The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Barnes and Noble

Loading Inventory...
Falling Down a Mountain

Falling Down a Mountain

Current price: $12.99
CartBuy Online
Falling Down a Mountain

Barnes and Noble

Falling Down a Mountain

Current price: $12.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: OS

CartBuy Online
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
After eighteen years, they still soldier on... After a somewhat revised version of
Tindersticks
broke their five-year recording silence with 2008's
The Hungry Saw
, it took less than two years for the group (again with a few modifications to the lineup) to compound that successful return with another new album -- their eighth overall -- which stands as perhaps even more of an achievement and pleasant surprise than its very fine predecessor. While
Saw
offered a few rare glimmers of positivity and sweetness from
Stuart Staples
and company, it was essentially business as usual for the perennially moody Britons.
Falling Down a Mountain
isn't exactly a major reinvention, either, but it does back up the golden-hued sky gracing its cover with some of their most upbeat and optimistic songs to date (keep in mind those are relative terms), and a liberal extension of the looseness they've been gradually settling into since 1999's
Simple Pleasure
. The six-and-a-half minute title track is immediately striking, with its simmering, asymmetrical, jazzy groove buoying a hypnotically simple vocal riff and some uninhibited soloing from trumpeter
Terry Edwards
.
"Harmony Around My Table"
is a bouncy soul-pop number that might hardly be recognizable as
if not for
Staples
' inimitable quavering baritone (as always, an acquired taste, like fine wine), while the low-key lovers' duet
"Peanuts"
sports a charmingly simple, slightly silly lyric, and the twinkling ballad
"Keep You Beautiful,"
though a typically mellow affair, is uncharacteristically, almost achingly sweet. Elsewhere, the album takes on a vaguely Western tinge (again echoing the dusty cover landscape), with the galloping, lustful
"She Rode Me Down,"
Edwards
' lonesome fluegelhorn on the
Morricone
-esque instrumental
"Hubbard Hills,"
and the gritty, downright driving
"Black Smoke."
Eventually -- this being
, after all -- the darkness does creep in: the deceptively buoyant
"No Place So Alone"
seethes with the jealousy of a jilted lover, and by the penultimate
"Factory Girls,"
we find
brooding alone, doused in melancholy, feebly asserting that "it's the wine that makes me sad, not the love I never had." It's a typically mournful, typically lovely
moment, made all the more exquisite here in contrast to the increased stylistic range that came before it. Sometimes, it just takes a slight change in scenery to help you appreciate what you've always had. ~ K. Ross Hoffman
After eighteen years, they still soldier on... After a somewhat revised version of
Tindersticks
broke their five-year recording silence with 2008's
The Hungry Saw
, it took less than two years for the group (again with a few modifications to the lineup) to compound that successful return with another new album -- their eighth overall -- which stands as perhaps even more of an achievement and pleasant surprise than its very fine predecessor. While
Saw
offered a few rare glimmers of positivity and sweetness from
Stuart Staples
and company, it was essentially business as usual for the perennially moody Britons.
Falling Down a Mountain
isn't exactly a major reinvention, either, but it does back up the golden-hued sky gracing its cover with some of their most upbeat and optimistic songs to date (keep in mind those are relative terms), and a liberal extension of the looseness they've been gradually settling into since 1999's
Simple Pleasure
. The six-and-a-half minute title track is immediately striking, with its simmering, asymmetrical, jazzy groove buoying a hypnotically simple vocal riff and some uninhibited soloing from trumpeter
Terry Edwards
.
"Harmony Around My Table"
is a bouncy soul-pop number that might hardly be recognizable as
if not for
Staples
' inimitable quavering baritone (as always, an acquired taste, like fine wine), while the low-key lovers' duet
"Peanuts"
sports a charmingly simple, slightly silly lyric, and the twinkling ballad
"Keep You Beautiful,"
though a typically mellow affair, is uncharacteristically, almost achingly sweet. Elsewhere, the album takes on a vaguely Western tinge (again echoing the dusty cover landscape), with the galloping, lustful
"She Rode Me Down,"
Edwards
' lonesome fluegelhorn on the
Morricone
-esque instrumental
"Hubbard Hills,"
and the gritty, downright driving
"Black Smoke."
Eventually -- this being
, after all -- the darkness does creep in: the deceptively buoyant
"No Place So Alone"
seethes with the jealousy of a jilted lover, and by the penultimate
"Factory Girls,"
we find
brooding alone, doused in melancholy, feebly asserting that "it's the wine that makes me sad, not the love I never had." It's a typically mournful, typically lovely
moment, made all the more exquisite here in contrast to the increased stylistic range that came before it. Sometimes, it just takes a slight change in scenery to help you appreciate what you've always had. ~ K. Ross Hoffman

More About Barnes and Noble at The Summit

With an excellent depth of book selection, competitive discounting of bestsellers, and comfortable settings, Barnes & Noble is an excellent place to browse for your next book.

Find Barnes and Noble at The Summit in Birmingham, AL

Visit Barnes and Noble at The Summit in Birmingham, AL
Powered by Adeptmind