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Mothers (album)

Mothers
Swim Deep Mothers cover.jpg
Studio album by Swim Deep
Released 2 October 2015
Recorded 2014-2015
Genre Psychedelic pop,krautrock,indie rock
Length 51:38
Label Chess Club/RCA
Swim Deep chronology
Where the Heaven Are We
(2013)Where the Heaven Are We2013
Mothers
(2015)
Singles from Mothers
  1. "To My Brother"
    Released: 9 February 2015
  2. "One Great Song and I Could Change the World"
    Released: 30 April 2015
  3. "Grand Affection"
    Released: 19 June 2015
  4. "Namaste"
    Released: 12 August 2015
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 79/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
DIY 5/5 stars
Drowned in Sound 7/10
The Guardian 4/5 stars
The Line of Best Fit 7.5/10
musicOMH 3/5 stars
NME 4/5 stars
Q 3/5 stars

Mothers is the second studio album by British indie rock band Swim Deep. It was released on 2 October 2015 on Chess Club, a subsidiary of RCA.Mothers peaked at number 55 on the U.K. charts and received generally positive reviews.

Following the success of their debut album, Where the Heaven Are We, Swim Deep began to record Mothers in London and Brussels in late 2014.Mothers was originally scheduled for release on 19 September 2015, but was pushed back until 2 October.

The first single from the album, "To My Brother", was released on 9 February 2015. "To My Brother" was noted for its more psychedelic style than previous Swim Deep music, as well as its acid house influences. Andy Baber of musicOMH described the song as "a blissful slice of psychedelic pop that nods to heavily towards the late ‘80s and early ‘90s and, in particular, Primal Scream’s Screamadelica".

The second single, "One Great Song and I Could Change the World", was released on 30 April and is featured on the soundtrack for FIFA 16.

The third single, "Grand Affection", was debuted at NME's Sounds of the Summer on 19 June.

The fourth single, "Namaste", was released on 12 August.NME's Rhian Daly described "Namaste" as "a great big bolt of pop that’s impossible to ignore".

Mothers was noted for its distinctly different style in comparison with Where the Heaven Are We. Speaking to DIY, frontman Austin Williams addressed the band's dramatic new direction, saying, "I feel like we’re all shaving our heads and going to war with this record." Andy Baber of musicOMH wrote, "It is clear the new five-piece had a lot of fun experimenting with their sound and it is a drastic departure from Where The Heaven Are We."The Guardian's Tshepo Mokoena said that the band "ditched the loose and baggy guitar pop of 2013’s Where the Heaven Are We? in favour of psych-pop that contorts itself into pulsing Balearic acid house and motorik rhythms."DIY's Stephen Ackroyd said that "Fueiho Boogie", the album's final track, "explodes time and time again into increasingly more ridiculous krautrock techno extravaganzas."


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