Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 2009


Sea Within a Sea

Buy Sea Within a Sea 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 = Sea Within a Sea

| cover = SeaWithinSingle.jpg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = The Horrors

| album = Primary Colours

| released =

| recorded = 2008

| studio =

| venue =

| genre =

| length =

| label = XL

| writer =

| producer = Geoff Barrow

| prev_title = Count in Fives

| prev_year = 2006

| next_title = I Can See Through You

| next_year = 2011

| misc =

}}

"'Sea Within a Sea'" is a song by English rock band the Horrors, released on 17 March 2009 by XL Recordings as a single from their second studio album, 'Primary Colours'.

Critical reception



"Sea Within a Sea" has been viewed as the Horrors' shift from the garage rock of their 2007 debut album, 'Strange House'. Jacob Sheppard of 'DIY' magazine examined the song as the group's "new direction", where they "take on a more mature sound; more electronic, bass heavy and psychedelic", hailing it as a "Neu! sounding, shoe-gazing seven-minute masterpiece". Similarly, Cam Lindsay from 'Exclaim!' magazine has regarded the track as "an eight-minute beauty that discards the raucous trashed garage of old" and "sinister throwback sound in deep krautrock trances and '60s psychedelia whilst still managing to hold on to their spooky shtick".

Many music writers and critics have stated that the song combines influences from krautrock, post-punk and Portishead (the previous band of the single's producer, Geoff Barrow). Johnathan Garrett of 'Pitchfork' described the song as an "oddly muzaked take on krautrock"; however, he commented that the track was "weirdly restrained" and "the Horrors can't even be bothered to leave an impression". Sean O'Neal of 'the A.V. Club' depicted that the song's instrumentation "drowns its post-punk ebbs in sprays of crashing guitar before being carried out on a sparkling tide of minimalist electronic pulses". Music writer Dorian Lynskey of 'the Guardian' claimed the single as "ascendant krautrock - Can by way of the last Portishead album", praising it as "several kinds of wonderful". 'Prefix' magazine explained that the song "perfectly connects with Portishead touchstones such as Neu!, Can and Kraftwerk" and is a "glacial eight-minute groove that only gets better as its parts disentangle". Emily Tartanella from 'PopMatters' expressed that the lead single was "miles away from anything theyve done before", outlining that "like Ian Curtis fronting the Cure, its mysterious, languid, and just a little bit spooky." 'NME' magazine described the song as "an eight-minute Spacemen 3-meets-Neu! odyssey of ominous motorik rhythms, Faris' mournful incantations and an expanding starfield of synths". In October 2011, 'NME' placed it at number 101 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years".

Music video



The music video for the song was directed by Douglas Hart, former bassist of Scottish alternative rock band the Jesus and Mary Chain. Hart integrated old production methods and special effects to forge a psychedelic and colourful eight-minute video, creating a similar atmosphere to live performances of the Velvet Underground at the Factory. Hart stated that "the challenge becomes how to create something psychedelic without resorting to the clich of trapping the band in a giant lava lamp".

The video starts with a presenter seated in an armchair, introducing the Horrors. The intent was to recreate the situation of bands "performing on the kind of shows that they didn't fit in" with a presenter "who obviously hated the band" in order to build up excitement to the performance. This idea was primarily inspired by Public Image Ltd's performance on 'American Bandstand' in 1980.

Hart processed magnets around a TV with a cathode ray tube that illustrated images of architecture and colourful polka dots. These pictures were then re-shot for projection. Subsequently, the magnets bent the cathode rays elsewhere from the screen, along a magnetic field, and created variations with the vibrant colours. This production technique was utilized by early video artists since machines that colourised video images had not yet been invented. The projected images were developed and created on Final Cut Pro and Adobe After Effects.

Notes



Category:The Horrors songs

Category:2009 singles

Category:2009 songs

Category:XL Recordings singles

Buy Sea Within a Sea now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 2009



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1057600328.