Thousand Yard Stare (album)

Thousand Yard Stare
Studio album by The Fauves
Released 2000
Genre Indie rock
Length 43:00
Label Shock Records
Producer The Fauves
The Fauves chronology
Lazy Highways (1998) Thousand Yard Stare (2000) Footage Missing (2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
The Daily Telegraph[1]
Herald Sun[2]
The Age[3]
The Courier-Mail[4]
Sunday Herald Sun[5]

Thousand Yard Stare is the fifth studio album by Mornington Peninsula, Melbourne indie band The Fauves.

The album marked the departure of founding bassist Andrew Dyer, who was replaced by longtime sound engineer Teddy Cleaver. It was also a return to the band's original label, the independent Shock Records, after being dumped by Polydor following a takeover of that label by Universal.[6]

Melbourne's Herald Sun noted the album abandoned the two-guitars approach in favour of cheap synthesisers and broadened the band's rock base to encompass disco and eletro-funk. Singer/guitarist Andrew Cox said: "Our two records prior to this were very guitar-pop records and we weren't keen on making the same album again. Being fairly limited guitarists there was only so far in this direction we could progress. So the keyboard thing is just an interesting way for us to explore a few more sounds."[7]

Cox told The Age that album was a collection of "happy songs". "I think it's just more of a pop album. Our last album (Lazy Highways) was possibly our most introspective album, quite a melancholy one, whereas I think this one is a bit more brasher and a little bit more upbeat, probably just more straight-out happy songs. We just felt pretty positive while we were making it and really happy with it as we were going along. I think it was the whole thing of doing it ourselves, without having people looking over our shoulder and telling us we had to have this and that on there, and constantly reinforcing that we had to sell 'x' number of units."[6]

Track listing

(all songs by The Fauves)

  1. "Taking the Uni Student Out to the Country" — 2:56
  2. "Medium Pacer" — 2:23
  3. "Write What You Know" — 3:43
  4. "Give Up Your Day Job" — 3:17
  5. "Going For My Blue Belt" — 3:23
  6. "First Day On the Run" — 3:05
  7. "Between You and the Dance Troupe" — 4:04
  8. "Celebrate the Failure" — 3:58
  9. "White Collar Crime" — 2:45
  10. "Valerie 3933" — 2:53
  11. "Astronaut Talk" — 3:35
  12. "Every TV Star Has a Dark Side" — 3:40
  13. "Bigger Than Tina" (bonus track) — 3:16

Personnel

References

  1. Stephen Downie, Daily Telegraph, 28 September 2000
  2. William Bowe, Herald Sun, 5 October 2000.
  3. The Age, 13 October 2000.
  4. Noel Mengel, Courier-Mail, 6 October 2000.
  5. Graeme Hammond, Sunday Herald Sun, 22 October 2000.
  6. 1 2 Roberts, Jo (6 October 2000). "Staring ahead". The Age. Melbourne.
  7. Bowe, William (2 October 2000). "Stare quality". Herald Sun. Melbourne.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.