Technicolour (Disco Inferno album) explained

Technicolour
Type:Album
Artist:Disco Inferno
Cover:Technicolour.jpg
Released:22 July 1996
Recorded:1994–1995
Genre:Experimental pop
Length:33:05
Label:Rough Trade
Producer:Disco Inferno
Prev Title:D. I. Go Pop
Prev Year:1994
Next Title:The Mixing It Session
Next Year:1999

Technicolour is the third and final studio album by Disco Inferno, released posthumously on 22 July 1996 by Rough Trade Records in the United Kingdom. After releasing the EP It's a Kid's World in September 1994, Disco Inferno found themselves "burnt out and in debt; attracting little commercial success; beset by live failures; struggling against frustration, depression, internal bitterness and against the prevailing musical tide; helplessly caught in Rough Trade's ownership battles; [and] still barely into their twenties"; the trio imploded and called it quits as a band.[1] Technicolour was shelved for nearly two years after the band had dissolved. A projected EP release of "Sleight of Hand" (backed by the unreleased tracks "Keep It Together" and "Drowned Out") was canceled, and an entire album's worth of songs already recorded by singer/guitarist Ian Crause remains unreleased.[1]

Technicolour was followed years later by The 5 EPs, a compilation of various EPs the band had released throughout the early 1990s. One additional EP was also released by the band after Technicolour, 1999's The Mixing It Session, a release of a BBC Radio 3 session recorded in 1994. In 2004, One Little Indian reissued Technicolour in the United States, and the album was released on vinyl for the first time in April 2018.[2]

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. From the liner notes of The 5 EPs, written by David Howell. Dated March 2011, released in September 2011.
  2. Web site: Disco Inferno – Technicolour: Releases . . 3 October 1996 . 28 February 2019.