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Girl and the Sea is the second EP by Australian electronic dance music duo The Presets released on Modular Records on 1 November 2004. [1] The EP reached No. 6 on the AIR charts [2] and at No. 20 on the ARIA Hitseekers Charts. [3] The vocals for the song were sung by Julian Hamilton and recorded by The Presets in Kim Moyes' small
The Presets' founders, Julian Hamilton and Kim Moyes met in 1995 at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music where they were both studying classical music. [7] [8] They shared an interest in 1980s pop music and became members of the Sydney-based electronic group, Prop, with Jeremy Barnett on marimbas, Hamilton on keyboards, Moyes on vibraphone, David Symes on bass guitar and Jared Underwood on drums.
Girl and the Sea: Released: 1 November 2004; Label: Modular Records; Format: CD; iTunes Live from Sydney: Released: 2 December 2008; Label: Modular Records; Format: Digital download; Peaked at No. 23 on the Australian Dance Singles Charts in December 2008 [8] Raka (with Golden Features) [9] Released: 15 November 2019; Label: Modular Records, EMI
Pitchfork, on the other hand, gave it a low 3.7/10 rating, writing "the most frustrating thing about Beams is that Moyes and Hamilton both know better". [ 3 ] The Guardian gave a three star review and observed, "The Australian duo begin by apeing Michael Jackson 's Billie Jean , with singer Julian Hamilton out-grunting Jacko, and conclude with ...
It should only contain pages that are The Presets songs or lists of The Presets songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Presets songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"If I Know You" is a break-up song with a Morrissey-like sexual ambiguity, with a vocal hook reminiscent of the 1980 Split Enz hit "I Hope I Never".. Discussing the lyrics, singer Julian Hamilton told Rolling Stone Australia: "It's a break up song but I didn't want it to be a guy pissed off at a girl because that always sounds so wimpy.
After two years of non-stop touring, The Presets began production of Apocalypso in early 2007 by going to a farm in Byron Bay for two weeks. [2] [3] The duo had no songs written or any idea what the album would sound like before hitting the farm. [4] Basing themselves in Berlin, the band continued work on the album while touring in Europe. [2]
The Presets recorded the album in Sydney and Los Angeles. The bulk of the album was recorded at the home studios of Julian Hamilton and Kim Moyes, with additional drum sessions taking place in Los Angeles with Joe Baressi and Sean Beavan. The Presets returned to Los Angeles to mix the album with Tony Hoffer.