From Every Sphere [Bonus Track] Ed Harcourt

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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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From Every Sphere [Bonus Track]

1LISTENBittersweetheart 4:31
2LISTENAll of Your Days Will Be Blessed 3:42
3LISTENGhost Writer 4:18
4LISTENThe Birds Will Sing for Us 4:26
5LISTENSister Reneé 4:44
6LISTENUndertaker Strut 3:41
7LISTENBleed a River Deep 4:48
8LISTENJestetter 3:56
9LISTENWatching the Sun Come Up 5:45
10LISTENFireflies Take Flight 4:37
11LISTENMetaphorically Sphere 4:46
12LISTENFrom Every Sphere 7:33
13LISTENThe Hammer and the Nail Bonus Track 5:17

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

With his elaborate, piano-based songs, Ed Harcourt belongs to the club of baroque singer-songwriters that includes Rufus Wainwright, Badly Drawn Boy, Aimee Mann, and Elliott Smith. He doesn't shy from experimenting with song structures and orchestrations, although he's rooted in the classics, such as Burt Bacharach and Elton John. From Every Sphere, Harcourt's third album, is at once tighter, grander, and weirder than its predecessor, Here Be Monsters. The flourishes and ambitions of songs such as "Ghostwriter" and "All of Your Days Will Be Blessed" are abetted by the layers of percussion and keyboard effects that are the trademark of producer Tchad Blake (Los Lobos, Sheryl Crow). But while Blake can sometimes tinker too much, that's not the case here. "Bleed a River Deep" and "Sister Reneé" are breathy piano ballads, buoyed by soft strings and muted horns. "Watching the Sun Come Up" and the title track, on the other hand, grow into broad orchestral climaxes. Harcourt's songs tend to rise and subside and rise again; they shoot for, and usually strike, big emotional epiphanies. Harcourt sometimes treads the edge of bombast, but From Every Sphere never crosses the line. It's an accomplished, ambitious achievement. Steve Klinge, Barnes & Noble



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