Future Spa (album)

Future Spa is the third album by Australian rock band The Fauves. It was released in August 1996.

Future Spa
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 1996
RecordedSing Sing, Hothouse, Melbourne and Charing Cross, Sydney
GenreIndie rock
Length60:45
LabelPolydor Records
ProducerWayne Connolly, Greg Wales
The Fauves chronology
The Young Need Discipline
(1994)
Future Spa
(1996)
Lazy Highways
(1998)

The album contained two songs that appeared in Triple J Hottest 100, 1996, "Dogs Are the Best People" at No.20 and "Self Abuser" at No.30.[1] It was nominated for Best Alternative Album in the 1997 ARIA awards but lost to Spiderbait's Ivy and the Big Apples.[2][3] In November 2008, The Age reported that the album had sold 15,000 copies,[4] making it the best-selling Fauves album.

Cox noted, "There are so many things you can write about, yet rock tends to limit itself to a very narrow band of what's acceptable. This is just our attempt to broaden that a little. Even if the lyrics aren't great, at least they're different. None of us are claiming to be poets."[5]

Track listing

(All songs written by The Fauves)

  1. "Big Brother Age" — 3:46
  2. "Don't Get Death Threats Anymore" — 3:22
  3. "Self Abuser" — 2:54
  4. "Sentimental Motel Journey" — 3:33
  5. "Dogs Are the Best People" — 2:49
  6. "I Love the Fight Game" — 2:35
  7. "Understanding Kyuss" — 2:53
  8. "That's the Lifestyle" — 4:13
  9. "Skateboard World Record" — 2:38
  10. "Tying One On" — 2:55
  11. "I Wrote You a Power Ballad" — 3:56
  12. "Dragster For Christmas" — 2:50
  13. "Suddenly Looked and Realised" — 2:48
  14. "Tighter Than I Like" — 19:45*

*Contains hidden track, "Everybody's Getting a Three Piece Together", followed by a police interview of two band members regarding a marijuana arrest and caution.[6]

Personnel

  • Phil Leonard — vocals, guitar
  • Andrew Cox — vocals, guitar
  • Andrew Dyer — bass, vocals
  • Adam Newey — drums, vocals

Additional musicians

  • Wayne Connolly — keyboards, guitar, mandolin, guitar, backing vocals
  • Tim Cleaver — guitar ("I Love the Fight Game")
  • Soultrain — guitar ("That's the Lifestyle)
  • Louise Taylor — keyboards
gollark: Tux1, you ARE to enter high orbit of Dres.
gollark: *Why* would you get one when the modern alternatives are so much better?
gollark: Those were deprecated in 19██ too, where would you *get* one?
gollark: ... of course not, how would that even *work*?
gollark: Yes, that would NOT be effective in the large apiolectromagnetic field gradients involved.

References

  1. McFarlane, Ian (1999). The Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. p. 214. ISBN 978-1-86-448768-8.
  2. 1997 Archived 2009-02-11 at the Wayback Machine, ARIA Awards
  3. George Palathingal (August 11, 2006). "The Fauves". Sydney Morning Herald.
  4. Patrick Donovan (November 21, 2008). "Almost famous". The Age.
  5. David Prater. "Q&A with Andrew Cox". Cordite Poetry Review.
  6. Future Spa, Jonathan Lewis, All Music Guide
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.