The Great Salt Lake Explained

The Great Salt Lake
Type:single
Artist:Band of Horses
Album:Everything All the Time
Released:August 2006
Recorded:Avast Studios
Genre:Indie rock
Length:3:46 (radio edit)
4:45 (album version)
Label:Sub Pop, Kids Records
Producer:Band of Horses, Phil Ek
Prev Title:The Funeral
Prev Year:2006
Next Title:Is There a Ghost
Next Year:2007

"The Great Salt Lake" is the second single taken from Band of Horses' debut album Everything All the Time, which was released on March 21, 2006.

History

The song was released as a single in August 2006 in the US. While the single failed to chart, it remains one of Band of Horses best known songs. It is the third most performed song by the band, after "The General Specific" and "The (Billion Day) Funeral", respectively.[1]

The song isn't actually about the Great Salt Lake, but about Lake Murray, a reservoir in Ben Bridwell's home state of South Carolina. He explained, "A lot of the imagery is about South Carolina, combined with some incidents we heard about from some hilarious fuck-ups we knew from Salt Lake City."[2]

An earlier version of the song was among the six lo-fi demos that appeared on the band's self-titled EP. Interest in that EP led to fellow South Carolina native Sam Beam of Iron and Wine offering Band of Horses the support slot on his tour.

Music video

The music video for the song shows band members Ben Bridwell, Creighton Barrett and Rob Hampton playing in a softball match. Neither Barrett or Hampton were members of Band of Horses when the song was recorded, but joined soon after the release of Everything All the Time.

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. http://www.setlist.fm/stats/band-of-horses-3bd6982c.html "Band of Horses setlist statistics"
  2. John Schacht, "Band of Horses Riding High" Creative Loafing Charlotte - September 13, 2006