On Flowers, Elizabeth Davis dismantles the protest-song tradition and rebuilds it as a stark, minimalist meditation on war’s quiet bureaucracy, where repetition, restraint, and fractured electronics expose conflict not as tragedy but as routine.
On Flowers, Elizabeth Davis dismantles the protest-song tradition and rebuilds it as a stark, minimalist meditation on war’s quiet bureaucracy, where repetition, restraint, and fractured electronics expose conflict not as tragedy but as routine.