Sunnyboys (album) explained

Sunnyboys
Type:studio
Artist:Sunnyboys
Cover:Sunnyboys album 1981.jpg
Recorded:May–July 1981
Alberts Studios, Sydney
Label:Mushroom
Producer:Lobby Loyde
Next Title:Individuals
Next Year:1982

Sunnyboys is the debut studio album by the Australian power pop group of the same name. It was released in September 1981 on Mushroom Records, which peaked at No. 13 on the Australian Kent Music Report albums chart.

For the album the group's line-up was Bil Bilson on drums, Richard Burgman on guitar, Jeremy Oxley on guitar and vocals, and his older brother, Peter Oxley, on bass guitar. It was recorded at Alberts Studios in Sydney between May and July 1981 with Lobby Loyde as producer. Two singles were released from the album: "Happy Man" (June 1981) and a new, re-recorded version of "Alone with You from their debut Phantom Records EP, from their (October) – both reached the top 30 on the Kent Music Report singles chart. However, Jeremy thought it was unfair to include "Happy Man" on the album, so in September 1981 they released a limited edition version of the album, replacing that song with "Tell Me What You Say", recorded during the album sessions.

In October 2010 Sunnyboys was listed at No. 37 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums.[1] [2] On 14 March 2014 the group issued an expanded 2× CD version, which reached the ARIA Albums Chart top 100.

Background

Sunnyboys was recorded by the group of the same name, which had formed in Sydney in July 1980 by the brothers, Peter (bass guitar) and Jeremy Oxley (guitar and vocals), together with Bil Bilson (drums) and Richard Burgman (guitar). Their first public performance occurred on 15 August 1980, two months after formation. Within a few weeks the quartet were playing on an almost nightly basis at venues across Sydney’s pub and club circuit. Among the band’s early fans was Jules Normington, the label owner of Phantom Records, who arranged for the band to make their first recording in October that year with the producer, Lobby Loyde (ex-Aztecs, Coloured Balls). The resulting self-titled 4-track 7-inch EP was released in December. The initial pressing of 1,000 copies was sold out in two weeks. The EP was later remixed and reissued as a 12-inch EP.

In February 1981 Sunnyboys became the first Sydney-based band to sign with Mushroom Records. From May they started recording Sunnyboys at Alberts Studio with Loyde producing again. Their first release in June, on that label, was the lead single, "Happy Man", from the album which debuted at No. 26 on the Kent Music Report singles chart on 6 July.

In a later interview with Mess+Noise, Burgman commented on how the inspiration for the songs on the album had come from Jeremy's previous experiences, stating "It's very much a teenager's record, I think if you look at that first album in that light, the songs on the record are just stories." Peter concluded that in hindsight the songs on the record betray Jeremy's troubled soul. "At the time I knew that they were great lyrics, but you were concentrating on the music, and you didn't look at the lyrics as a 19-year-old in terms of how intense and deeply personal they were. Truly in hindsight you think, 'Oh my goodness, these lyrics Jeremy was writing were truly very heartfelt and soulful'. They were his real feelings at the time. They weren't third-party storytelling, they were real heart-on-the-sleeve stuff. The lyrics are incredible now when you're listening to them. I think the longevity of the songs really does relate to the intensity of those lyrics."

The album was released in September 1981 by Mushroom Records on vinyl, together with a limited release of 2,000 on yellow vinyl (this version had a slightly different track listing with "Happy Man" replaced with "Tell Me What You Say". The album peaked at No. 13 on the national Kent Music Report album chart in October. A second single, a new re-recorded version of "Alone with You" (an earlier version had been previously included on the band's 1980 self-titled EP), was released in October reaching No. 28 on the national singles chart.

