I See Seaweed

I See Seaweed
Studio album by
Released1 March 2013
Recorded2012–2013
StudioHome studio, Nagambie (Victoria)
Genre
Length52:21
LabelSelf-released/MGM
ProducerGareth Liddiard, Burke Reid & John Roberto
The Drones chronology
A Thousand Mistakes
(2011)
I See Seaweed
(2013)
Feelin Kinda Free
(2016)
Singles from I See Seaweed
  1. "How to See Through Fog"
    Released: 1 February 2013

I See Seaweed is the fifth studio album by Australian band The Drones, released in March 2013. The album marked the first appearance of Steve Hesketh on keyboards (hence making the band a quintet) and the last appearance of drummer Mike Noga. Recorded by the band themselves inside a "demountable classroom from the '60s",[1] the music on the album is more dynamic, darker and "expansive" in comparison to previous albums, while Liddiard's poetic lyrics were regarded as being more "universal" and humorous in exploring topics such as climate change, free will, conservative politics, socioeconomic issues, existentialism and the human condition in general. The song "How to See Through Fog" was released as the album's only single in early 2013.

Released independently, the album was co-distributed through Waterfront Records.[2] It received rave reviews from the Australian press, and has been called "a significant moment in Australian rock music, [...] for the stark, beautiful and often menacing way it frames and comments upon a culturally specific moment."[3] It ended up topping over a hundred The Music critics' year-end lists, among many others, also becoming their first to enter the ARIA Charts' top 20. Its reception outside Australia, despite being scant, was highly positive in nature and it would go on to be praised by writers and critics in the years following its release. The album received a number of award nominations, and its tracks have been covered by the likes of Kirin J. Callinan.

  1. ^ "THE SOUND OF A CAR CRASH". Audiotechnology.audiotechnology.com. 15 January 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  2. ^ The Drones. "I See Seaweed". Waterfront Records. Retrieved 8 June 2008.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference en was invoked but never defined (see the help page).