A Different Kind of Weather explained

A Different Kind of Weather
Type:studio
Artist:The Dream Academy
Cover:A Different Kind Of Weather.(The Dream Academy album - cover art).jpg
Released:15 June 1990
Recorded:1990
Genre:Rock
Label:Reprise (US)
Blanco y Negro (UK)
Producer:David Gilmour (main)
Prev Title:Remembrance Days
Prev Year:1987
Next Title:Somewhere in the Sun... Best of the Dream Academy
Next Year:2000

A Different Kind of Weather is the third and final studio album by the English band the Dream Academy.[1] [2] It was released on 15 June 1990 by Reprise and Blanco y Negro Records. The album saw the return of David Gilmour as the main producer, six years after he had produced their debut album.

The album failed to enter the charts, despite the band performing their first and only tour of the United Kingdom to promote its release, in 1991.

Critical reception

Trouser Press wrote that "[Kate] St. John’s oboe and soprano sax is an effective antidote to blandness, but the languid material is almost characterless, relegating the album to handsomely accomplished ambience for the old at heart."[3] The Globe and Mail wrote that the album "harks back to the days of the British progressives without specifically copying any one band."[4]

Singles from the album

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Dream Academy | Biography & History. AllMusic.
  2. Semon . Craig . Dream Academy offers up more neo-psychedelia . Telegram & Gazette . 3 Feb 1991 . 10.
  3. Web site: Dream Academy . Trouser Press . 7 April 2021.
  4. Niester . Alan . RECORDINGS OF NOTE ROCK A DIFFERENT KIND OF WEATHER The Dream Academy . The Globe and Mail . 4 Mar 1991 . C3.