Harold Budd, Simon Raymonde, Robin Guthrie & Elizabeth Fraser

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sea, Swallow Me 00:00 Tools
Why Do You Love Me? 00:00 Tools
Memory Gongs 00:00 Tools
Ooze Out And Away, Onehow 00:00 Tools
She Will Destroy You 00:00 Tools
Bloody And Blunt 00:00 Tools
The Ghost Has No Home 00:00 Tools
Eyes Are Mosaics 00:00 Tools
Sea Swallow Me 00:00 Tools
Ooze Outand Away, Onehow 00:00 Tools
Eyescare Mosaics 00:00 Tools
The Ghost Has No Name 00:00 Tools
The Moon And The Melodies 00:00 Tools
Ooze out and way, Onehow 00:00 Tools
Ooze Out And Away, One How 00:00 Tools
Sea, Shallow Me 00:00 Tools
Eyesare Mosaics 00:00 Tools
Why Do You Love Me¿ 00:00 Tools
Ghost Has No Home 00:00 Tools
Eyes Are Mosiacs 00:00 Tools
Ooze Out And Away Onehow 00:00 Tools
A1 Sea, Swallow Me 00:00 Tools
Bloodyand Blunt 00:00 Tools
03 - Why Do You Love Me_ 00:00 Tools
B4 Ooze Out And Away, Onehow 00:00 Tools
A2 Memory Gongs 00:00 Tools
B3 Bloody And Blunt 00:00 Tools
A4 Eyes Are Mosaics 00:00 Tools
B2 The Ghost Has No Home 00:00 Tools
A3 Why Do You Love Me ? 00:00 Tools
B1 She Will Destroy You 00:00 Tools
Moon and The Melodies 00:00 Tools
Sea Shallow Me 00:00 Tools
Why Do You Love Me- 00:00 Tools
Bloody & Blunt 00:00 Tools
Ooze Out & Away, Onehow 00:00 Tools
01 Sea, Swallow Me 00:00 Tools
The Ghost Has No Home" 00:00 Tools
04 - Eyes Are Mosaics 00:00 Tools
04 Eyes Are Mosaics 00:00 Tools
Why Do You Love Me _ 00:00 Tools
Ooze Out And Away One How 00:00 Tools
Eyes Are Mosaic 00:00 Tools
Sea, Swallow 00:00 Tools
01 - Sea, Swallow Me 00:00 Tools
05 She will Destroy You 00:00 Tools
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Harold Budd, Simon Raymonde, Robin Guthrie & Elizabeth Fraser Biography The Moon and the Melodies (1986) is the product of a one-off collaboration between the Scottish group Cocteau Twins and the American composer Harold Budd. The Cocteau Twins refused to sign the album with the band's name and used their individual names instead. The album has the characteristic style — heavily-treated guitar sounds and strangely euphoric vocalising — that can be heard in the group's other work from the same period, for example on the EP "Echoes in a Shallow Bay" or the album Victorialand. Harold Budd's stylistic piano tonalities and phrasing on this project are echoed in his solo album, Lovely Thunder, from the same year. The phrases "bloody and blunt" and "ooze out and away, onehow" come from Elizabeth Fraser's lyrics on the songs "The Tinderbox (Of a Heart)" and "My Love Paramour", both from the 1983 Cocteau Twins album Head Over Heels. Reusing phrases from old songs as titles for others can be considered one of Fraser's signature characteristics, as can her habit of emphasizing syllables in ways that differ from standard usage. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.