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Swimming Horses

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Swimming Horses

| cover = Siouxsie SwimmingHorses.jpg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = Siouxsie and the Banshees

| album = Hyna

| B-side = "Let Go", "The Humming Wires"

| released = 16 March 1984

| recorded = 1984

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = Post-punk, art rock

| length =

| label = Polydor

| writer = Susan Ballion, Peter Edward Clarke, Robert Smith and Steven Severin

| producer =

| prev_title = Dear Prudence

| prev_year = 1983

| next_title = Dazzle

| next_year = 1984

| misc =

}}

"'Swimming Horses'" is a song by English post-punk band Siouxsie and the Banshees. It was co-produced with Mike Hedges and was released on 16 March 1984 by Polydor Records as the first single from the band's sixth studio album, 'Hyna'.

Content



The song was based on a piano-driven melody. Siouxsie Sioux explained the strong issue behind the lyrics:

This is based on a programme I saw about a female version of Amnesty, called 'Les Sentinelles'. They rescue women who are trapped in certain religious climates in the Middle East, religions that view any kind of pre-marital sexual aspersion as punishable by death either by the hand of the eldest brother in the family, or by public stoning. And there was this instance of a woman whose daughter had developed a tumour, and, of course, gossip abounded that she was pregnant. The doctor who removed the tumour allowed her to take it back to the village to prove that, no, it wasn't a baby but they wouldn't believe her. The woman knew her daughter would have to be stoned to death so she poisoned her, out of kindness, to save her from a worse fate. Now this organisation has all these escape routes for women like her, mainly through the elder brother who pretends to have killed them. But once they've been saved, they can never go back. So the song starts, "Kinder than with poison..." I also used the imagery of "He gives birth to swimming horses", from the fact that male sea horses give birth to the children, so they're the only species that have a maternal feel for the young. It was, I suppose, an abstract way of linking it all together without being sensationalist. I remember just being really moved by that programme, and wanting to get the sorrow out of me.


Release



"Swimming Horses" was released on 16 March 1984 by record label Polydor. It peaked at number 28 in the UK Singles Chart.

Legacy



The piano motif was later re-used by Robert Smith as the basis for the Cure song "Six Different Ways".

References



Category:Songs about fish

Category:1984 singles

Category:Siouxsie and the Banshees songs

Category:Song recordings produced by Mike Hedges

Category:1984 songs

Category:Polydor Records singles

Category:Songs written by Siouxsie Sioux

Category:Songs written by Budgie (musician)

Category:Songs written by Steven Severin

Category:Songs written by Robert Smith (musician)

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