Treeless Plain

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Treeless Plain
Treeless Plain.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 1983
RecordedEmerald City Studios, Sydney
August/September, 1983
Genre
Label Hot Records/Rough Trade
Producer The Triffids
The Triffids chronology
Bad Timing and Other Stories
(1983)
Treeless Plain
(1983)
Love In Bright Landscapes
(1986)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [1]

Treeless Plain is the debut album by The Triffids, released in November, 1983. [2] The album was recorded at Emerald City Studios, Sydney, Australia in twelve midnight to dawn sessions, during August through to September 1983. [3] It was the band's first release after signing with Hot Records.

Contents

A remastered version of the album, with seven bonus live tracks recorded in 1983, was released in Australia in June 2008 through Liberation Music. [4]

Details

David McComb later said, "I don't think it's a great record, but at least we tried to do a few things that pub bands wouldn't normally do. For a lot of the underground scene all across Australia, we just weren't hard rock enough. We used to have a thing against pedals." [5] Elsewhere, he said, "I wouldn't have wanted it rawer, and I wouldn't have wanted it any slicker. It doesn't sound like it was rushed at all. We just wanted a crispness and brightness, and a sort of relaxed feeling. The usual criticism is that there's too much variety, to which we always point to the rest of the music industry and say there's not enough." [6]

"Evil" Graham Lee (not a member of the band until later) said, "The band recorded Treeless Plain in a dozen midnight-to-dawn sessions with a young, green recording engineer called Nick Mainsbridge. Dave had put a lot of thought into how the songs would be recorded and mixed and, fortunately, his production notes still exist, because they came in very handy when Nick got the chance to remix the album in 2007." [7]

The album was named after the Nullarbor Plain, which Robert McComb estimated they crossed eleven times travelling from Perth to the east coast of Australia. He said, "It took five days in my Combivan, and then three days once we got a van that could do better than 80 km (50 mi) an hour. We hit a couple of roos in that one. One of them almost totalled the car. At one point, Dave wanted to call the album $2,000 Kangaroo." [8]

Reception

An AllMusic review claimed, "Treeless Plain underscores The Triffids' knack for blending folk and country with indie rock in a way that anticipated the rise of alt-country in the '90s." David McComb's "commanding and resonant" vocals were particularly praised, and the songs, "offered incontrovertible evidence of McComb's skill as a songwriter with a unique lyrical and musical vision." [9]

Clinton Walker described the album as, "a remarkably mature, muscular yet sensitive statement, and it was probably as broadly successful as any Australian indy has ever been. But that still didn't mean big figures." [5] Elsewhere, it was said that the album would endear itself to listeners, "assuming, of course, that you can envisage a band that links folksy sounds, replete with fiddles, with those you might expect of some early Velvet Underground." [10]

Track listing

All songs written by David McComb [11] unless otherwise noted.

  1. "Red Pony" - 4:11
  2. "Branded" - 2:44
  3. "My Baby Thinks She's a Train" - 3:36
  4. "Rosevel" - 2:59
  5. "I Am a Lonesome Hobo" (Bob Dylan [11] ) - 2:14
  6. "Place in the Sun" - 2:22
  7. "Plaything" - 3:10
  8. "Old Ghostrider" - 3:09
  9. "Hanging Shed" - 4:02
  10. "Hell of a Summer" - 4:30
  11. "Madeline" - 2:35
  12. "Nothing Can Take Your Place" - 2:49

2008 Reissue

  1. "Red Pony"
  2. "Branded"
  3. "My Baby Thinks She's a Train"
  4. "Rosevel"
  5. "I Am a Lonesome Hobo"
  6. "Place in the Sun"
  7. "Plaything"
  8. "Old Ghostrider"
  9. "Hanging Shed"
  10. "Hell of a Summer"
  11. "Madeline"
  12. "Nothing Can Take Your Place
  13. "Interview" (Live at the Wireless)
  14. "Old Ghostrider" (Live at the Wireless)
  15. "Plaything" (Live at the Wireless)
  16. "My Baby Thinks She's a Train" (Live at the Wireless)
  17. "Rosevel" (Live at the Wireless)
  18. "Hell of a Summer" (Live at the Wireless)
  19. "On the Street Where You Live" (Live at the Wireless)

Personnel

The Triffids

Credited to: [2]

Additional musicians

Production

Related Research Articles

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Love In Bright Landscapes is an anthology by Australian folk rock group, The Triffids, which was released in 1986. The original LP had ten tracks compiled from their album, EP and single releases in the period from 1983 to 1985, during which time the group were resident in Perth, Sydney and London. Three additional tracks from the same sources were included on the later CD version of the album.

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"Wide Open Road" is a single released in 1986 by Australian rock band The Triffids from their album Born Sandy Devotional. It was produced by Gil Norton and written by David McComb on vocals, keyboards and guitar. The B-side "Time of Weakness" was recorded live at the Graphic Arts Club, Sydney, November 1985 by Mitch Jones, mixed by Rob Muir. "Dear Miss Lonely Hearts" was recorded at Planet Sound Studios, Perth and produced by the Triffids. "Wide Open Road" reached No. 26 on the UK Singles Chart in 1986, and No. 64 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart. In May 2001 the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA), as part of its 75th Anniversary celebrations, named "Wide Open Road" as one of the Top 30 Australian songs of all time.

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They'd recorded "Spanish Blue" when the spectre of the Gudinski organisation loomed, and they were summoned to the Mushroom/White Citadel. Gudinski liked "Spanish Blue". 'It was just that he wanted us to re-write it, and re-mix it,' McComb laughs. 'We ended up putting it out ourselves immediately they started dilly dallying because we said we wouldn't re-mix it. We thought that we couldn't just wait for people to decide what they wanted to do.'

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Tall Tales and True were an Australian three piece band from Sydney formed in the early 1980s by Perth born musician, Matthew de la Hunty. They're best known for their 1992 album, Revenge!, which peaked inside the ARIA top 50.

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. 1 2 Holmgren, Magnus; Skjefte, Morten; Warnqvist, Stefan; Simonetti, Vince. "The Triffids". Passagen.se. Australian Rock Database (Magnus Holmgren). Archived from the original on 28 July 2002. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  3. "Listings for Treeless Plain". Discogs . Retrieved 20 December 2007.
  4. Liberation Music website announcement Archived 2008-07-20 at the Wayback Machine
  5. 1 2 Clinton Walker (1996). Stranded: The Secret History of Australian Independent Music 1977–1991 . Pan MacMillan. pp. 148–149. ISBN   0-7329-0883-3.
  6. Clinton Walker. "The Triffids: Self-Sufficient and Surviving". Rock's Backpages .(Subscription required.)
  7. Alex Denney. "A Beautiful Waste: in search of The Triffids". Drowned in Sound . Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  8. Andrew Mueller. "The Triffids: Album By Album". Rock's Backpages .(Subscription required.)
  9. Wilson Neate. "Treeless Plain". AllMusic. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
  10. "Records". High Fidelity News and Record Review. Linkhouse Publications: 108.
  11. 1 2 "Australasian Performing Right Association". APRA . Retrieved 20 December 2007.