Skywriting is the second album by the Field Mice.[3]
Skywriting | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | June 1990 | |||
Genre | Indie pop, twee pop | |||
Length | 34:28 | |||
Label | Sarah Records | |||
The Field Mice chronology | ||||
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2005 Reissue cover | ||||
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Pitchfork Media | 6.6/10[2] |
It is often regarded as the most experimental of their three albums: featuring six wildly eclectic tracks ranging from post-acid house electronica (the side-long opener "Triangle"), country and western (side two's opener "Canada"), Go-Betweens-influenced jangle pop ("Clearer") and New Order-type sequencer/guitars ("It Isn't Forever"), to wistful, atmospheric, slow-motion ambience ("Below The Stars") and bizarre sample-strewn noise-collages (final track "Humblebee").
Track listing
edit- "Triangle" – 8:55
- "Canada" – 3:28
- "Clearer" – 3:56
- "It Isn't Forever" – 6:01
- "Below the Stars" – 5:36
- "Humblebee" – 6:32
2005 bonus tracks
editThe following tracks appear on the 2005 reissue of the album from LTM recordings.
- "Landmark"
- "Quicksilver"
- "Holland Street"
- "Indian Ocean"
- "So Said Kay"
- Disc Two
- "If You Need Someone"
- "The World to Me"
- "Song Six"
- "Anyone Else Isn't You"
- "Bleak"
- "I Thought Wrong"
- "Right as Rain"
- "A Heart Disease Called Love"
- "This Is Not Here (1998)"
- "Other Galaxies"
"This Is Not Here (1998)" is the remixed version first issued on Where'd You Learn to Kiss That Way?. The original version appears on For Keeps. "A Heart Disease Called Love" is a cover of a John Cooper Clarke song.
References
edit- ^ "Skywriting Review by Stewart Mason". AllMusic. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
- ^ "The Field Mice Skywriting + Singles". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
- ^ White, Michael (7 December 2015). Popkiss: The Life and Afterlife of Sarah Records. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 9781628922233 – via Google Books.