Sunset Studies

Sunset Studies is the first studio album by the Australian indie rock band Augie March. It was released in 2000 in Australia by BMG.

Sunset Studies
Studio album by
Released30 October 2000
Recorded1999-2000
GenreIndie rock
Length76:10
LabelBMG Australia
ProducerRichard Pleasance, Paul McKercher, Augie March
Augie March chronology
Sunset Studies
(2000)
Strange Bird
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
The Australian[1]
The Age[2]
Herald Sun[3]

The album was recorded over the course of a year in five studios with three separate producers.[4]

Track listing

(All songs by Glenn Richards, arranged by Augie March except where noted)

  1. "The Hole In Your Roof" – 7:12
  2. "Maroondah Reservoir" – 5:05
  3. "There Is No Such Place" – 3:17
  4. "Tulip" – 6:20
  5. "Tasman Awakens" – 4:42
  6. "Believe Me" – 2:02
  7. "Sunset Studies" – 5:34
  8. "Men Who Follow Spring The Planet 'Round" (traditional motif, Richards, Augie March) – 5:35
  9. "Angels Of The Bowling Green" – 5:12
  10. "Heartbeat And Sails" – 3:01
  11. "The Offer" – 4:56
  12. "The Good Gardener (On How He Fell)" – 5:26
  13. "Here Comes The Night" – 4:50
  14. "Asleep In Perfection" – 4:04
  15. "Owen's Lament" – 8:46

Personnel

  • Glenn Richards — guitars, vocals, piano, keys, percussion, drums ("There Is No Such Place"), drum programming, banjo, dobro, samples
  • Edmond Ammendola — bass, piano, percussion, electric guitar, piano accordion
  • David Williams — drums, piano accordion, percussion, keyboards, backing vocals ("The Hole in Your Roof")
  • Adam Donovan — guitar, backing vocals ("The Hole in Your Roof"), pedal steel, hammond organ, piano, keyboards, percussion, tape machine, samples

Additional personnel

  • Alex Parlas — trumpet ("The Good Gardener")
  • Rob Dawson — piano, backing vocals ("There Is No Such Place"), organ, piano ("The Offer")
  • Cameron Reynolds — clarinet ("Tulip")
  • Tim Neill — hammond organ ("Here Comes the Night")
  • Paul McKercher — acoustic guitar ("Heartbeat and Sails")
  • Gerasimos Grammenos — percussion ("Tasman Awakens")
  • Naomi Evans — violin ("Men Who Follow")
  • Richard Pleasance — dobro, backing vocals ("Men Who Follow")


gollark: -2?
gollark: Wait, is that the 5.1 edition or what?
gollark: I can only imagine.
gollark: In CC anyway.
gollark: Well, yes, but it means you *can* use `load`.

References

  1. Iain Shedden, The Australian, 28 October 2000.
  2. The Age, 17 November 2000.
  3. Andrew McCutcheon, Herald Sun, 23 November 2000.
  4. Paul Stewart, "Marching to a different drum," Sunday Herald Sun, 29 October 2000, page 81.
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