Difference between revisions of "Seahorse"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (→Themes) |
(→Trivia: Random footnote from a zoology geek. I hope it's not too tangential to the point.) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
== Trivia == | == Trivia == | ||
*Forty-first [[Thing a Week]], released July 14, 2006. | *Forty-first [[Thing a Week]], released July 14, 2006. | ||
− | *As Coulton noted upon release, the behaviour described in the song "is not actually the way things really are for seahorses". In reality, like most fish species, seahorses do not care for their young once they are born. | + | *As Coulton noted upon release, the behaviour described in the song "is not actually the way things really are for seahorses". In reality, like most fish species, seahorses do not care for their young once they are born. Male, rather than female, seahorses are responsible for bearing their young, but do not rear them. |
== Themes == | == Themes == |
Revision as of 20:55, 24 June 2009
![]() | |
Seahorse | |
Release | Thing a Week Four |
---|---|
Length | 3:28 |
Release date | 07-14-2006 |
Related Pages | Other media |
Blog entry |
{{#song:Seahorse }}
Trivia
- Forty-first Thing a Week, released July 14, 2006.
- As Coulton noted upon release, the behaviour described in the song "is not actually the way things really are for seahorses". In reality, like most fish species, seahorses do not care for their young once they are born. Male, rather than female, seahorses are responsible for bearing their young, but do not rear them.
Themes
- Marine life
- Loss
- Parenthood
- Loneliness
Thing-a-Week Four |