Westway (The Glitter & the Slums) explained

Westway (The Glitter & the Slums)
Type:studio
Artist:Sticky Fingers
Cover:Sticky Fingers - Westway.png
Released:30 September 2016
Recorded:January – February 2016
Studio:Karma Sound Studios
Bang Saray, Thailand and Sydney, Australia
Length:39:36
Label:Sureshaker
Producer:Dann Hume
Prev Title:Land of Pleasure
Prev Year:2014
Next Title:Yours to Keep
Next Year:2019

Westway (The Glitter & the Slums) is the third studio album by Australian rock band Sticky Fingers, released through Sureshaker on 30 September 2016.[1] It was produced by Dann Hume, who produced the band's second album, Land of Pleasure, and co-produced their debut album Caress Your Soul.Westway (The Glitter & the Slums) debuted at number 1 on the Australian Albums Chart, making it the band's first number 1 album in Australia.[2]

The album's release was preceded by the first single "Outcast at Last" in March 2016, the second single "Our Town" in July 2016 and the third single "Sad Songs" November 2016.

At the J Awards of 2016, the album was nominated for Australian Album of the Year.[3]

Recording and production

Dann Hume returned to produce the album after producing the band's second album Land of Pleasure and co-producing debut album Caress Your Soul. Hume had also previously produced albums for Lisa Mitchell, Snakadaktal and Matt Corby. According to lead guitarist Seamus Coyle the band chose to work with Hume again because of their longtime working relationship and he "knows how to get the best" out of them.[4] Bassist Paddy Cornwall said that Hume had become a close friend of the band and they have a comfortable working relationship with him.[4]

The album was mostly recorded over the course of a month at Karma Sound Studios in Bang Saray, Thailand in early 2016.[5] Frost and Cornwall wrote the lyrics of the album. Two songs, "Something Strange" featuring Australian rapper Remi and "Amillionite", were recorded in Sydney. "Something Strange" was recorded in Sydney because the band invited Remi to collaborate on the song when he came to them to borrow a drum kit while he was visiting Sydney.[6]

Track listing

All songs written by Sticky Fingers (Daniel Neurath, Dylan Frost, Eric da Silva Gruener, Paddy Cornwall & Seamus Coyle) unless noted.

Personnel

Sticky Fingers

Additional musicians

Charts

Year-end charts

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sticky Fingers Announce New Album & Headline Tour Dates. Wilson. Zanda. 2 August 2016. 19 October 2016.
  2. Web site: They've Done It: Sticky Fingers Pick Up #1 ARIA Debut Over Bon Iver theMusic.com.au. The Music. 8 October 2016. 16 October 2016.
  3. Web site: The J Award 2016. Triple J. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2016. 15 August 2020.
  4. Web site: Music News, Views and All the Latest from Junkee.
  5. Web site: The Avalanches, Sticky Fingers, Illy, Thundamentals, The Little Dum Dum Club media triple j. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 7 August 2016. 7 April 2017.
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20160928210227/http://www.axs.com/interview-sticky-fingers-paddy-cornwall-on-rapper-remi-being-bogan-107194
  7. Web site: ARIA Top 100 Albums 2016. Australian Recording Industry Association. 6 January 2017.