Morose is represented on DeBaser by the album On The Back Of Each Day, described in the available review as gloomy, hazy, evocative and immersive, blending post-rock crescendos with apocalyptic-folk songwriting.

The DeBaser review by fede (2009) discusses the album On The Back Of Each Day in detail and describes the music as slow, atmospheric, and rewarding repeated listens. Works on DeBaser include On The Back Of Each Day, Opaque and With Wit.

DeBaser hosts a single detailed review of Morose's album On The Back Of Each Day, praising its gloomy, suspended atmosphere and evocative power. The record is described as slow, immersive, and not immediately catchy, rewarding careful repeated listens. Review highlights include comparisons to post-rock crescendos and apocalyptic-folk songwriting.

For:Listeners of atmospheric, melancholic, slow-building post-rock and apocalyptic-folk; people who prefer immersive albums to immediate hits.

 Strangely gloomy, yet reassuring, hazy, foggy, in black and white, crossed by spectral sounds that emerge from nowhere and vanish into nothingness, cries of wind instruments, barely plucked guitars, a bouncing and hypnotic piano, and a voice that bewitches you, slow, inexorable, that pronounces every word carefully.

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