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I Grow Tired but Dare Not Fall Asleep [Slipcase] * by Ghostpoet (CD, 2020)

About this product

Product Identifiers

ProducerObaro Ejimiwe
Record LabelPlay It Again Sam
UPC5400863026943
eBay Product ID (ePID)20050169254

Product Key Features

FormatCD
Release Year2020
GenreRock
Run Time45 Mins 35 Seconds
ArtistGhostpoet
Release TitleI Grow Tired but Dare Not Fall Asleep [Slipcase] *

Additional Product Features

DistributionHarmonia Mundi (Distribut
Number of Discs1
Country/Region of ManufactureUSA
ReviewsNME (Magazine) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Ghostpoet is his quintessential languid self here. The album is soulful, melancholic with bursts of urgent sonics -- a suitable accompaniment to the sense of burden in the lyrics." Clash (Magazine) - "Ghostpoet doesn't shy away from pressing issues -- he tackles them head on. As ever, he does so with brilliance and genre-defying sounds, fusing elements of alt-rock and electronica."
EngineerShuta Shinoda
Additional informationPersonnel: Benjamin Markham, Scott Rimington (guitar); Raven Bush (strings); Obaro Ejimiwe , Robert Stillman (piano, keyboards, synthesizer, programming, drum programming); Sam Beste (piano, keyboards, synthesizer); Fabian Prynn (drums); Aluá Nascimento (percussion). Audio Mixer: Shuta Shinoda. Recording information: Ariesound Studios; Hackney Road Studios. Photographer: Emma Dudlyke. Arranger: Obaro Ejimiwe . Obaro Ejimiwe is still sleepless and sounds every bit the part on the fifth Ghostpoet album, his first since 2017's Dark Days + Canapés. Lethargy and lack of projection notwithstanding, he's cognizant enough to transmit his ever-harrowing thoughts, wishing for death, quoting pro-Brexit demonstrators, and acknowledging "I was once your Superman, now I'm just bones" with mystifying impassivity. Sour paralysis is conveyed in almost every track, whether the target is narcissism, materialism, or racism. The energy increases only when Ejimiwe is at his most defiant on "Nowhere to Hide Now" (with the returning Delilah Holliday providing whispered background vocals) and the title song, the only cut that could be termed a rocker, as all else crawls and slinks. Even with its uneasy strings and variety of keyboards, the sound is starker in comparison to the previous Ghostpoet LP. It's less reliant upon electronics with a stronger emphasis on the razor-sharp interplay between drummer Fabian Prynn and bassist Tom Herbert -- both holdovers from the previous album -- and guitarist Benjamin Markham, who breaks occasionally from circular and shadowy supporting rhythms to deal out liberally reverbed lashings. While the album's cover deliberately recalls Henry Fuseli's The Nightmare, it wouldn't look out of place between copies of Joy Division's Closer and Associates' Sulk. Like those two post-punk touchstones, I Grow Tired But Dare Not Fall Asleep has a despairing seductive power. ~ Andy Kellman
Number of Audio ChannelsStereo