Bush – The Sea Of Memories (2011) Review
Ten years is long enough for a comeback to feel either exciting or completely unnecessary.
For Bush, it could easily have been the latter — their original run had ended in commercial decline, two founding members had left the fold and declined invitations to the reunion, and there was a sense that the world had simply moved on.
That’s what makes The Sea of Memories such a pleasant surprise.
Because instead of sounding like a band trying to relive the ’90s, Bush returned with a record that felt bigger, sharper, and more justified than anyone had much right to expect.

Everything Really Is Zen
These UK rockers had always carried a frustrating contradiction.
Frontman Gavin Rossdale’s gift for writing huge, radio-facing choruses was obvious, but for years he seemed half-tempted to apologise for it in exchange for acceptance from his peers.
The Sea of Memories is the album where that internal conflict ceases.
The songs are cleaner and more direct than the Albini-era material, but they don’t feel neutered. Bob Rock’s production gives everything scale — bigger drums, broader guitars, more room around the vocal — and instead of making the band sound soft, it makes them sound modern.

Don’t Call It A Comeback
The Sound of Winter did the hard work immediately.
As a comeback single, it’s exactly what Bush needed: familiar enough to reassure, different enough to matter.
The guitars still hit, but there’s a cinematic sweep to the arrangement that would have been out of place on the older records. It became the band’s first No. 1 on Billboard’s Alternative Songs chart since 1999, and notably, it did so without the support of a major label — the band chose to return as an independent act and self-release their material in order to retain full creative control of their music.
It’s a track that builds upon the hard rock sensibilities of the superb Golden State (2001), showing that Rossdale has lost none of his ability to craft instantly memorable choruses and radio-friendly guitar hooks.

The New Dynamic
Chris Traynor is central to why the album works as neatly as it does.
He had already stepped in during the Golden State era, but here he feels fully embedded, and his presence changes the band’s shape.
It’s one of those line-up changes that makes more sense the longer you listen, because where Nigel Pulsford’s playing often carried a ragged, more traditional alt-rock edge, Traynor’s tone is cleaner, thicker, and better suited to the scale Bush are chasing here. That proves especially valuable on songs like All My Life, where the guitars need to support Rossdale’s weathered vocal without fighting it.

“Chris was a natural choice, because he stepped in at the end of the Golden State tour and we’ve continued to work together ever since.”
– Gavin Rossdale

Where It Hits
The Sea of Memories contains several noteworthy deep cuts.
All Night Doctors is a genuine high point — sparse enough to recall Glycerine, but older, sadder and more self-aware. Rossdale paints everyday collapse with a confidence that feels earned rather than theatrical.
Elsewhere, The Afterlife and Baby Come Home both land as polished, emotionally direct rock songs, while The Mirror of the Signs and Stand Up give the album the sort of muscular centre a reunion record badly needs. And if you dip into the deluxe material, The Year of Danger — which combines the segments of three unused tracks into one eclectic rocker which isn’t a million miles away from The Police — really does feel strong enough to have made the main running order.
"Head straight, screwed on,
We screwed up for too long."
THE SOUND OF WINTER

Where It Shows Its Seams
The Sea Of Memories isn’t flawless.
Prior the album’s release, Gavin Rossdale spoke about his drive to get the songs written and recorded as quickly as possible to, as he put it, “capture the energy of a band getting back together”.
But while the upside of this decision is immediacy, the downside is that certain songs feel a little undercooked. A few also carry his old habit of mismatching parts — a great chorus attached to a weak verse, or a strong lyrical tone that never quite develops into a full song.
Numbers like Red Light and I Believe in You are the clearest examples.; neither one quite earning the space they occupy on the record. And while The Afterlife is undeniably catchy, it also feels like the kind of track that might have become a classic had they taken a little more time to ensure its electric chorus was paired with a stronger composition.
"It's a killer inside as I'm watching you slide out my hand."
BE STILL MY LOVE

Crunching The Numbers
Commercially, the album did enough to prove Bush still had an audience.
The Sea of Memories debuted at No. 18 on the Billboard 200, and lead single The Sound of Winter gave them a genuine alternative-radio comeback. That isn’t the kind of chart story that rewrites a band’s legacy overnight, but it does confirm that this reunion was more than a sentimental exercise.
And in some ways, that’s all it needed to do.

“Sound of Winter is our favourite new song to play live, because it acts as a bridge between the old stuff and the direction we we want to go from here”
– Chris Traynor

Bush – The Sea of Memories
What makes The Sea of Memories work is that it doesn’t pretend the years in between never happened.
This isn’t Bush trying to relive the ’90s. They sound older, steadier, and more comfortable with what they’re good at. The choruses are still there. The guitars still hit. But there’s more patience in the writing, and more confidence in the production.
The result is a comeback album that feels fully justified — not perfect, but absolutely worth the wait.
These Go To Eleven Reworked Tracklist
These Go To Eleven Reworked Tracklist
Bush didn’t come back after ten years to sound tentative.
This reworked tracklist reshapes the album to make sure the strongest choruses land properly, and the reunion energy is kept high. What’s left is a version of The Sea of Memories that feels leaner, more purposeful, and even more convincing as a comeback statement.
Here’s how to experience Bush: The Sea of Memories (2011) for maximum impact:
- The Sound of Winter (3:30 ★
- The Heart of the Matter (4:24)
- The Afterlife (4:47)
- All Night Doctors (4:19) ★
- Red Light (3:32)
- The Mirror of The Signs (4:23)
- The Year of Danger (4:37) ^
- All My Life (3:24)
- Stand Up (4:21)
- Baby Come Home (4:17)
- She’s a Stallion (4:38)
- I Believe In You (3:13)
- Ghost (4:54) ^
- Be Still My Love (4:48) ★
★ Standout track
^ Featured on the deluxe edition
In summary:
A polished, hard-hitting return that proves Bush still knew how to write huge choruses — and how to make them count.
The Sea of Memories receives 8/11.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
>> The Sea of Memories (2011) is part of our Bush album review series.
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