, but
"Shell of a Fighter" restores order, an enthralling piece expanding to nearly eight minutes of lilting pastoral verse, quiet passages of electronics, and an all out storm of squally guitars and ferrocious drumming.
"Teardrop Falls," one of their best, is a paced yet graceful pop dance tune.
Flowermouth has serenity, too, in
"Watching Over Me," which may have been better following
"Shell." "Simple" uses a sample courtesy of
Lisa Gerrard of
Dead Can Dance, roaming through contemporary club beats to reach a haunting climax.
"Things Change" is the endgame, with the lyrics "You're leaving me behind you, I hate the way things change" sung in earnest. Gentle again, giving way to
Wilson's emotionally wrought guitar mimicking the gut wrenching agony of love lost. A masterpiece of writing and playing recommended beyond reason. ~ Kelvin Hayes