Drown Your Heart Again

Drown Your Heart Again is the first full-length album by British indie rock band The Strange Death of Liberal England. It was released in September 2010 on the Republic of Music label.[2]

Drown Your Heart Again
Studio album by
Released2010
RecordedOld Blacksmiths Studio, Portsmouth[1]
GenreIndie rock
LabelRepublic of Music
ProducerDavid M. Allen
The Strange Death of Liberal England chronology
Forward March!
(2007)
Drown Your Heart Again
(2010)

The album is not a concept album, but features a number of sea-related themes.[3]

Critical reception

Upon its release, many reviewers commented on the length of time it had taken for this album to arrive, five years since the band first came to prominence, and three since the release of Forward March!, their previous mini-album.[4]

[Sic] Magazine said "Their music is joyful and optimistic, blending folk-driven indie rock with the choral stomp of post-orchestral",[3] comparing them to British Sea Power, I Like Trains and Efterklang.

Dom Gourlay's review in Drowned in Sound said that "the ten pieces that make up Drown Your Heart Again represent a composed transition for a band unfairly forgotten in an ever-changing cyclical musical landscape", rating it 7/10.[2]

Track listing

From the sleeve notes, back cover and Discogs.[5]

  1. "Flickering Light"
  2. "Flagships"
  3. "Rising Sea"
  4. "Like a Curtain Falling"
  5. "Lighthouse"
  6. "Autumn"
  7. "Shadows"
  8. "Come On You Young Philosophers!"
  9. "Yellow Flowers"
  10. "Dog Barking at the Moon"

References

  1. CD sleeve-notes / back cover
  2. Dom Gourlay (2010-11-24). "The Strange Death of Liberal England Drown Your Heart Again". Drowned In Sound. Retrieved 2016-08-27.
  3. "The Strange Death of Liberal England – Drown Your Heart Again". [sic] Magazine. 2010-12-28. Retrieved 2016-08-27.
  4. Chris Tapley (2010-09-16). "The Strange Death of Liberal England – Drown Your Heart Again". The Line Of Best Fit. Retrieved 2016-08-27.
  5. "The Strange Death Of Liberal England – Drown Your Heart Again". discogs. Retrieved 2016-08-27.



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