Everything Was Forever
More than two decades into its career, the band formerly known as British Sea Power sounds newly energized, eagerly plotting new routes to familiar emotional peaks.
The Brighton band – notably having dropped the word 'British' from their moniker – return with a brutal but beautiful album
While the band’s seventh album is unlikely to banish their cult status, these dynamic, grandiose anthems are worth getting to know
Some bands feel a need to reinvent themselves every once in a while, and for Sea Power, all it took was to lop the "British" off the first part of their name.
Everything Was Forever is Sea Power's first album in five years—and the first since the name change, which saw the band drop ‘British’ from their moniker.
A lot has been made about the name change that accompanied the announcement of this sextet’s first album in half a decade, but the rechristened Sea Power (formerly known as British Sea Power) is having no trouble with that teacup-sized storm.
With Everything Was Forever, Sea Power have made an album to shelter inside – a dreamy, bucolic pleasure of a record
Sea Power - Everything Was Forever review: Two fingers for the dead, two fingers for the living
The former British Sea Power lose more than a word, in a bittersweet, pounding requiem