How Big How Blue How Beautiful Album Download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Download

How Big How Blue How Beautiful Album Download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Download

how big how blue how beautiful album download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Download. 1. Ship to Wreck 2. What Kind of Man 3. How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful 4. Queen Of Peace 5. Various Storms & Saints 6. Delilah 7. Long & Lost 8. Caught 9. Third Eye 10. St Jude’ 11. Mother 12. Hiding 13. Make Up Your Mind 14. Which Witch 15. Third Eye (Demo) 16. How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful (Demo) 17. As Far As I Could Get. Tags: Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Leak Download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Leak Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful zip download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful album mp3 download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album 320 kbps Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Leaked Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful has it leaked Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful (2015) Album Leak Download. Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Download. 1. Ship to Wreck 2. What Kind of Man 3. How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful 4. Queen Of Peace 5. Various Storms & Saints 6. Delilah 7. Long & Lost 8. Caught 9. Third Eye 10. St Jude’ 11. Mother 12. Hiding 13. Make Up Your Mind 14. Which Witch 15. Third Eye (Demo) 16. How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful (Demo) 17. As Far As I Could Get. Tags: Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Leak Download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Leak Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album Download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful zip download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful album mp3 download Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Album 320 kbps Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful Leaked Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful has it leaked Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful (2015) Album Leak Download. How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful: Album Review. British indie-rock band Florence + The Machine recently released their third studio album, How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful , as a follow up to first Lungs and second Ceremonials. The album details the struggles in a faulted relationship with powerful songs detailing regret, such as "Ship to Wreck", anger, shown in "What Kind of Man", and self-appreciation, noted in "Third Eye". The album begins with the exquisitely crafted "Ship to Wreck". This song, despite its seemingly gleeful and positive musicality, depicts strong regret from Florence towards how she ruined her relationship. The powerful lines such as "I can't help but pull the Earth around me to make my bed" and "don't touch the sleeping pills, they mess with my head" reinforce Florence's ability to create musical masterpieces despite the circumstances. The regretful nature takes a shocking turn to "What Kind of Man", an ode to questioning why your lover is so crooked. It's followed by the more lighthearted title track, "How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful", about how she's maybe questioning that fame and the attention of Hollywood (enforced by the first line, "Between a crucifix and the Hollywood sign, we decided to get hurt. "), all while making yet another grand water reference by asking, "How big? How blue? How Beautiful?" Not to mention the inspirational instrumental section towards the end, in which the listener is engulfed by trumpets, embracing the powerful statement of the song: fame can corrupt relationships. The next song is "Queen of Peace", the first song in the album that is more resemblant of her older style shown in Ceremonials and Lungs. Personally, it is my favorite track as I'm sitting here, stumped on how to compare it to an older song of her's. The powerful chorus with a regular drum beat unheard in the rest of the album is haunted by the line, ". cause you're driving me away". In this song, she yet again makes another water reference: ". like a boat into oblivion", which was notorious in Ceremonials. The album takes a slower turn as the upbeat melody of "Queen of Peace" is overcome by the haunting guitar chords of "Various Storms and Saints", a melody about trying to become free from an unstable relationship while her lover dwells in the turbulence. Up next, the positive and encouraging "Delilah", a song about fully understanding that her lover is no good for her, while craftily using the story of femme fatale Delilah and Sampson to describe her story with her partner. "Various Storms and Saints" wasn't the only taste of depressing instrumentals and vocals, as "Long & Lost", "Caught", and "St. Jude" all further depict her chaotic relationship. Quite notably, in "St. Jude", Florence manages to harbor her vocal ability as to not a single big note, and it is that control that makes the song worth listening to. Again on an upbeat note, "Third Eye" comes towards the end, a song about appreciating self-worth. It is followed by transcendent "Mother" in which she is calling upon her mother's assistance to leave. The deluxe edition of the album has two bonus tracks ("Hiding" and "Make Up Your Mind"). Both are strong and worth the listen; however, the high notes and repition of "Hiding" can make it one of the more obnoxious tracks on the album. Following that are three demos, a before unheard and equally powerful "Which Witch", "How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful", and "Third Eye". The vinyl edition has additional song "As Far As I Could Get" and the Target bonus tracks include "Pure Feeling" and "Conductor". Overall, the album deserves a 4.8/5 stars, repetition in the song's themes and the lingering, awkward melody of "Hiding" being stuck in your head holding it back. How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful. The much-anticipated third studio long-player from Florence Welch and her mechanically inclined companions, How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful arrives after a period of recalibration for the spirited English songtress. Arriving three-and-a-half years after 2011's well-received Ceremonials, the 11-track set, the first Florence + the Machine album to be produced by Markus Dravs (Arcade Fire, Coldplay), eschews some of the bombast and water- and death-fixated metaphors of Lungs and Ceremonials in favor of a more restrained sonic scope and an honest reckoning with the dark follies of your late twenties. This change is most notable on the workmanlike opener "Ship to Wreck," a shimmering, open road-ready folk-rock rumination on the ambiguity/inevitability of post-fame self-destruction that, unlike prior first cuts like "Dog Days Are Over" and "Only If for a Night," feels firmly rooted in the now. Whether it be simple maturity or Dravs' calculated production style, there's no denying that an effort has been made to dial back a bit on some of the pageantry of Welch's earlier works, and for the most part, her penchant for pairing mystic Bronte-esque pondering with similarly windswept pagan/gothic gospel rock is left bubbling beneath the surface. This attempt to reign in Welch's more histrionic tendencies yields mixed results, with some songs finding the sweet spot between bluster and nuance and others (most of them in the album's sleepy latter half) disappearing altogether. Of the former, the bluesy (and ballsy) "What a Man," the propulsive and purposeful "Delilah," and the gorgeous title track impress the most. Instead of building to a fevered crescendo, as is the Flo-Machine way, the latter cut, a transcendent, slow-burning, chamber pop gem, dissolves into a simple and elegant, yet still goose-bump-inducing round of horns, and is breathtaking without knocking the wind out of you. Whether How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful ends up being a transitional album remains to be seen, as there is enough of each side of Welch (the pastoral and the feral) represented to tip the scale either way. That said, her Brit-pop soul treacle is still miles better than some of her contemporaries' top-tier offerings, and when the album connects it moves right in and starts to redecorate, but when it falters, it's akin to a chatty party guest failing to realize that everyone else has gone home. How Big How Blue How Beautiful. Florence and the Machine’s 2012 MTV Unplugged set was startling. Here was Florence Welch’s magnificently wayward choir-girl voice laid bare, shorn of cathedral reverb and synth swaddle, singing hits and covers (including Otis Redding’s “Try a Little Tenderness”) backed by wooden instruments and candles. The band’s first LP since that session seems informed by it: Finally, Welch is leaning hard into the classic rock and soul sounds her vocals always flirted with, like Ophelia in a Mondrian miniskirt. The timing feels right. Welch emerged in the shadow of Amy Winehouse, and Welch’s 2009 debut was followed by the megasuccess of Adele — two kindred British soul divas with signature throwback sounds. Welch had her own thing, conceptually bolder: a cinematic art rock that looked back to Kate Bush, and looked forward via collaborations with dance producers like Jamie xx and Calvin Harris. Her main wingman here is producer Markus Dravs (Björk, Arcade Fire, Coldplay), the Brian Eno protégé who helps rock acts signify pop.

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