Beneath This Burning Shoreline

Beneath This Burning Shoreline
Studio album by Cherry Ghost
Released 5 July 2010
(see release history)
Recorded January – December 2009
Genre Indie rock
Length 52:50
Language English
Label Heavenly Records
Producer Cherry Ghost, Dan Austin
Cherry Ghost chronology
iTunes Festival: Live in London (EP)
(2007)
Beneath This Burning Shoreline
(2010)
Herd Runners
(2014)
Singles from Beneath This Burning Shoreline
  1. "Kissing Strangers"
    Released: 28 June 2010
  2. "Black Fang"
    Released: 20 September 2010
  3. "We Sleep on Stones"
    Released: 8 November 2010
  4. "Only a Mother"
    Released: 7 March 2011

Beneath This Burning Shoreline is the second studio album by Cherry Ghost, released on 5 July 2010 via Heavenly Records. The band recorded the album themselves with Dan Austin, who co-produced their debut album Thirst for Romance. The album's opening track, "We Sleep on Stones", was offered as a free digital download on the band's website in May 2010.[1] The album's twelfth track, "Diamond in the Grind", was posted on YouTube, set to a clip of Harold Lloyd's 1924 silent film Girl Shy, in February 2010.[2][3]

A music video for the album's first single "Kissing Strangers" premiered in June 2010. Lead singer Simon Aldred describes the song as "Sinatra-esque," adding that, "I think it's one of the best songs I've ever written... it's nice to have a single I'm really proud of."[4] The album's second single, "Black Fang", was released on 20 September 2010 on 7" vinyl, and came with the exclusive non-album track "Dancehall to Daybreak". The album's third single was "We Sleep on Stones", released on 8 November 2010. The 12" vinyl single featured an exclusive remix of "We Sleep on Stones" by Mr. Chop, as well as Cherry Ghost's cover version of the 1991 CeCe Peniston hit "Finally" and an extended instrumental version of "Finally". A fourth single, "Only a Mother", was released as a digital download on 7 March 2011.

Recording

In March 2008, singer-songwriter Simon Aldred announced through a MySpace blog posting that the band were at the writing stage for the second album and had seven songs written, which had been distilled from over 50 different tunes. The bulk of the album was written across Europe, namely Berlin and Rome. The band recorded the album between January and December 2009 in Frank Bough Sound III, a converted barn in Cheshire, owned by friends and labelmates Doves.[4][5][6]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[7]
BBCpositive[8]
The Guardian[9]
The Independent[10]
MusicOMH[11]
Q[12]

Beneath This Burning Shoreline was released to positive reviews, garnering 4 out of 5 star reviews from major publications such as Q,[12] The Guardian,[9] The Independent,[10] and The Times.[13] The Guardian summarised that "Cherry Ghost are good at purveying glimpses of seedy lives... and exceptionally good arrangers of strings, guitar and thrumming synths into gorgeous symphonic pop."[9] The Independent noted that, "The prevailing tone throughout is akin to that chastened postwar mood captured by Carol Reed in The Third Man; certainly, Aldred's characters would not be out of place gazing down upon ant-people from a ferris wheel, or fleeing through sewers."[10] Allmusic reviewer Jon O'Brien finalised that the album "furthers Aldred's reputation as one of the U.K.'s most interesting storytellers."[7]

Track listing

All tracks written by Simon Aldred (lyrics) and Cherry Ghost (music). 

No. Title Length
1. "We Sleep on Stones"   5:46
2. "A Month of Mornings"   5:36
3. "Conquered, Part 1"   1:02
4. "Kissing Strangers"   4:35
5. "Only a Mother"   3:30
6. "The Night They Buried Sadie Clay"   5:28
7. "My God Betrays"   4:06
8. "Barberini Square"   5:48
9. "Conquered, Part 2"   1:13
10. "Black Fang"   4:20
11. "Luddite"   6:17
12. "Diamond in the Grind"   4:45
13. "Strays at the Ice Pond"   2:10

Release history

Country Date Label Format Catalogue #
United Kingdom 5 July 2010 Heavenly Records
(distributed by V2 Music)
CD HVNLP79CD

Credits

Cherry Ghost
Personnel
Production

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.