Voices of Babylon explained

Voices of Babylon
Type:studio
Artist:The Outfield
Cover:Voices of Babylon album cover.jpg
Released:28 March 1989
Recorded:Sunset Sound Recorders, Hollywood, California; Farmyard Studio, Little Chalfont, Bucks; Scarf Studio, London January–April 1988
Genre:Pop rock, power pop
Length:40:36
Label:Columbia
Producer:John Spinks, David Kahne, David Leonard
Prev Title:Bangin'
Prev Year:1987
Next Title:Diamond Days
Next Year:1990

Voices of Babylon is the third studio album by the British band The Outfield, released during the spring of 1989 and which spawned an eponymous single. It was the group's last album to feature drummer Alan Jackman until the release of Replay in 2011. It was also their final album on the Columbia label. Following the album's release, and with their commercial success slipping, the band parted ways with Jackman and hired Paul Read as a replacement for the album's tour.

This album features a unique script similar to what is known as the Pigpen cipher. On the album cover, the script says "OUTFIELD" and the liner notes show the title of each album track in that script.

Track listing

  1. "Voices of Babylon"
  2. "My Paradise"
  3. "Part of Your Life"
  4. "Shelter Me"
  5. "The Night Ain't Over"
  6. "No Point"
  7. "Taken By Surprise"
  8. "Reach Out"
  9. "Makin' Up"
  10. "Inside Your Skin"

All songs were written by John Spinks, except for "Taken By Surprise", which was written by John Spinks and Tony Lewis.

Personnel

Additional musicians

Singles

The album's title track was a Top 40 hit single, peaking at #25 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #2 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.[1] The second-single "My Paradise" peaked at #72 on the Billboard Hot 100, not achieving the expected success. "Part of Your Life" was released as a promotional single, but failed to gain significant airplay.

"The Night Ain't Over" was released as a single in Canada, featuring a previously unreleased track "Better Get Ready" as the B-Side.

Notes and References

  1. Billboard Charts