Sirocco (album) explained

Sirocco
Type:Album
Artist:Australian Crawl
Cover:Siroccocrawl.jpg
Border:yes
Released:July 1981
Recorded:March–April 1981
Studio:EMI Studios 301
Genre:Pop rock
Length:46:07
Label:EMI Australia
Producer:Peter Dawkins
Prev Title:The Boys Light Up
Prev Year:1980
Next Title:Sons of Beaches
Next Year:1982

Sirocco is the second album from Australian rock band Australian Crawl. It was released in July 1981 and on 3 August, it topped the Australian charts where it remained for six weeks, the band's first of two albums to hit

  1. 1
.[1] It was released a year after their successful debut The Boys Light Up which had reached No. 4.[1]

The album was recorded in March–April 1981 in Sydney and produced by Peter Dawkins (Air Supply, Billy Thorpe, Dragon, John Farnham).[2]

"I was approached by Australian Crawl, who were about to do their second album, Sirocco. They’d been tortured to death by David Briggs, or at least by his studio style, and needed a change. We got along incredibly well, it was all so comfortable. They played me twenty new songs, I gave them a list of the eleven I liked and we just said let’s go."[3]

Sirocco spent eight months in the Top 20[1] and was their most successful album.[4] 1981 Australian End of Year Album Charts has Sirocco at No. 2 behind Double Fantasy by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, and ahead of AC/DC's Back in Black making it the best charting album by an Australian act.[1] [5]

The album was named after Australian born actor Errol Flynn's yacht and included the second single from the album, a lyrical biography, called "Errol".[4] [6] Sirocco was the Crawl's first US and European release.

Drummer Bill McDonough's younger brother Guy McDonough (co-lead vocals, rhythm guitar) had joined as their sixth member.[7] Guy had already co-written tracks for their first album and now wrote or co-wrote five of Sirocco's eleven tracks, including all three singles, also providing lead vocals on "Errol", "Oh No Not You Again", and "Resort Girls".[6] "Errol" was voted their third most popular song by listeners of Triple M in 2007.[8] The other single from the album was "Things Don't Seem" which reached No. 11[6] and was their fifth most popular song in the 2007 poll.[8]

Sean Higgins was a bandmate with the McDonough brothers in an earlier band, The Flatheads,[7] and had co-written "Downhearted" for Boys Light Up; Higgins co-wrote "Things Don't Seem" for Sirocco. At about this time guitarist Brad Robinson was married to actress Kerry Armstrong, later an Australian Film Institute Award winner, and they co-wrote "Easy on Your Own", which was also the B-side to "Errol".

At the 1981 Countdown Music Awards, the album was nominated for Best Australian Album.[9]

Track listing

  1. "Things Don't Seem" (Guy McDonough, Sean Higgins) – 3:57
  2. "Unpublished Critics" (James Reyne, Paul Williams) – 5:14
  3. "Love (Beats Me Up)" (Reyne) – 4:35
  4. "Oh No Not You Again" (G McDonough) – 5:08
  5. "Lakeside" (Reyne) – 4:49
  6. "Trusting You" (William "Bill" McDonough, G McDonough) – 3:09
  7. "Errol" (Reyne, G McDonough) – 3:30
  8. "Can I Be Sure" (Simon Binks) – 3:37
  9. "Easy on Your Own" (Binks, Brad Robinson, Kerry Armstrong) – 3:48
  10. "Love Boys" (W McDonough) – 3:41
  11. "Resort Girls" (G McDonough) – 4:36

Songwriting credits from Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA).[10]

Personnel

Adapted from AllMusic.[11]

Charts

Year-end charts

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. NOTE: Used for Australian Singles and Albums charting from 1970 until ARIA created their own charts in mid-1988.
  2. Web site: Peter Dawkins Fact File . ABCTV (Australian Story) . 27 February 2006 . 2008-03-26.
  3. Web site: Stories . Peter Dawkins Official website . 2008-03-26.
  4. Web site: The Final Wave liner notes . St. John . Ed . 1986 . Axel Husfeldt . 2008-03-26 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20030729180159/http://www.zmms.tu-berlin.de/~axhu/AustralianCrawl/ . 29 July 2003 .
  5. Book: Angus Cameron . The Second Australian Almanac . . 1986 . 0-207-15232-2 .
  6. Book: McFarlane, Ian . Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop . doc . Ian McFarlane . . 1999 . 1-86448-768-2 . 2008-03-01 . registration .
  7. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20131022063048/http://hem.passagen.se/honga/database/a/australiancrawl.html . Australian Crawl . Holmgren . Magnus . Stefan . Warnqvist . Oliver . Draper . Bill . McDonough . Australian Rock Database. Passagen.se (Magnus Holmgren) . 22 October 2013 . 23 March 2014 .
  8. Web site: Triple M's Essential 2007 Countdown . Triple M . 2008-03-26 . 20 November 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081120152401/http://www.triplem.com.au/melbourne/music/2007countdown/the_countdown.html . dead .
  9. Web site: Australian Music Awards . Ron Jeff . 16 December 2010 . 30 June 2012 . https://archive.today/20120630220831/http://users.ncable.net.au/~ronjeff/top40/oz_king.htm . dead .
  10. Web site: Australasian Performing Right Association . . 2008-03-04 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080124161012/http://www.apra.com.au/site/public/searchworksresult.stm . 24 January 2008 .
  11. Web site: AllMusic credits . . 2017-03-23 .
  12. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 433.