The album was certified gold status (shipment of 35,000 units) soon after its release and, in 2004, platinum accreditation (70,000 units).[3] As from February 2014, the sales figures for the album are around the 100,000 mark.[4]

On 14 March 2014 the group issued an expanded two-CD edition. The first disc contains the original 12-track album followed by the eight tracks from the same recording session that were not included on the original release. The second disc, "New Kicks", contains the complete pre-recording demo session.[4] [5] Later that month the album returned to the Australian national top 100 on the ARIA Albums Chart,[6] [7] (which had replaced the Kent Music Report in 1989). It also reached No. 58 on the ARIA Top 100 Physical Albums Chart and No. 12 on the ARIA Catalogue Albums Chart.[6]

Critical reception

Garry Raffaele of The Canberra Times reviewed Sunnyboys in October 1981 and felt that "'Happy Man', the single, is still, in my view, their best. Closely followed by 'Alone with You'."[8] He continued, that they are "a band breaking out of mediocrity and forcing its strong sound, good, urgent rock. I believe it needs to consolidate now – and that means the next album is important."[8] Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, in 1999 opined that "It remains an Australian rock classic, an album brimming with infectious, danceable R&B-spiced rock'n'roll, impassioned, dynamic songs, a marvellously lighthearted disposition and lashings of youthful exuberance."

FasterLouder's Anton, in September 2004, believes "every self-respecting Australian music lover needs to own the Sunnyboys' debut, self-titled album. It's a flawless 40 minutes of electrified, passionate pop rock, combining the male angst of the Violent Femmes' first album, the melodic sensibilities of Crowded House, and The Saints' ability to rock the fuck out." He states that the "album is almost disconcertingly beautiful, delivering loneliness, alienation and lost hope sung by singer/guitarist Jeremy Oxley and backed by a ludicrously tight band. Oxley's lyrics were acutely accurate explorations of the male psyche."

Craig Mathieson in 100 Best Australian Albums (October 2010) describes the album as "a stunning work of guitar pop/rock minimalism.", stating "the album hotwires the youthful exuberance and anxiety of Jeremy's songs and delivers them with a visceral powerpop attack, with melodies and harmonies to die for." Mathieson goes on to state "Sunnyboys is as infectious as Ebola." and "Every song is a potential single from the moody 'Liar' and 'Let You Go' to the frenetic, hip-shaking 'It's Not Me' and 'Tunnel of Love' to the album's closing track and pièce de résistance 'I'm Shakin'."

In December 2012 Martin Boulton in the Sydney Morning Herald stated that "the album evokes feelings of lightness and overwhelming joy, while exploring themes of loneliness and alienation." Peter Oxley commented that "I was conscious [at the time] that they were good lyrics, but not conscious of the depth and how soulful they were for Jeremy." In an album review from March 2014 on TheMusic.com.au, Dan Condon states it is "track after track of guitar pop perfection, each song possibly better than the last, with Jeremy Oxley a self-assured but unassuming leading voice."

Release history

DateRegionLabelFormatCatalogue
September 1981AustraliaMushroomLPL37696
Limited Edition Yellow VinylL-37634
1991CDD19478
14 October 1997MUSH32360.2
14 March 2014[9] Festival Records2×CD, digital downloadFEST601026
1 November 2019[10] Warner Music AustraliaLimited Edition Light Blue Vinyl5419705525

Credits

Sunnyboys
Additional musicians
Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 100 Best Australian Albums . . 28 October 2010 . 18 July 2015 .
  2. Web site: 100 Best Aus Albums Revealed . . 27 October 2010 . 18 July 2015 .
  3. Web site: Accreditations – 2004 Albums . Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) . . 2004 . 18 July 2015 .
  4. Web site: Sunnyboys Eponymous Debut Reissued – Remastered, with 24 Bonus Tracks & March Tour! . Hassan, Darren . Glam Digital . Glam Adelaide . 5 February 2014 . 18 July 2015 .
  5. Web site: Sunnyboys (Expanded Edition) . Stafford, Andrew . Double J. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) . 18 July 2015 .
  6. Web site: 24 March 2014 . https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20140404130100/http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/23790/20140405-0001/issue1256.pdf . The ARIA Report . Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) . 1256 . 6, 8, 12, 14 . 4 April 2014 . 29 June 2015 .
  7. Web site: Albums Pre-1989 – Part 3 . Ryan (bulion) . Gary . Australian Charts Portal. Hung Medien (Steffen Hung) . 23 March 2014 . 19 July 2015 .
  8. News: Rock Music: 'Jive' Lacks the Drive . Raffaele . Garry . . ACT . 5 October 1981 . 18 July 2015 . 3 . .
  9. Web site: Sunnyboys (Explanded Edition) . JBHiFi. 13 February 2020.
  10. Web site: Sunnyboys (Limited Edition Light Blue Vinyl) . JBHiFi. 13 February 2020.