Halcyon (Orbital song)

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"Halcyon"
Single by Orbital
from the album Radiccio (EP)
Halcyon (EP) (US version)
Orbital 2 ("+ On + On")
Released 1992 (original)
1993 ("+ On + On")
Format 7" vinyl, 12" Vinyl, CD
Recorded 1992
Genre Ambient house, acid house
Length 11:05 (original version)
3:51 (edit)
9:27 ("+ On + On" version)
Label FFRR
Writer(s) Edward Barton
Phil and Paul Hartnoll
Producer(s) Orbital
Orbital singles chronology
"Midnight / Choice"
(1991)
"Halcyon"
(1992)
"Lush"
(1993)

"Halcyon" is a song written and performed by Orbital, dedicated to the Hartnolls' mother, who was addicted to the tranquiliser Halcion (Triazolam) for many years. [1] The song features two samples from earlier international hit singles. The first sample is a backmasked vocal sample by Kirsty Hawkshaw from "It's a Fine Day" by Opus III (1992). Ed Barton, the composer of "It's a Fine Day", receives a co-writing credit for the track. The second is a vocal harmonies sample in the song "Leave It" from the 1983 album 90125 by the progressive rock band Yes.[2] There is no co-writing credit for the Yes sample.

This original form of Halcyon is relatively uncommon; it first appeared on the Radiccio EP, and was only in the U.S. release as a single under its own name. It did not appear on a full-length album until the compilation Work 1989-2002, and then only in its shorter "single edit".

On Orbital's second eponymous album the track "Halcyon + on + on" appears, a slightly more upbeat and melodic remix of the original song. In contrast to the original, the remix is far more widely known, and has been featured on several movie soundtracks (most notably Mortal Kombat, Hackers, CKY2K and Mean Girls). The title of the remix is inspired by a contemporary advertising slogan used by the Ariston washing machine company ("Ariston + on + on"). "Halcyon + on + on" is somewhat shorter than the original, at 9 minutes and 27 seconds long.

"Halcyon" is one of the mainstays of Orbital's live performances, in which it is frequently remixed with clips from Belinda Carlisle's "Heaven is a Place on Earth" and Bon Jovi's "You Give Love a Bad Name". A 1999 performance containing these samples appears on the album Orbital: Live at Glastonbury 1994–2004. On occasion (notably the group's 2004 "last ever" performance broadcast on BBC Radio 1) it has also incorporated the chorus of "I Believe in a Thing Called Love" by The Darkness.

In June 2009, Orbital released a two CD greatest hits compilation Orbital 20, which included a number of new remixes, including a "remodel" of "Halcyon" by Tom Middleton.

Music video

The song's video featured Opus III singer Hawkshaw playing a typical mother who was 'under the influence' (which was shot in the Hartnolls' home), who begins her chores by washing dishes. [1] As she starts doing the task, it becomes evident that she starts to lose focus and start seeing things, like pictures of the same person on a plate (when removed by plate the picture starts to get smaller), notices her two sons in unusual places (one dancing on a table; the other inside the cabinet below the sink, then in the sink), throwing items from her purse into the water and also washes them (including Barbara Cartland's novel "Shotgun Wedding"), discovers a bald person who looks like her and tries to push it back into the sink, and as she drains the water she also fights with it by using a boquet of roses. She then starts dancing in an erratic behaviour before she calms down, and when she turns around she sees herself coming into the kitchen. The video ends with a definition for Halcyon and Halcyon Days on the screen. Hawkshaw would later update that song's video in 2013 on YouTube using Machinima.

Track listing

1992, Radiccio (UK release)

12", Radiccio 1
  1. Halcyon (11:07)
  2. The Naked And The Dub (11:51)
12", Radiccio 2
  1. The Naked And The Dead (6:23)
  2. Sunday (7:14)
CD, Radiccio
  1. Halcyon (11:07)
  2. The Naked And The Dead (6:23)
  3. Sunday (7:14)
CD, Radiccio 2
  1. Halcyon Edit (3:57)
  2. Halcyon (11:07)
  3. Deeper (6:58)

1992, Halcyon (US release)

12", Halcyon
  1. Halcyon (11:05)
  2. The Naked And The Dub (11:51)
CD, Halcyon
  1. Halcyon (11:07)
  2. The Naked And The Dead (6:23)
  3. The Naked And The Dub (11:51)
  4. Sunday (7:10)
  5. Chime (Radio Edit) (3:15)

1993, Radiccio (Japan release)

CD, Radiccio
  1. Halcyon Edit (3:52)
  2. Halcyon (11:09)
  3. Deeper (6:59)
  4. The Naked And The Dead (6:25)
  5. Sunday (7:13)
  6. The Naked And The Dub (11:53)
Some versions of this CD repeats "The Naked And The Dead" instead of "The Naked And The Dub".

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Well, we all had this crazy adolescence," explains Phil, tucking into a chilli burrito. "Because my dad was working really hard and was rarely at home while our mum was freaking out on Halcyon (a then-popular prescription tranquiliser)... Don't get me wrong, mum was always very loving and caring. But they prescribed her this drug and she just kept on doubling the dose." It was this which inspired 1992's 'Halcyon' and its video, which depicted bald Kirsty out of Opus III as a snooker-loopy housewife rattling around her suburban semi". Orbital:Suburban Spacemen Select Magazine, September 1994. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links