Together Alone

This article is about the Crowded House album. For other uses, see Together Alone (disambiguation).
Together Alone
Studio album by Crowded House
Released 18 October 1993
Recorded 1992 - 1993, Karekare Beach, New Zealand
Periscope Studios, Melbourne
Platinum Melbourne
Genre Rock, alternative rock, pop rock
Length 51:32
Label Capitol
Producer Youth and Crowded House
Crowded House chronology
Woodface
(1991)
Together Alone
(1993)
Recurring Dream
(1996)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Q

Together Alone is the fourth studio album by the band Crowded House. It was released in October 1993 and was their first album to feature multi-instrumentalist Mark Hart as a full band member. Unlike the band's first three albums, which were recorded in the US and Australia and produced by Mitchell Froom, Together Alone was recorded in New Zealand with producer Youth. Seven singles were released from Together Alone, including "Distant Sun", which was a top 10 hit in New Zealand[2] and Canada,[3] and "Locked Out" which reached number 12 on the UK singles chart[4] and number 8 on the US Modern Rock chart,[5] the latter on the strength of the song's inclusion on the soundtrack of the 1994 film Reality Bites.[6]

Background

The album was mainly recorded at Neil Finn's friends Nigel and Jody Harrocks' house at Karekare Beach in New Zealand, with additional recording in Melbourne, Australia at both Periscope and Platinum Studios. The album's opening track was named "Kare Kare" after the beach near where the album was recorded.

The album topped the album chart in New Zealand,[2] reached number 2 in Australia[7] and number 4 in the UK.[4] Due to its inclusion on the Reality Bites soundtrack, the song "Locked Out" was bundled with The Knack's "My Sharona", which also features in the film, as a promotional jukebox single.[8] The video single release of "Nails in My Feet" featured a documentary of the making of Together Alone entitled Footage from the Together Alone recording session.

The song "Catherine Wheels" was written by Neil and Tim Finn while with Split Enz and was originally titled "The First To Say Gone". The final version included input from bass player Nick Seymour which earned him a co-writing credit, one of only five he has with Crowded House. (The others are "Recurring Dream" and "Help Is Coming" from Afterglow, "Newcastle Jam" from the Special Edition Live Album and "Isolation" from Intriguer).

Allmusic noted that the album is, "More experimental and musically varied than any of their previous releases" and cited the addition of Mark Hart to the band's line-up and new producer Youth as reasons for this.[1] The album features more complex, layered guitar and keyboard arrangements than on Crowded House's previous works. The title track features a New Zealand Māori choir and log drummers and was co-written by Ngapo 'Bub' Wehi of the Te Waka Huia Cultural Group Choir, who also provide backing vocals on "In My Command" and "Catherine Wheels".

Cover art

Bassist Nick Seymour created the album cover, which features a red car, possibly a taxi. It contains Jesus, a golden figure and a third occupant in the back of the car of whom only an arm, clad in a striped shirt, is visible. The car is surrounded by a golden halo and has fluffy dice hanging from the rear view mirror. The cover of the 2007 single "Don't Stop Now" has a similar red car and the song's video features the car during its animated sequences. The album artwork was co-designed by Seymour and Margo Chase. It incorporates photography, by Youri Lenquette and Merlyn Rosenberg, of the band and of landscapes including Karekare beach.

Track listing

All songs written by Neil Finn unless otherwise indicated:

  1. "Kare Kare" (Crowded House) – 3:35
  2. "In My Command" – 3:43
  3. "Nails in My Feet" – 3:39
  4. "Black & White Boy" – 4:00
  5. "Fingers of Love" – 4:26
  6. "Pineapple Head" – 3:27
  7. "Locked Out" – 3:17
  8. "Private Universe" – 5:39
  9. "Walking on the Spot" – 2:54
  10. "Distant Sun" – 3:49
  11. "Catherine Wheels" (Neil Finn, Tim Finn, Nick Seymour) – 5:12
  12. "Skin Feeling" (Paul Hester) – 3:56
  13. "Together Alone" (Neil Finn, Mark Hart, Ngapo 'Bub' Wehi) – 3:55

A limited edition of the album in some territories featured a bonus disc of live tracks from their previous 3 albums:

  1. "World Where You Live" – 5:30
  2. "Mean to Me" – 4:06
  3. "Sister Madly" – 5:42
  4. "Better Be Home Soon" – 3:23
  5. "It's Only Natural" – 3:52
  6. "Weather with You" – 5:19

Personnel

Crowded House

Additional musicians

Album credits

Chart performance

Preceded by
Vs. by Pearl Jam
New Zealand Albums Chart Number-one album
21–27 November 1993 (1 week)
Succeeded by
So Far So Good by Bryan Adams

Album

Sales of Together Alone highlighted Crowded House's continued popularity in Australasia[2][7] and the UK.[4] The album also had some success across Europe, but like its predecessor, Woodface, it failed to make much impact in the US.[9] The album was certified platinum in the UK,[10] New Zealand (x2) and Australia.[11]

Chart Position
Australian Albums Chart[7] 2
Canadian Albums Chart[12] 19
New Zealand Albums Chart[2] 1
German Albums Chart[13] 55
Dutch Albums Chart[14] 19
Norwegian Albums Chart[15] 14
Swedish Albums Chart[16] 25
UK Albums Chart[4] 4
US Billboard 200[9] 73

Singles

Apart from the top 10 success of "Distant Sun" in Canada[3] and New Zealand,[2] the singles from Together Alone generally performed poorly outside the UK, where five singles reached the top 30.[4] One exception was "Nails in My feet", which narrowly missed the New Zealand top 10.[2]

Single AUS
[7]
CAN GER
[17]
NZ
[2]
UK
[4]
"Distant Sun"[3] 23 4 70 5 19
"Nails In My Feet" 34 11 22
"Locked Out"[18] 81 12
"Fingers of Love" 25
"Pineapple Head" 27
"Private Universe" 46 50
"Together Alone" 37

Further reading

References

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