Seabound: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Seabound is a German futurepop duo consisting of Frank M. Spinath and Martin Vorbrodt. They are known for their insightful lyrics about the human psyche.
 
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* Double-Crosser (2006)
 
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=== This band provides examples of: ===
 
* [[Driven to Suicide]] and [[Goodbye, Cruel World]]: "Torn" is told from the point of view of someone who has just slit their wrists, secretly hoping to be saved at the last second by the person he loves/is obsessed with. Sadly, as Frank Spinath makes clear on the band's website:
{{quote| SHE will not burst through the door.<br />
SHE will not call.<br />
SHE is not thinking of you right now.<br />
SHE won't even move.<br />
SHE NEVER DID. }}
* [[Poisonous Friend]]: The song of the same name, which the trope was actually named after, is about the narrator's conflicted relationship with a woman and/or deadly snake, who kills people. The narrator sometimes watches her murders, and contemplates "how it feels to annihilate a friend", though it's not clear whether he means to off his friend or join her in her killings.

Latest revision as of 04:11, 26 December 2014

/wiki/Seaboundcreator

Seabound is a German futurepop duo consisting of Frank M. Spinath and Martin Vorbrodt. They are known for their insightful lyrics about the human psyche.

Discography

  • No Sleep Demon (2001)
  • Beyond Flatline (2004)
  • Double-Crosser (2006)
Seabound provides examples of the following tropes:
  • Driven to Suicide and Goodbye, Cruel World: "Torn" is told from the point of view of someone who has just slit their wrists, secretly hoping to be saved at the last second by the person he loves/is obsessed with. Sadly, as Frank Spinath makes clear on the band's website:

SHE will not burst through the door.
SHE will not call.
SHE is not thinking of you right now.
SHE won't even move.
SHE NEVER DID.

  • Poisonous Friend: The song of the same name, which the trope was actually named after, is about the narrator's conflicted relationship with a woman and/or deadly snake, who kills people. The narrator sometimes watches her murders, and contemplates "how it feels to annihilate a friend", though it's not clear whether he means to off his friend or join her in her killings.