Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1990


Sailing on the Seven Seas

Buy Sailing on the Seven Seas now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Sailing on the Seven Seas

| cover = Sailing Seven Seas.jpg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark

| album = Sugar Tax

| B-side = Burning

| released =

| recorded =

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = Synth-pop

| length = 3:45

| label = Virgin

| writer = Andy McCluskey, Stuart Kershaw

| producer = Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark

| prev_title = Brides of Frankenstein

| prev_year = 1988

| next_title = Pandora's Box

| next_year = 1991

| misc =

}}

"'Sailing on the Seven Seas'" is a song by English electronic music band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD), released as the first single from their eighth studio album, 'Sugar Tax', on 18 March 1991. Along with 1981's "Souvenir", it is the band's highest-charting UK hit to date, peaking at number three on the UK Singles Chart. It also charted at number three in Austria and Sweden, number five in Ireland and number nine in Germany. The single was the first to be released by OMD without co-founder Paul Humphreys, who had left to form his own band The Listening Pool.

The song pays homage to various rock groups. The Velvet Underground song "Sister Ray" is directly referenced (OMD had previously covered "I'm Waiting for the Man" as a B-side to 1980 single "Messages"), and the line "people try to drag us down" is similar in melody and lyrical content to the opening line of The Who's "My Generation";Andy McCluskey interview. 'Granada Reports'. ITV Granada. 1 July 1991. Presenter: "OMD... have enjoyed a career revival of late with smash hit 'Sailing on the Seven Seas' which was influenced by, of all things, 'rock' groups like The Who and The Velvet Underground." singer Andy McCluskey also noted that the track includes "Glitter Band-style" drumming.

Reception and legacy



Richard Riccio of the 'St. Petersburg Times' described "Sailing on the Seven Seas" as "fabulous... a rollicking foot-stomper in its original version, and a haunting late-night dance track in remixed [B-side] form." MTV Europe ranked it the 21st-greatest song of 1991,"Top 100 of 1991". MTV Europe. 30 December 1991. while KROQ placed it 54th. In a retrospective review, AllMusic critic Dave Thompson wrote that OMD "sail giddily through the musical past", delivering "a glorious musical mlange, an inspired melding of synth pop soar, 2-Tone yore, and glam rock roar, the anthemic chorus to the fore with a fist-in-the-air punch that shouts out for more".[https://www.allmusic.com/song/sailing-on-the-seven-seas-mt0010509445 "Sailing on the Seven Seas" review] at AllMusic

Humphreys described the track as "a great, kind of a weird pop song". Original OMD drummer Malcolm Holmes, who also had no involvement in the song, said, "I loathe the track I do. But it charted and it did the business." After returning to the band, Holmes commented, "'Sailing on the Seven Seas' is a great thing to play as a drummer. When I started to play it, it became something else to me... so I don't really see the song as how I did in those days.

The song has been included on every OMD compilation album since its release.

Versions and B-sides



The song was released as a 7-inch single version and in an extended version for the 12-inch release. The extended version was more oriented to the electronic dance music market in vogue at the time. Another mix entitled "Dancing on the Seven Seas" was also included on a special collector's edition CD single. The regular CD single featured another remix entitled "Floating on the Seven Seas" and the "Larrabee Mix" of "Sailing on the Seven Seas", similar to the original single version but mixed at Larrabee Studios in North Hollywood, California.

Two other new songs were included as B-sides or bonus tracks on the CD single: "Burning" and "Sugar Tax". Despite its title, "Sugar Tax" did not feature on the album of the same name. Both tracks feature on the B-sides compilation album 'Navigation: The OMD B-Sides' (2001). "Sugar Tax" also features as a B-side on the later single release "Then You Turn Away".

A 12-inch promo single released in the US features further remixes, namely "Drowning on the Seven Seas", "Raving on the Seven Seas" and 'Mix 1' and 'Mix 2' of "Sailing on the Seven Seas". Although uncredited, many of the remixes were the work of Phil Coxon.

Track listings



'7-inch: Virgin / VS 1310 (UK)'

# "Sailing on the Seven Seas"

# "Burning"

'12-inch: Virgin / VS 1310 (UK)'

# "Sailing on the Seven Seas (Extended Version)"

# "Floating on the Seven Seas"

'CD Single (VSCDT1310)'

# "Sailing on the Seven Seas"

# "Floating on the Seven Seas"

# "Sailing on the Seven Seas" (Larrabee Mix)

# "Sugar Tax"

'CD Single (VSCDX1310)'

# "Sailing on the Seven Seas"

# "Burning"

# "Dancing on the Seven Seas"

# "Big Town"

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



References



Category:1990 songs

Category:1991 singles

Category:Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark songs

Category:Songs written by Andy McCluskey

Category:Songs written by Stuart Kershaw

Category:Virgin Records singles

Buy Sailing on the Seven Seas now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1990



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1109113676.