Somewhere Else (Marillion album) explained

Somewhere Else
Type:studio
Artist:Marillion
Cover:Marillion - Somewhere Else (2007) front cover.jpg
Border:yes
Released:9 April 2007
Recorded:2006
Studio:The Racket Club
(Buckinghamshire, England)
Label:Intact
Producer:Michael Hunter
Prev Title:Marbles
Prev Year:2004
Next Title:Happiness Is the Road
Next Year:2008

Somewhere Else is the fourteenth studio album by British neo-prog band Marillion. It was released by the band's own label, Intact Records, in the United Kingdom on 9 April 2007.[1] Produced by Michael Hunter, the album was recorded during 2006 at The Racket Club in Buckinghamshire, except the track "Faith", written during the Marbles sessions and recorded the previous year.

Artwork

The album title was initially supposed to be 14 and a cover art was prepared to match with it. However, the name altered and a new artwork became necessary. The final variant of the cover featuring a tower viewer also known as coin-operated binoculars was designed by Carl Glover. It is quite similar to that of Weather Report's compilation album . The band had been aware of this but since it occurred by accident they decided not to change anything.[2]

Release

Critical reception

Stephen Dalton of Uncut, describing Somewhere Else in a 3 star (out of 5) review, stated that "some tracks chime and soar like Coldplay. Others are just a post-rock whimper away from Radiohead". Dalton concluded that "Marillion deserve a fair hearing". Richard Mann of Guitarist was less impressed, writing "with its bombastic production, meandering instrumentation and anthemic AOR choruses it's no doubt precisely the sort of thing owners of the other 13 albums by the band will lap up. But for the innocent bystander, there's really nothing to see here...Steve Rothery's guitars often seem weighed down with unnecessary effects from the Museum of Abandoned Guitar Sounds: the solos, usually a strong point, seem tossed off and inconsequential ... in places, the album's lyrics beggar belief." Mann concluded: "On 'Faith', the barely disguised aping of McCartney's 'Blackbird' fingerpicking offers the final proof that there's little invention left in the tank."[3]

Classic Rock ranked the album number 24 on their end-of-year list for 2007.[4]

Commercial performance

Somewhere Else peaked at number 24 on the UK Albums Chart, becoming Marillion's first to enter the Top 40 since Radiation (1998).[5] The first single from the album was "See It Like a Baby", a download-only release, which made number 45 on the UK Singles Chart. Follow-up "Thankyou Whoever You Are" fared better, reaching number 15 and giving the band their third Top 20 hit of the 2000s and their second highest charting single since 1987's "Incommunicado".[6]

2011 Madfish reissues

Unlike their previous two albums, Marillion did not ask fans to pre-order Somewhere Else before it was recorded because they did not need the money. This left some fans disappointed as there was no special edition available. However, a similar 36-page deluxe edition packaged in a digibook format with an additional artwork designed by Carl Glover was issued on 25 April 2011 by the independent label Madfish, a division of Snapper Music.[7] Moreover, a limited double vinyl edition featuring a modified track listing and three extra live tracks, taken from the live video Somewhere in London, was released by Madfish on 11 July 2011.[8]

Track listing

Two tracks from the sessions were included on different editions of the single "Thankyou Whoever You Are": "Circular Ride" and "Say the Word". These two b-sides have not been included on any edition of the album so far.

2011 Madfish 2xLP edition

Side one

  1. "The Other Half"
  2. "See It Like a Baby"
  3. "Somewhere Else"

Side two

  1. "Thankyou Whoever You"
  2. "Most Toys"
  3. "Last Century for Man"
  4. "Faith"

Side three

  1. "A Voice from the Past"
  2. "No Such Thing"
  3. "The Wound"

Side four

  1. "The Other Half (Live)"
  2. "Somewhere Else (Live)"
  3. "Voice from the Past (Live)"

Personnel

Marillion

Additional musicians

Technical

Charts

Singles

Release history

RegionDateLabelVersionFormatCatalog
United Kingdom9 April 2007IntactStandardCDINTACT CD11
Germany13 April 2007
North America24 April 2007MVD Audio
Europe25 April 2011MadfishDeluxeCDSMACD973
11 July 2011LimitedLPSMALP973

References

Notes

Citations

External links

Notes and References

  1. 1 February 2007 . Somewhere Else . 18 March 2015.
  2. Web site: Somewhere Else – Introduction . Marshall . Fraser . April 2007 . Marillion – Explanations of Lyric Elements . 18 March 2015.
  3. Mann . Richard . . May 2007 .
  4. Web site: Classic Rock end-of-year lists . Parker . Steve . Steve Parker Micro Site . 18 March 2015.
  5. Web site: Marillion – Somewhere Else . . 18 March 2015.
  6. Web site: Marillion . . 18 March 2015.
  7. Web site: Marillion – Somewhere Else (digibook CD) . Madfish Store . 18 March 2015.
  8. Web site: Marillion – Somewhere Else – vinyl edition (double vinyl) . Madfish Store . 18 March 2015.