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Skying

Skying
Thehorrors-skying.jpg
Studio album by The Horrors
Released 11 July 2011
Recorded 2011
Studio Offerclass Ltd., London; Miloco Garden, Shoreditch, London, England
Genre
Length 54:36
Language English
Label XL
Producer
  • The Horrors
  • Craig Silvey
The Horrors chronology
Primary Colours
(2009)
Skying
(2011)
Higher
(2012)
Singles from Skying
  1. "Still Life"
    Released: 11 July 2011
  2. "I Can See Through You"
    Released: 3 October 2011
  3. "Changing the Rain"
    Released: 12 March 2012
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 83/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
The A.V. Club B+
The Guardian 4/5 stars
The Independent 4/5 stars
Los Angeles Times 3.5/4 stars
Mojo 4/5 stars
NME 8/10
Pitchfork 7.5/10
Q 4/5 stars
Spin 7/10

Skying is the third studio album by British band the Horrors. The album was released on 11 July 2011 in the UK and on 9 August 2011 in the US on XL recordings.

Recorded by the band in their self-built London studio, it is the first album the band produced themselves. Two months prior to its release, the song "Still Life" was premiered on Zane Lowe's Radio 1 show where it was played in its entirety and named as his "Hottest Record in the World". This was the first track to be released from the album and the first indicator to fans of the direction the album would take.

The album's sound was noted as including elements of post-punk revival,neo-psychedelia and shoegazing.

Skying received considerable attention from the music press before its release, following the overwhelming positive response to Primary Colours. Numerous music publications confirmed it would be their album of the month in upcoming issues including Mojo and Q. The single "Still Life" gained far more media exposure and mainstream radio airplay than previous releases, reaching the Radio 1 A list.

Reviewing the album for BBC Music, Mike Diver wrote, "There's no fault to be found with Skying – truly, every song here hits its mark... From the most incongruous of beginnings, The Horrors have become national treasures in waiting, and now possess the ability to realise any ambitions". Likewise, Clash ran the review as a lead album feature, with writer Joe Zadeh declaring the Horrors as "an intellectually collective five-piece, fully immersed in the confidence of their own astonishing abilities".

Hot Press said: "This is fundamentally a psych-rock record...From the cover – an ethereal sea/sky combo with lens flare at the periphery – to the vague, fuzzy song titles..., Skying is a very tripped-out kind of album, with echoes of the early '90s shoegaze brigade... However, the Horrors have the happy knack of always putting their own distinctive twist on familiar reference points".


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Wikipedia

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