180gLP comes in thick 24pt. jacket printed on uncoated paperboard with the same booklet as the CD and a 12"x19" art print poster featuring painting by Suzanne Osborne.
CD comes in a custom gatefold jacket printed on uncoated 100% recycled 18pt. paper board with a separate 4-colour printed CD sleeve – all featuring original artwork by Suzanne Osborne. CD also includes a 16-page black-and-white credit booklet featuring photography by Neil Fraser.
1. Falling Down A Mountain
2. Keep You Beautiful
3. Harmony Around My Table
4. Peanuts
5. She Rode Me Down
6. Hubbards Hills
7. Black Smoke
8. No Place So Alone
9. Factory Girls
10. Piano Music
Running time: 00:44:25
180gLP comes in thick 24pt. jacket printed on uncoated paperboard with the same booklet as the CD and a 12"x19" art print poster featuring painting by Suzanne Osborne.
CD comes in a custom gatefold jacket printed on uncoated 100% recycled 18pt. paper board with a separate 4-colour printed CD sleeve – all featuring original artwork by Suzanne Osborne. CD also includes a 16-page black-and-white credit booklet featuring photography by Neil Fraser.
"Falling Down a Mountain, Tindersticks’ eighth album, is the sound of a band rediscovering themselves. The album is dominated by the band’s whimsical, playful side, a usually dormant but altogether delightful aspect of their character." – BBC
"A record that certainly rivals, if not betters any of its three predecessors from the past decade… Falling Down A Mountain doesn't disappoint even at its most arduous vantage points... evident proof that Stuart Staples' creative palette is as vibrant and uncompromising as it ever has been." – Drowned In Sound
"As dense, focused and resolute a record as [Tindersticks] has turned in." – Dusted
"Falling Down A Mountain is as suffused with melancholy as any Tindersticks recording, but these songs don’t crouch quietly in a corner... The album has a swagger that Tindersticks hasn’t shown since 2001’s Can Our Love…, finding common ground between the rockier Velvet Underground and the mellower Rolling Stones." – The A.V. Club
"The music's still resolutely afterhours in tone, and Stuart Staples still sounds like the missing link between Roland Gift and Paul Shane. But the melancholy club style is at least partly laid aside, introducing both dry mirth and disconcerting menace." – MusicOMH
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