CINEMATIC ORCHESTRA, The - Ma Fleur - Vinyl (2xLP)

Sold Date: February 4, 2018
Start Date: December 15, 2017
Final Price: £26.59 (GBP)
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Free delivery on many items.   Same-day despatch, no-question returns.   Authorised dealers - full technical support.   Online since 1997. Shop categories Information The CINEMATIC ORCHESTRA Ma Fleur(2xLP) Ninja Tune

Cat: ZEN 122. Rel: 7 May 07
Broken Beat/Nu Jazz/Nu Soul


Side 1 - Track 1. To Build A Home Side 1 - Track 2. Familiar Ground Side 1 - Track 3. That Home Side 2 - Track 1. Child Song Side 2 - Track 2. Music Box Side 2 - Track 3. Ma Fleur Side 3 - Track 1. Prelude Side 3 - Track 2. As The Stars Fall Side 3 - Track 3. Into You Side 4 - Track 1. Breathe Side 4 - Track 2. Time & Space

"Ma Fleur" is the first full studio album by Jason Swinscoe's Cinematic Orchestra since 2002's "Everyday". The record was written as the soundtrack to a specially commissioned screenplay for an imagined film (which may or may not be made). Shortly after finishing "Everyday", a piece of music which achieved great critical and commercial success, Jason Swinscoe relocated from East London to Paris. Here he began work on the instrumentals which would form the basis of his new record - more moods than finished tracks, a series of sketches or diagrams of directions to follow. Having completed a rough version by early 2005, he gave this to a friend who disappeared for three weeks and came back with short story scripts in which each scene represented a story of a different time in life, expressing the emotions which underpin the journey from birth to death. Jason then took this and worked some more on the tracks, and in turn gave this back to his scriptwriter, the two aspects of the project developing alongside one another. Gradually, Swinscoe recruited suitable vocalists for the atmospheres and themes he wanted to deal with. The remarkable Fontella Bass, who is now sadly in frail health, is the woman behind both legendary soul number "Rescue Me" as well as some of the Art Ensemble of Chicago's finest moments, had worked on "Everyday" and was an obvious choice to voice the parts of the elderly protagonist that Swinscoe envisaged. Mercury-nominated Lou Rhodes is not only a fantastic singer but a young mother and so perfect for the "mid-life" singer. The as-yet unheralded Patrick Watson, a remarkable vocalist from Montreal, became the youngest of the trio.