Every Brilliant Eye

Every Brilliant Eye is the third album by Australian rock band Died Pretty. It was released in 1990 and produced by Jeff Eyrich, whose previous production credits included The Gun Club, The Plimsouls and T Bone Burnett.

Every Brilliant Eye
Studio album by
ReleasedMarch 1990
StudioAmerican Recording, NRG Recording Studios, Los Angeles
GenreRock
Length45:30
LabelBlue Mosque/Festival Records
ProducerJeff Eyrich
Died Pretty chronology
Lost
(1988)
Every Brilliant Eye
(1990)
Doughboy Hollow
(1991)
Singles from Every Brilliant Eye
  1. "Whitlam Square"/"Sink or Swim"
    Released: February 1990
  2. "True Fools Fall"/"A Ballad"
    Released: May 1990
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The album was recorded in Los Angeles at the close of a tour of Europe and the United States. It was the first to feature new keyboardist John Hoey (ex-X-Men, Thought Criminals and New Christs) following the departure of long-time member Frank Brunetti and bassist Steve Clark (ex-Glass), who replaced Mark Lock.[2]

Track listing

(All songs by Brett Myers, Ron Peno except where noted)

  1. "Sight Unseen" – 4:39
  2. "The Underbelly"– 6:24
  3. "Herr Godiva" – 4:19
  4. "Face Toward the Sun" – 5:59
  5. "Prayer" – 4:22
  6. "True Fools Fall" – 4:15
  7. "Whitlam Square" – 4:27
  8. "Rue the Day" (Ron Peno, Steve Clark) – 3:53
  9. "From the Dark" – 7:12

Personnel

  • Brett Myers – guitar
  • Ron Peno – vocals
  • Steve Clark – bass
  • John Hoey – keyboards
  • Chris Welsh – drums, percussion

Additional personnel

  • J'Anna Jacoby – violin
  • Shandra Beri – backing vocals
  • Gary McLaughlin – percussion
  • Gonzalo Quintana III – drums

Charts

Chart (1990) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[3] 79
gollark: No, it does.
gollark: - PotatOS uses a single global process manager instance for nested potatOS instances. The ID is incremented by 1 each time a new process starts.- But each nested instance runs its own set of processes, because I never made them not do that and because without *some* of them things would break.- PotatOS has a "fast reboot" feature where, if you reboot in the sandbox, instead of *actually* rebooting the computer it just reinitializes the sandbox a bit.- For various reasons (resource exhaustion I think, mostly), if you nest it, stuff crashes a lot. This might end up causing some of the nested instances to reboot.- When they reboot, some of their processes many stay online because I never added sufficient protections against that because it never really came up.- The slowness is because each event goes to about 200 processes which then maybe do things.
gollark: WRONG!
gollark: It doesn't reuse already allocated IDs.
gollark: Don't read too much into that.

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. McFarlane, Ian (1999). The Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. p. 171. ISBN 1-86448-768-2.
  3. Ryan, Gavin (2011). Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010. Mt. Martha, VIC, Australia: Moonlight Publishing.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.