Friday, June 19, 2026

“Reliance” by Tugboat Captain

 

     The contrast among the elements of Tugboat Captain’s “Reliance” is striking. On one hand, the lyrics present an intelligently crafted first-person narrative of an unraveling relationship, while the backing choir delivers its lines with an engaging warmth (at least until the final minute). On the other hand, the instrumentation has an appealing simplicity reminiscent of early 1980s arcade games. Even the instruments carry contrast, since the arcade-game synth is sometimes joined by elegantly sweeping violin.
 
     The instrumental arrangement gives ample space for the lead vocals to shine as they wistfully deliver the description of activities of a night and their connection to the damaged relationship. Quoting an explanation accompanying the release:
  Tugboat Captain return with “Reliance”, a seven-minute epic that traces the full collapse of a relationship, blow by blow and verse by verse, until nothing remains but the closing question: ‘Reliance, is that all it is?’ It is the band at their most bold and unsparing, a communal outpouring of pain that moves from stumbling, visceral grief toward something cathartic and hard-won.”
 
      The communal aspect of the track is most evident during the final 90 seconds, when the vocals crescendo and repeatedly question, ”Reliance, is that all it is?” The backing vocals are the Ctrl P Community Choir, “a collective of friends and collaborators who gathered on the final day of recording, lend their voices to an arrangement that swells outward, reaching for resolution in the wreckage.”
 
   Reliance” is a single from the upcoming album “All At Once,” which is scheduled for release on July 17, 2026. London-based Tugboat Captain comprises frontman Sox (Alexander Sokolow), Joshua Cobb (bass, trombone), Georgia Mancey (drums, percussion), Sophia Bartlett (violin, keys), and Dougal James (keys, bass). Sox notes:
  Reliance’ carries the weight of the record. All the raw emotional intensity comes to a peak. It’s a song about pain, loss and change.”
It’s an album about disintegration and liminality, reflected as much in its lyrics as in its tightly wound, restless arrangements. From the off-kilter drift of “Us & The Moon” to the sweeping heartbreak of “Reliance” and the sharply shifting grooves of the title track, the album “All At Onceis Tugboat Captain’s most sonically distinctive and expansive work to date and at the same time, the one that feels most unmistakably their own.
 
     Reliance” by Tugboat Captain

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