Secrets of the Witching Hour

Secrets of the Witching Hour is the second album of the British indie band, The Crimea, released on 30 April 2007 as a free download on the band's website. The song "Loop A Loop" appeared in an advertisement for Trident Gum.[1]

Secrets of the Witching Hour
Studio album by
Released30 April 2007
GenreIndie rock
Length36:18
LabelDouble Dragon, Free Two One
ProducerThe Crimea
The Crimea chronology
Tragedy Rocks
(2005)
Secrets of the Witching Hour
(2007)
Square Moon
(2013)

Background and release

The Crimea were dropped by Warner Bros. Records in 2006 after the band's debut album, Tragedy Rocks, sold 35,000 copies worldwide.[2][3] The band decided to self-finance their second album, titled Secrets of the Witching Hour, and make it available to download for free from its website. The album was released on 30 April 2007, almost two weeks before its original projected release date.[2][3] Within the first 24 hours, the album was downloaded more than 5,000 times. Starting on June 4, a CD version was offered for sale on a mail-order basis from the band's website.[3]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Hot Press[4]
NME[5]
Stylus MagazineB[6]

In a review of the album for NME, Jess Colman wrote: "Although slightly ruined by the frequent and unnecessary Americanised monologues, the record’s Technicolor fusion of dark, sombre tunes and vibrant, upbeat tracks proudly pushes aside any doubts."[5] Francis Jones of Hot Press said that on this album, "The Crimea manage to fashion epic tales from everyday material, intimate scenarios instilled with the heroic bombast of Greek myth, or a sense of tragedy befitting the Bard."[4] Andrew Iliff of Stylus Magazine remarked that "the Crimea pick up the swooning where they left off" on Tragedy Rocks. Iliff added that "MacManus' indiscriminate pop culture fetishism is undiminished, littering his lyrics with movie titles and cultural landmarks."[6]

Track listing

  1. "All Conquering"
  2. "The 48A Waiting Steps"
  3. "Raining Planets"
  4. "Man"
  5. "Bombay Sapphire Coma"
  6. "Don't Close Your Eyes on Me"
  7. "Loop a Loop"
  8. "Light Brigade"
  9. "Several Thousand Years of Talking Nonsense"
  10. "Requiem Aeternam"
  11. "Weird"
gollark: It's not an infrastructure problem, it's a this-is-computationally-very-hard problem, and a horribly-centralizes-power problem, and a bad-incentives-to-be-efficient problem, and a responding-to-local-information problem.
gollark: And in general lots of things can be done better, or *at all*, if you have a giant plant somewhere producing resources for big fractions of the world.
gollark: Some resources (lithium and such are big issues nowadays) only exist in a few places, so you have to ship from there.
gollark: This also doesn't seem practical.
gollark: It isn't really, though; it seems like it would be more like whoever runs "production" just deciding who gets things.

References

  1. Beckmann, Jim (19 February 2008). "Still giving it away - The Crimea releases 16 exclusive tracks... for free!". KEXP-FM. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  2. Gibson, Owen (30 April 2007). "Album giveaway could ignite music revolution". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  3. Brandle, Lars (1 May 2007). "The Crimea Breaks Mold With Download Offering". Billboard. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  4. Jones, Francis (11 July 2007). "Music Reviews - Albums: The Crimea - 'Secrets of the Witching Hour'". Hot Press. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 23 June 2014.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  5. Colman, Jess (25 June 2007). "'NME' Album Review: The Crimea - 'Secrets of the Witching Hour'". NME. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  6. Iliff, Andrew (29 May 2006). "Reviews: The Crimea - 'Tragedy Rocks'". Stylus Magazine. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
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