Broken UFO
Broken UFO is the fourth album by Australian rock band Icecream Hands. It was released in 2002. A single, "Rain Hail Shine", was nominated for the 2002 ARIA Music Awards in the "best independent release" section.[5]
Broken UFO | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 2002 | |||
Recorded | 2001-2002 | |||
Studio | Yikesville, Melbourne | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 52:49 | |||
Label | Rubber Records | |||
Producer | Shane O'Mara and East Van Parks | |||
Icecream Hands chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
The Age | |
The Age | |
The Courier-Mail | |
The Herald Sun |
Track listing
(All songs by Charles Jenkins except where noted)
- "Broken UFO" — 3:05
- "Coming After You Again" — 4:42
- "Beautiful Fields" — 3:15
- "Head Down" (Marcus Goodwin) — 3:33
- "Stay in the Same Room" — 3:35
- "The Diplomat's Daughter" — 4:00
- "Why'd You Have to Leave Me This Way" — 3:27
- "When the Show is Over" (Douglas Lee Robertson) — 4:05
- "Because You're Young" — 4:02
- "Come Down Come Down" — 3:11
- "Rain Hail Shine" — 3:44
- "Waterproof" — 3:51
- "Leaving All the Best" — 4:08
- "Happy in the Sky" (Robertson) — 4:11
Personnel
- Marcus Goodwin — guitar
- Charles Jenkins — guitar, vocals
- Douglas Lee Robertson — bass, vocals
- Derek G. Smiley — drums, vocals
Additional personnel
- Garrett Costigan — pedal steel
- Ian Whitehurst — saxophones
- Eugene Ball — trumpet
- Stephanie Lindner — violin
- Caerwen Martin — cello
- Shane O'Mara — guitar
- Rebecca Barnard — backing vocals
- Matthew Vehl — hammond organ
gollark: It's dan200's, and not been updated or maintained in seemingly any way since 2014.
gollark: It's not MY wiki.
gollark: I'm trying to figure out if I can somehow bodge MWOffliner into being able to work with the ancient MediaWiki install backing the CC wiki.
gollark: As long as you don't change its size unnecessarily.
gollark: If you NEVER plan to run stuff concurrently and expect everyone using your code to respect this invariant, one buffer is probably faster?
References
- Shaun Carney, The Age, 12 September 2002.
- Jo Roberts, The Age, 13 September 2002.
- Noel Mengel, The Courier-Mail, 14 September 2002.
- Neala Johnson, The Herald Sun, 5 September 2002.
- "ARIA nominees announced," The Age, 17 September 2002.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.