You're All Living in Cuckooland

Last updated

You're All Living in Cuckooland
You're All Living In Cuckooland.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 7, 2006
Recorded2005–2006
Genre Hard rock, heavy metal
Length53:16
Label NPL
Producer Burke Shelley, Nigel Thomas
Budgie chronology
The Last Stage
(2004)
You're All Living in Cuckooland
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar half.svgStar empty.svg [1]

You're All Living in Cuckooland is the eleventh and final album by the Welsh heavy metal band Budgie. Released in November 2006, it was their first official studio album in 24 years. It was accompanied by a UK tour. [2]

Contents

Track listing

All tracks are written by Burke Shelley and Simon Lees, except where noted

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Justice" 4:31
2."Dead Men Don't Talk" 6:08
3."We're All Living in Cuckooland"Shelley6:04
4."Falling" 5:22
5."Love Is Enough"Shelley2:25
6."Tell Me Tell Me" 4:47
7."(Don't Want To) Find That Girl" 6:28
8."Captain"Shelley3:43
9."I Don't Want to Throw You" 5:31
10."I'm Compressing the Comb on a Cockerel's Head" 8:17

Personnel

Budgie

Related Research Articles

<i>Budgie</i> (album) 1971 studio album by Budgie

Budgie is the debut album by the Welsh heavy metal band Budgie. It was released on July 30, 1971, through MCA Records. The US version on Kapp Records includes "Crash Course in Brain Surgery", originally released as a single and covered by Metallica on their 1987 EP The $5.98 E.P. - Garage Days Re-Revisited. "Homicidal Suicidal" has also been covered by the Seattle grunge band Soundgarden. Canadian band Thrush Hermit covered "Nude Disintegrating Parachutist Woman" on the album All Technology Aside, included on the 2010 The Complete Recordings box set.

<i>If I Were Brittania Id Waive the Rules</i> 1976 studio album by Budgie

If I Were Brittania I'd Waive the Rules is the sixth album by the Welsh heavy metal band Budgie, released in April 1976.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Budgie (band)</span> Welsh rock band

Budgie were a Welsh heavy metal band from Cardiff. The band formed in 1967, and the following year recorded a demo; in 1971, their first album, produced by Rodger Bain, was released by MCA. The band, a classic power trio with the occasional keyboard player, released ten albums, with MCA, A&M, and RCA, between 1971 and 1982, attracting a fair number of fans and achieving modest commercial success.

<i>Bandolier</i> (album) 1975 studio album by Budgie

Bandolier is the fifth album by Welsh rock band Budgie, released in September 1975 through MCA Records. It reached #36 in the UK. The album was released in the US on A&M Records in late 1975. The cover art was created by artist Patrick Woodroffe. This was the first LP to feature drummer Steve Williams, who thereafter would play on all of Budgie's releases, along with Burke Shelley.

<i>Never Turn Your Back on a Friend</i> 1973 studio album by Budgie

Never Turn Your Back on a Friend is the third studio album by Welsh heavy metal band Budgie, released in June 1973. This was drummer Ray Phillips' final appearance on a Budgie recording date. The album shows the band continuing the successful heavy metal formula of their previous album Squawk, adding a hint of speed metal in the single "Breadfan", one of the band's best known songs.

<i>Impeckable</i> 1978 studio album by Budgie

Impeckable is the seventh album by the Welsh heavy metal band Budgie. It was released in February 1978 on A&M Records. Guitarist Tony Bourge left the band after the album was released.

<i>In for the Kill!</i> 1974 studio album by Budgie

In for the Kill! is the fourth studio album by Welsh rock band Budgie. It was released through MCA Records in May 1974. The album includes the song "Crash Course in Brain Surgery," originally released in 1971 as a single and was included on their self-titled debut album. The song was covered by Metallica for their 1987 EP The $5.98 E.P. - Garage Days Re-Revisited, while the album's title track was covered by Van Halen during the group's club days.

