"Skrting on the Surface" is a song by the English rock band the Smile. It was released on 17 March, 2022, as the third single from the Smile's debut album, A Light for Attracting Attention.
"Skrting on the Surface" features guitar arpeggios in the time signature11 8. The singer, Thom Yorke, and the guitarist, Jonny Greenwood, developed it from an earlier unreleased song by their band Radiohead.
History
Variations on the title phrase appeared on the Radiohead website around the time of their album OK Computer (1997).[1] The Radiohead singer, Thom Yorke, first performed "Skrting on the Surface" in 2009 in a solo piano rendition while touring with his band Atoms for Peace.[2] In 2012, Radiohead performed a different arrangement, which Pitchfork described as "a bleak slow-groover".[1]
In 2021, Yorke and the Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood announced a new band, the Smile, with the drummer Tom Skinner.[3] Skinner said "Skrting on the Surface" was one of the first songs they worked on, and developed from Greenwood's 11 8 guitar line. Yorke realised that the earlier song "fit perfectly on top".[4] Skinner recorded his drums in a single take, creating an "air of spontaneity".[4] The song was recorded by Radiohead's producer, Nigel Godrich, in his studio in London.[4]
The Smile debuted "Skrting on the Surface", then titled "Skating on the Surface", in a surprise performance for Live at Worthy Farm, a live video produced by Glastonbury Festival streamed on 22 May, 2021.[5] The single was released on 17 March, 2022.[6]
Music video
The video for "Skrting on the Surface" was directed by Mark Jenkin, who also directed the video for the Smile's previous single, "The Smoke".[7][8] It was shot on 16 mm film in the Rosevale Tin Mine in Cornwall, England. Water from the mine was used to develop the film by hand.[9] The video was filmed during Storm Eunice and Storm Franklin; the crew were unaware of the damage done by the storm while they worked underground.[10]
Reception
The Fader journalist Jordan Darville called the song "an unabashed channeling of what has made Greenwood and Yorke's creative partnership so successful over the course of many decades".[7] The Rolling Stone journalist Daniel Kreps said Skinner's drumming and Greenwood's arpeggios gave the song "a technicolour makeover" in comparison to the earlier versions.[9]
Track listing
The song, on specific streaming services and digital storefronts, also contains the Smile's two previously released singles.
^A Light for Attracting Attention (liner notes). The Smile. London, England: XL Recordings. 2022. FXL1196LP.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)