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<reviews itemIdentifier="wh019"><review review_id="49999"><review_id>49999</review_id>
<reviewbody>Dumpfes langsames Stampfen und sanfte melodische KlÃ¤nge, die leider regelmÃ¤Ãig von einem ein Tick zu aufdringlichen Morsekode gestÃ¶rt werden. Daher schwankte ich zwischen vier und fÃ¼nf Sterne, entschied mich letztendlich aber fÃ¼r vier.</reviewbody>
<reviewtitle>.</reviewtitle>
<reviewer>knisterwerk</reviewer>
<reviewdate>2005-09-10 18:03:29</reviewdate>
<createdate>2005-09-04 21:31:51</createdate>
<stars>4</stars>
</review>
<review><reviewbody>Tree Helicopter  Rain I

A vaguely remembered sense of urgency
fails to disturb us from the quiet 
reverie of the Helicopters Rain. 

As we are somnolently rushed away in an
ambulance, life support rather lazily 
reports the bodys distress to a spirit 
content to drift just outside of its reach.  
The vehicles siren is only a distant 
siryn to a life left behind.  The time has
finally come to rest, and gradually slip 
away from the madly spinning top of a 
receding world.  

Well, if not all that, it at least goes 
with the morning coffee or tea!

Tree Helicopters Rain I is definitely a 
more relaxed-less haunting venture in 
the Webbed Hand series, and almost playful 
in its teasing use of warning s.o.s.-like
beeps and blips, which really only seem to conspire with the mellow drift which the 
work intends to convey.  I count this 
as another successful entry into the 
Rain series, and yet another very 
interesting facet of the talented
Mr. McDill.

</reviewbody>
<reviewtitle>The Joy of Flatlining</reviewtitle>
<stars>4</stars>
<reviewer>HighCalm</reviewer>
<createdate>2006-04-05 09:41:08</createdate>
<reviewdate>2006-04-05 09:41:08</reviewdate>
</review>
<info><num_reviews>2</num_reviews>
<avg_rating>4.00</avg_rating>
</info>
</reviews>
