That Guillemots CD is Red, so Get Over It!

CD Design Artwork Reviews Add comments

The Guillemots are hardly a famed-bunch for fantastic album artwork—take a look at Through the Windowpane for example, but when I saw the design for the single Get Over It (below), I simply gasped. Why? Because, after hearing the track (and incidentaly liking it) I pondered the reason why the CD design was simply a red plastic rope-looking monstrosity with text over the top.

Guillemots CD Get Over It Image

Fuelled by curiosity, I sped to the iTunes Store (er, online that is) to find out more about this seemingly-unthoughtful album art. Then, and what may be obvious by now, I saw the artwork for the Guillemots new album Red (pictured below). Now, this CD design makes no sense to me either, but I could see the reasoning behind the photography used in the Get Over it single.

Guillemots Red CD Album Image

I’m not sure what this huge red ball sitting in a dark tunnel supposed to be, but I do like it. Let’s face it, that image is both memorable and elegant. I’m kinda into the Guillemots anyway, so I have a fair idea of what they’re all about—and this album art certainly ‘fits the bill’.

On a negative note, though, I don’t like the Guillemots logo. It’s just terrible, drab and uninspiring, for me anyway. I’m unsure of what it may be representing, nor the reason why it has survived previous album releases and re-surfaced for Red.

Be all this as it may, I think this artwork is fitting for band’s music that it represents. At the beginning of this post I was ranting on about the single taken from it when viewed out of context. Now I have seen the big picture, I have upgraded my opinion of Get Over It from ‘what is this supposed to be’, to ‘clever concept, but only works as part of a whole’. Overall, I rate the CD single design 4/10, but the album 7/10. Any comments, feel free to leave one…

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That Guillemots CD is Red, so Get Over It!

CD Design Artwork Reviews Add comments

The Guillemots are hardly a famed-bunch for fantastic album artwork—take a look at Through the Windowpane for example, but when I saw the design for the single Get Over It (below), I simply gasped. Why? Because, after hearing the track (and incidentaly liking it) I pondered the reason why the CD design was simply a red plastic rope-looking monstrosity with text over the top.

Guillemots CD Get Over It Image

Fuelled by curiosity, I sped to the iTunes Store (er, online that is) to find out more about this seemingly-unthoughtful album art. Then, and what may be obvious by now, I saw the artwork for the Guillemots new album Red (pictured below). Now, this CD design makes no sense to me either, but I could see the reasoning behind the photography used in the Get Over it single.

Guillemots Red CD Album Image

I’m not sure what this huge red ball sitting in a dark tunnel supposed to be, but I do like it. Let’s face it, that image is both memorable and elegant. I’m kinda into the Guillemots anyway, so I have a fair idea of what they’re all about—and this album art certainly ‘fits the bill’.

On a negative note, though, I don’t like the Guillemots logo. It’s just terrible, drab and uninspiring, for me anyway. I’m unsure of what it may be representing, nor the reason why it has survived previous album releases and re-surfaced for Red.

Be all this as it may, I think this artwork is fitting for band’s music that it represents. At the beginning of this post I was ranting on about the single taken from it when viewed out of context. Now I have seen the big picture, I have upgraded my opinion of Get Over It from ‘what is this supposed to be’, to ‘clever concept, but only works as part of a whole’. Overall, I rate the CD single design 4/10, but the album 7/10. Any comments, feel free to leave one…

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