Second Thoughts (album) explained

Second Thoughts
Type:Album
Artist:Split Enz
Cover:Second thoughts (album cover).jpg
Released:August 1976 (AUS, NZ)
September 1976 (UK)
January 1977 (US)
Recorded:April – May 1976
Studio:Basing Street, London
Genre:Progressive rock
Length:41:48
Label:Mushroom Records (AUS/NZ), Chrysalis Records (Rest of world)
Producer:Phil Manzanera
Prev Title:Mental Notes
Prev Year:1975
Next Title:Dizrythmia
Next Year:1977

Second Thoughts is the second studio album by New Zealand art rock band Split Enz. It was recorded in London with Roxy Music's guitarist Phil Manzanera producing the album.

Four of the songs on the album were reworked versions of songs from their 1975 debut album, Mental Notes. Two other songs on the album had been first recorded during the Mental Notes sessions, but left off and re-recorded for Second Thoughts. There were two new songs, both written by Phil Judd, and a re-recording of an early Judd/Finn composition ("129"), which for the Second Thoughts version, was renamed "Matinee Idyll".

The album was called Mental Notes when released outside Australasia and also featured a reworked version of the Mental Notes cover (for comparison see original and remake). Wally Wilkinson's image was replaced with that of Robert Gillies, and some band members are shown with newer haircuts: Phil Judd was now bald, and Tim Finn had his sides shaved.

Tim Finn, Robert Gillies and Eddie Rayner have said that the band felt the songs needed to be redone. But both Phil Judd and Noel Crombie have said that the re-recording of the Mental Notes tracks was a waste of time. On his MySpace forum, Judd has said that Tim Finn was obsessed with making the songs sound better, while he had new songs that he wanted to record.

Track listing

* New arrangement of a song that first appeared on Mental Notes

† Recorded during the Mental Notes sessions but not included in it, and re-recorded for Second Thoughts

Personnel

Split Enz

Additional personnel

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book. St Ives, NSW. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 288. NOTE: Used for Australian Singles and Albums charting from 1970 until ARIA created their own charts in mid-1988.