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Sea Shanties 1969 Album

Sea Shanties Sea Shanties
Affinity
100%
0.5
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1
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1.5
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2
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2.5
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3.5
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4
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4.5
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5
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Recent Ratings
3.5 AlRog 4 jfclams
First Ratings
4 jfclams 3.5 AlRog
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Item description
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Length
39m 38s
Country
United Kingdom
Release Dates
1969-10-01
Description
Sea Shanties is the debut album of English rock band High Tide. It was one of the first albums to use violin as a rock instrument. The cover artwork was drawn by Paul Whitehead. It was voted number 5 in the All-Time 50 Long Forgotten Gems from Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.
artist
producer
label
Other Roles
Tony Hill
Tony Hill
Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
Simon House
Simon House
Violin, Organ
Tracklist
1. Futilist's Lament 5m 17s
2. Death Warmed Up 9m 8s
3. Pushed, But Not Forgotten 4m 43s
4. Walking Down Their Outlook 4m 58s
5. Missing Out 9m 38s
6. Nowhere 5m 54s

Reviews

All Reviews
High Tide was one of those obscure bands at the turn of the 70's who have been cited as an influence on both hard rock, heavy metal, and the avant-garde. Revolving around the tense pairing of Tony Hill on guitar and Simon House on violin and organ, as well as Hill's haunting Morrison-like vocals, the album is a cauldron of fluctuating peaks and valleys more attuned to the noise-rock scene of the 80's, even though there is quite a 70's progressive feel as far as the arrangements go. The titles and lyrics ("Futilist's Lament", "Death Warmed Up", etc.) reflect a mindset quite the doomy opposite from the then-prevailing psychedelic mood, that is for sure. But this is not to be confused with the simple, straightforward Black Sabbath-style of visceral horror, for High Tide is definitely more of the refined, psychological variety - based on Hill and House continously suggesting the listener's mind with note after crudely, distorted note spilling out of their respective instruments. As far as underground albums go, this is one of the more uncompromising - and fascinating - to take in.
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