<i>Power Supply</i> (album) 1980 studio album by Budgie

Power Supply is the eighth album by the Welsh heavy metal band Budgie, released in October 1980 on Active Records, a sublabel of RCA Records. This is the first album without original guitarist Tony Bourge, who left the band in 1978 after the album Impeckable.

<i>Nightflight</i> (Budgie album) 1981 studio album by Budgie

Nightflight is the ninth album by the Welsh heavy metal band Budgie, released in October 1981 on RCA Records. A remastered version, with two live tracks from 1981, was released in 2013. The illustration on the cover is by Derek Riggs.

<i>Deliver Us from Evil</i> (Budgie album) 1982 studio album by Budgie

Deliver Us from Evil is the tenth album by the Welsh heavy metal band Budgie, released in October 1982 on RCA Records, and according to Burke Shelley its theme "attacks the power structures of East and West and the balance of terror"; it also "refers to all kinds of evil, not just The Bomb and war, but the main theme calls for world peace". One reviewer suggested that the album's lyrics were influenced by Shelley becoming a born-again Christian.

<i>Heavier Than Air – Rarest Eggs</i> 1998 live album by Budgie

Heavier Than Air – Rarest Eggs is an album of compiled live tracks spanning Budgie's career. We Came, We Saw... is a companion to this album.

<i>The Last Stage</i> (album) 2004 compilation album by Budgie

The Last Stage is a compilation of unreleased Budgie tracks, mostly from the early-to-mid eighties. Many of these tracks were intended to be released on the follow-up to 1982's Deliver Us from Evil, an album that never saw the light of day. The track "Beautiful Lies" was supposedly meant to be included on the album but never made it. It was previously made available on the Budgie compilation album An Ecstasy of Fumbling – The Definitive Anthology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Burke Shelley</span> Welsh bassist and singer (1950–2022)

John Burke Shelley was a Welsh musician, best known as the lead vocalist and bassist of the early heavy metal band Budgie.

<i>Best of Budgie</i> (1975 album) 1975 greatest hits album by Budgie

Best of Budgie was the first compilation album by Welsh rock band Budgie. It contained tracks from the band's third, fourth and fifth studio albums. At over an hour in length, it is among the longest single-LP rock records.

<i>Best of Budgie</i> (1981 album) 1981 greatest hits album by Budgie

Best of Budgie was the second compilation album by Welsh rock band Budgie, after the 1975 compilation of the same name. It consisted solely of tracks from the first two Budgie albums, Budgie and Squawk.

<i>An Ecstasy of Fumbling – The Definitive Anthology</i> Compilation album by Budgie

An Ecstasy of Fumbling – The Definitive Anthology was the third compilation album by Welsh rock band Budgie. The album contained two discs and featured songs from their first album, Budgie, to their tenth, Deliver Us from Evil. The album also features one rare track, "Beautiful Lies", that has never featured on any other Budgie album, as well as two live tracks.

<i>Best of Budgie</i> (1997 album) 1997 compilation album by Budgie

The Best of Budgie was the fourth compilation album by Welsh rock band Budgie, released in 1997. The compilation contained tracks only from the third, fourth and fifth studio albums, much like the 1975 compilation of the same name.

<i>Radio Sessions 1974 & 1978</i> 2005 live album by Budgie

Radio Sessions 1974 & 1978 is a double live album by Welsh rock band Budgie. The album tracks were taken from two live concerts; one at the Global Village in London in 1974, the other in Los Angeles in 1978.

<i>The BBC Recordings</i> (Budgie album) 2004 live album by Budgie

The BBC Recordings is live compilation album by Welsh rock band Budgie. The tracks on this album were taken from five shows.

References

  1. Prato, Greg. "You're All Living in Cuckooland - Budgie". AllMusic . Rovi Corporation . Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  2. "Budgie Welsh Rockers Web Site". www.budgie.uk.com. Archived from the original on 6 November 2006. Retrieved 12 January 2022.