Hunters & