"Dead Eyes Opened" | ||||
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Single by Severed Heads | ||||
from the album Since the Accident | ||||
B-side | "Bullet" "Mount" |
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Released | February 1984 | |||
Format | 12" single | |||
Recorded | 1982 | |||
Genre | EDM, industrial | |||
Length | 3:22 (Album version) 6:35 (Single version) |
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Label | Ink Records | |||
Writer(s) | Tom Ellard | |||
Producer(s) | Tom Ellard | |||
Severed Heads singles chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | |
Pop Matters |
"Dead Eyes Opened" is a song by the experimental Australian group Severed Heads, originally released on their 1983 album Since the Accident. Upon its initial release as a 12-inch record single in 1984, the track received critical and commercial success, peaking at the #16 spot on the ARIA Charts.
Initially, Since the Accident was a cassette tape recorded between 1982 and 1983, and "Dead Eyes Opened" was only left on said tape to help fill up the blank space. The song includes a spoken word sample, which was later revealed to have been taken from the television series Scales of Justice.
The track was released as a 12-inch vinyl single in early 1984 to help promote Since the Accident, to which it received favorable reviews from critics. Sounds magazine critic Dave Henderson described the track as "gutsy, emotional, and melodic sound" and, along with nine other singles released that same week, gave the track "Single of the Week" status. AllMusic critic Sean Carruthers gave the single 4 and a half stars out of a possible five, stating that it's "...a great introduction for the band for North American audiences". Tom Ellard, frontman of Severed Heads, has expressed his distaste for the track many times throughout the years, even calling it "insipid" in one interview.
Since its initial release in 1984, the single has been reissued a few times, each "version" includes a completely new track listing from the original. Nettwerk reissued the single as a 12-inch extended play in 1986, complete with new tracks, in order to help promote the then-newly released Come Visit The Big Bigot. Similarly, Volition Records, in partnership with Sony Music, released another version of the single in 1994, now set with new remixes of the track, to help promote Gigapus. The entire 1986 Nettwerk single was also included on the compact disc version of Come Visit The Big Bigot, which was titled as Come Visit The Big Bigot With Dead Eyes Opened, while the entire 1994 Volition single was included as a bonus second disc on some versions of Gigapus.