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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Phil Mongredien

Johnny Flynn and Robert Macfarlane: The Moon Also Rises review – celebratory and thought-provoking

Johnny Flynn and Robert Macfarlane photographed from above, with a lake and the fronds of a willow behind them
‘A record of two distinct halves’: Johnny Flynn and Robert Macfarlane. Photograph: Hanna-Katrina Jędrosz

The sunny positivity of the first collaboration between singer-songwriter-actor Johnny Flynn and nature writer Robert Macfarlane, 2021’s Lost in the Cedar Wood, felt like a genuine bright spot amid the bleakness of the pandemic. The genesis of this follow-up was far more pleasant – some of the songs came into being during walks on the South Downs (most notably Song With No Name), rather than as a result of exchanged WhatsApp messages and voice memos during lockdown – but the elements that made that first record so enjoyable remain in place: uplifting and muscular English folk stylings, courtesy of Flynn, with ancient and modern themes interwoven in these co-written lyrics.

It’s a record of two distinct halves, either side of glorious, modern-day wassail song The Sun Also Rises. It opens in more upbeat style, despite weighty subject matter – burials, death rituals, AI – while the second half is quieter and more introspective, the pandemic-inspired Year-Long Winter evoking thaw and new growth emerging from the cold and dark. By turns celebratory and thought-provoking, The Moon Also Rises is a joy.

Listen to Uncanny Valley by Johnny Flynn and Robert Macfarlane.
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