Cover of Flowers Must Die Kompost
ALFAMA

• Rating:

For fans of progressive rock, krautrock enthusiasts, lovers of psychedelic and acid culture music, and listeners seeking experimental 90s-influenced sounds.
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LA RECENSIONE

They come from Northern Europe.

They rework time with new formulas. To say the beginning is a Guru Guru scream dressed in flared jeans.

Swedes. They rework the prog passed down from bad experiences.

Kraut. Rave party among mushrooms, Free jazz 0.6. They are not children, but they are a new generation. They shape prog into mutant forms of Psyco Acid metropolitan Folk.

The repetition around a PC, you dance by throwing old records into the air. But deep down they are children of Ecstasy, children of raves. Braids dig into their Kraut ethnic DNA sustained by the usual Motorik.

They are friends of the Goat. The Goat are more witch-like.

They are the industrial folk of Comus.

Instead, these guys are children of the acid culture, intellectual seeking roots.

In their way, very 90s.

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Summary by Bot

Flowers Must Die's album Kompost redefines prog rock with a modern twist, blending Krautrock rhythms, acid culture, and folk influences. The music carries an intellectual and rave-inspired vibe rooted in 90s culture. Their sound is a mutant fusion that embraces repetition, Motorik, and free jazz elements, appealing to fans of experimental progressive music.

Tracklist

01   Källa Till Ovisshet (03:56)

02   Hit (05:07)

03   After Gong (04:29)

04   Why? (07:57)

05   Hej Då (05:18)

06   Don't You Leave Me Now (04:18)

07   Hey, Shut Up! (05:06)

08   Där Blommor Dör (01:16)

09   Svens Song (05:26)

Flowers Must Die

Swedish group described in DeBaser's review as blending krautrock, progressive rock, acid folk and rave elements; their album Kompost is reviewed by ALFAMA.
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