Sea of Brass

Sea of Brass is a 2015 release by British Sea Power, featuring a selection of songs from earlier releases re-recorded by the group alongside brass bands.[1]

Sea of Brass
Studio album by
Released30 October 2015 (2015-10-30)
GenreIndie Rock
LabelGolden Chariot Records
British Sea Power chronology
Happiness
(2014)
Sea of Brass
(2015)
Let the Dancers Inherit the Party
(2017)

The recordings originated with British Sea Power's 2014 concerts with a number of brass bands in different places across the UK. The concept and concert tour was also known as 'Sea of Brass'. The band worked with Peter Wraight to arrange songs selected from their back catalogue for brass band.[2]

It was released in a variety of formats and combinations. A primary studio album containing eight tracks[3] was recorded with Foden's Band. An expanded studio album featuring fourteen tracks was released as a double vinyl album. A live recording was made with Redbridge Brass Band at the Barbican Centre in London, a DVD of this recording also being made available. A supplementary CD contains further studio recordings with Foden's Band, recordings featuring only Foden's Band, live tracks performed with Bournemouth Symphony Brass and two recordings of a poem by Jock Scot backed by BSP. These were released variously on CD, DVD, vinyl and download. A deluxe boxset contains all the recordings on CD.

All the releases were made on the band's own Golden Chariot Records label.

Track listing

Double vinyl album

  1. "Heavenly Waters"
  2. "Once More Now"
  3. "Albert's Eyes"
  4. "Atom"
  5. "A Light Above Descending"
  6. "Machineries Of Joy"
  7. "When A Warm Wind Blows Through The Grass"
  8. "The Great Skua"
  9. "Waving Flags"
  10. "No Need To Cry"
  11. "The Smallest Church In Sussex"
  12. "Lights Out For Darker Skies"
  13. "Wooden Horse"
  14. "Lately"

Triple CD + DVD Boxset

Studio album

  1. "Heavenly Waters"
  2. "Once More Now"
  3. "Albert's Eyes"
  4. "Atom"
  5. "A Light Above Descending"
  6. "Machineries Of Joy"
  7. "When A Warm Wind Blows Through The Grass"
  8. "The Great Skua"

Live CD

  1. "Heavenly Waters"
  2. "A Wooden Horse"
  3. "Albert's Eyes"
  4. "Atom"
  5. "No Need To Cry"
  6. "Once More Now"
  7. "The Smallest Church In Sussex"
  8. "Machineries Of Joy"
  9. "A Light Above Descending"
  10. "Lately"
  11. "Lights Out For Darker Skies"
  12. "Waving Flags"
  13. "The Great Skua"
  14. "When A Warm Wind Blows Through The Grass"

Supplementary CD

  1. "Waving Flags" (Brass-only Orchestral Version)
  2. "Lights Out For Darker Skies"
  3. "No Need To Cry"
  4. "A Wooden Horse"
  5. "Waving Flags"
  6. "The Smallest Church In Sussex"
  7. "Lately"
  8. "Albert's Eyes" (Brass-only Orchestral Version)
  9. "Someone's Yearning" (Studio Version)
  10. "Once More Now" (Brass-only Orchestral Version)
  11. "True Adventures" (live at All Saints Church, Hove)
  12. "What You Need The Most" (live at All Saints Church, Hove)
  13. "Blackout" (live at All Saints Church, Hove)
  14. "Bear" (live at All Saints Church, Hove)
  15. "Heavenly Waters" (Brass-only Orchestral Version)
  16. "Waving Flags Two" (Brass-only Orchestral Version)
  17. "Someone's Yearning" (live at The Barbican, London)
  18. "The Great Skua" (Brass-only Orchestral Version)

Live DVD

  1. "Heavenly Waters"
  2. "A Wooden Horse"
  3. "Albert's Eyes"
  4. "Atom"
  5. "Someone's Yearning"
  6. "No Need To Cry"
  7. "Once More Now"
  8. "The Smallest Church In Sussex"
  9. "Machineries Of Joy"
  10. "A Light Above Descending"
  11. "Lately"
  12. "Lights Out For Darker Skies"
  13. "Waving Flags"
  14. "The Great Skua"
  15. "When A Warm Wind Blows Through The Grass"
gollark: > C
gollark: ```WHAT?```
gollark: It's O(n) comparisons and O(1) swaps best case, hence no.
gollark: Thus, apioform you.
gollark: Oh, lyric, bubblesort is *also* `O(n)` best case.

References

  1. Anastasia Connor (20 October 2015). "British Sea Power: Sea of Brass – album review". Louder Than War. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  2. Ben Walsh (8 October 2015). "British Sea Power: Why is an indie band using 28-piece brass bands on their new album?". The Independent. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  3. Luke Cartledge (23 October 2015). "British Sea Power blow their own trumpets". Retrieved 12 February 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.