“Led by the hugely talented Mark Hollis, the London-based four-piece transitioned from bright, hard-edged pop to mesmeric, meditative post-rock over the course of nine years and five albums … The Colour of Spring, released in 1986, was a major breakthrough, commercially and artistically,” (The Guardian). “Gone were the synths and the icy bombast. In their place came big, woody textures, an organic sensibility more obviously suited to Hollis’s evocations of shifting seasons and inner change. The pounding, krautrock-on-the-farm groove of ‘Life Is What You Make It’ delivered the big hit, but nothing signalled the transition quite as magnificently as ‘Living in Another World,’ the album’s second single.
A surging, seven-minute tour de force, propelled by Steve Winwood’s organ (there’s a definite whiff of Traffic in the album’s headily pastoral aroma), Morris Pert’s percussion and Mark Feltham’s harmonica, the song is a mile high and rising by the time the key change kickstarts the chorus. Hollis is in characteristically wracked form, singing so hard he seems fit to burst as he digs around his romantic and cosmic alienation: ‘Better parted … speech gets harder/ There’s no sense in writing.’ He might be hankering after wide, open, quiet spaces, but the music thrums with verve and vibrancy.”
The widescreen feel of the track isn’t surprising, given the heft of the band’s best-known hit, 1984’s “It’s My Life.” Starting in A minor, the tonality shifts upwards to B minor for the pre-chorus (0:56) before unwinding the cathartic chorus, shifting upwards by an unsettling tritone to F minor (1:14 – 1:48); the cycle then begins again. Many thanks to MotD regular Rob P. for yet another great find!