Boom Crash Opera | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 1987 | |||
Recorded | January–February 1987 | |||
Studio | RAK Studios, London | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Label | WEA Records | |||
Producer | Alex Sadkin | |||
Boom Crash Opera chronology | ||||
| ||||
Singles from Boom Crash Opera | ||||
|
Boom Crash Opera is the first album by Australian rock band Boom Crash Opera, released in 1987.[1] Singles released from the album include two which reached the top 20 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart, "Great Wall" and "Hands Up in the Air".[1][2]
In 1986 Boom Crash Opera signed with Dirty Pool Management and WEA Records. The band recorded their first two singles in 1986 with English producer Steve Brown (ABC, The Cult and Wham!) at Platinum Studios in Melbourne. Their debut single, "Great Wall", which was released in May 1986 reached No. 5 on the (Australian) national chart.[3] Their second single, "Hands up in the Air", followed in late July, peaking at No. 16.[3] Following which the band toured nationally with Icehouse.
At the ARIA Music Awards of 1987 the group were nominated for three awards: Highest Selling Single for "Great Wall", Best New Talent for both singles, and Best Video for "Hands up in the Air". At the Countdown Music and Video Awards of 1986, held in July 1987, "Great Wall" won Best Debut Single.
The label then flew the band to London to record their debut album at RAK Studios with producer, Alex Sadkin (Simply Red, Grace Jones, Talking Heads) and engineer, Will Gosling (Big Country). Both "Great Wall" and "Hands up in the Air" were remixed for their album versions. After recording the album Sadkin travelled to the Bahamas to work, where he died in a car accident in July. The self-titled album was released in September 1987, reached No. 19 on the Kent Music Report Albums Chart[3] and went on to achieve Gold record status.[citation needed] It spawned a further three singles, "City Flat" (June 1987), "Her Charity" (September 1987) and "Love Me to Death" (March 1988).
In an interview Farnan said "The whole idea of the album was to capture a live band feel, rather than a meticulously layered, constructed studio artist sound. We just wanted to capture a fairly live feel and wanted people feeling there were musicians playing and performing, rather than, you know, machines."