Mental Notes (Split Enz album)

Mental Notes
Studio album by Split Enz
Released

31 July 1975 (Australia)

7 August 1975 (New Zealand)
Recorded May – June 1975
Studio Festival Records Studio 24, Sydney, Australia
Genre Art rock
Length 44:17
Label

Mushroom Records (Australia)

White Cloud Records (New Zealand)
Producer David Russell, Split Enz
Split Enz chronology
Mental Notes
(1975)
Second Thoughts
(1976)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Mental Notes is the 1975 debut album by New Zealand art rock band Split Enz. The album cover was painted by band member Phil Judd. Original vinyl copies featured Phil saying "Make a mental note" in the runout groove of the record's second side, causing the phrase to be looped ad infinitum on manual turntables until the stylus is removed.

Track listing

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Walking Down a Road *"  Phil Judd, Tim Finn5:26
2."Under the Wheel"  Phil Judd, Tim Finn7:50
3."Amy (Darling)"  Phil Judd, Tim Finn5:18
4."So Long for Now"  Phil Judd, Tim Finn3:19
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Stranger Than Fiction *"  Phil Judd, Tim Finn6:58
2."Time for a Change *"  Phil Judd3:46
3."Maybe"  Phil Judd, Tim Finn2:59
4."Titus *"  Phil Judd3:02
5."Spellbound †"  Phil Judd, Tim Finn5:00
6."Mental Notes"  Phil Judd0:34
Bonus Tracks on 2006 Remaster
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
11."129 (Live)"  Phil Judd/Tim Finn3:03
12."Lovey Dovey (Live)"  Phil Judd/Tim Finn3:22

* These songs were re-recorded for the Second Thoughts album.

† This version has Phil Judd singing lead vocals. An earlier version (found on The Beginning of the Enz) recorded in 1974 has Tim Finn singing lead.

Personnel

Split Enz

Production

Special Thanks to

History and features

The album was a moderate success on its release in July 1975. It sold 12,000 copies in Australia, reached #35 on the album chart for one week, and peaked at #7 in New Zealand. Much of the material derived from Tim Finn's and Phil Judd's fascination with the work of the renowned English writer and artist Mervyn Peake – notably Spellbound, the epic track Stranger Than Fiction (their concert centrepiece) and Titus, named after the hero of Peake's Gormenghast trilogy.[2]

References

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