Cover of Tracey Thorn A Distant Shore
JonatanCoe

• Versione 2 Rating:

For fans of tracey thorn, lovers of indie folk and intimate lo-fi music, listeners seeking emotional and contemplative albums
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LA RECENSIONE

Beyond our chaotic urban grids, the queues at checkouts, the congestion in traffic, and the chronic lack of parking, there are places of simple everyday life, inhabited by simple people, where time is stretched to the point of blending with infinity.

Hull, for example, is drenched for most of the year by a steel sky, heavy with rain and enveloped in a silence so reverent that you can hear the rustle of clothes and the weight of life through the creaking of wooden boards poorly fastened to the floor.

Hull is deep gray, fishing boats in the harbor, coat racks adorned with damp parkas, light bulbs lit at noon, and wind that cuts the face.

Hull is suburb triumphing over the metropolis four to zero, it's a furniture store that will casually become famous.

Hull is predominantly rain, slow, violent, relentless, incessant rain.

Hull is Tracey, wet soles, and a thick fringe that completely hides one eye.

It is a "distant shore" that smells of a happy oasis, an intimate bedroom low-fi, it's the place you can't detach from even though you betray it every night.

It is a Small Town Girl between maturity and adolescence, locked away in the boxes up in the attic.

Hull is vulnerability, fears, discovery, change, wrapped around twenty minutes of tape.

Hull is an intimate album, a secret diary that smells of rain and speaks of Tracey.

It speaks of us.

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Summary by Bot

Tracey Thorn's 'A Distant Shore' is a quietly intimate album reflecting on life in Hull, a rain-drenched, humble town. The review emphasizes the emotional vulnerability and low-fi aesthetic that creates a personal, diary-like listening experience. It contrasts small town simplicity with metropolitan chaos, capturing themes of change, maturity, and discovery. Though rated moderately, the album is depicted as a meaningful retreat into everyday beauty.

Tracklist Videos

01   Small Town Girl (03:57)

02   Simply Couldn't Care (02:48)

03   Seascape (02:38)

04   Femme Fatale (02:41)

05   Dreamy (02:56)

06   Plain Sailing (02:07)

07   New Opened Eyes (02:57)

08   Too Happy (03:09)

Tracey Thorn

English singer-songwriter best known as one half of Everything But The Girl; also a solo artist with several albums and collaborations.
01 Reviews