As the Flower Withers explained

As the Flower Withers
Type:studio
Artist:My Dying Bride
Cover:As the Flower Withers Album Cover.jpg
Released:22 May 1992
Recorded:December 1991 – January 1992
Studio:Academy Studios
Genre:Death-doom
Length:49:26
Label:Peaceville
Producer:Hammy, My Dying Bride, Keith Appleton (uncredited)
Prev Title:Symphonaire Infernus et Spera Empyrium
Prev Year:1992
Year:1992
Next Title:The Thrash of Naked Limbs
Next Year:1993

As the Flower Withers is the debut studio album by Yorkshire-based heavy metal band My Dying Bride. The artwork was designed by Dave McKean. This is the only full-length My Dying Bride album on which lead vocalist Aaron Stainthorpe utilizes his death growl as the sole vocal style.

Song information

Many of the tracks on this album have appeared in a different form on other My Dying Bride releases. "Sear Me" was the first in a trilogy of songs to bear the title, followed by the keyboard- and violin-only "Sear Me MCMXCIII" in 1993 and "Sear Me III" in 1999, which is more similar in style to the original, being a full band composition."The Bitterness and the Bereavement" evolved from an earlier demo, which was released independently as "Unreleased Bitterness" in 1993. This version of the song also appears on the digipak re-release of As the Flower Withers, and on the rarities/best-of compilation Meisterwerk 1. "Vast Choirs" is a reworked version of the version that appears on the band's first recording, Towards the Sinister. This version is widely available on both Meisterwerk 2 and the 2004 reissue of Trinity. "The Return of the Beautiful" was re-recorded for 2001's The Dreadful Hours, with its title being slightly changed to "The Return to the Beautiful". Live versions of "The Forever People" can be found on the limited edition versions of The Angel and the Dark River and For Darkest Eyes. This song is often played as the last song of the set in many of the band's live shows.

Personnel

Additional personnel