Create account Log in

Build a Boat to the Sun (Deluxe Edition)

[Edit]

Download links and information about Build a Boat to the Sun (Deluxe Edition) by Sea Of Bees. This album was released in 2015 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:08:07 minutes.

Artist: Sea Of Bees
Release date: 2015
Genre: Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:08:07
Buy on iTunes $10.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Test Yourself 5:03
2. Karma Kard 4:51
3. Old Bridge 3:51
4. Ease 4:10
5. Don't Follow Me 4:36
6. Little Sea 4:34
7. Dan 4:01
8. Moline 4:36
9. Dad 4:13
10. Monk 3:30
11. Girl (Alternate Version) 2:32
12. Moline (First Demo) 4:23
13. San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair) 3:55
14. Sanctified 5:32
15. Stuck in the Middle 3:46
16. Yellow Submarine 4:34

Details

[Edit]

Julie Baenziger returns three years after the yearning, heartache-guided Orangefarben with full-band instrumentation (drum kit!) and a lighter spirit on the contemplative but decidedly more upbeat, thematically titled Build a Boat to the Sun. A brighter indie pop can be found on tracks like the guitar-strumming "Dan" with surprising electronic bleeps, and "Dad," a loose, reflective tribute in the style of early girl groups ("ooh, sha la la"), though still splashed with Sea of Bees' faintly haunting reverb. There's a classic quality to the whole album, really. The opener, "Test Yourself," has a driving-with-the-top-down, silk-ponytail-scarf feel and sweetness as Baenziger sings of looking inward and striving for betterment. The record has sparse, more intimate tunes as well, like the slow-building acoustic-guitar ballad "Don't Follow Me" ("Don't follow me, I am lost/Trying to find my home like everyone else") and the breezily wistful, lightly twangy "Old Bridge" ("Mama, please don't cry/Don't worry 'bout my life"). However, across the board, the lyrics are more forward-thinking, about healing and gratitude rather than about being in the midst of loss. Established fans will likely welcome the new developments; it's not a shift in style so much as in attitude, and her relatable introspection is in full force, just at a different stage — still searching but looking toward the light.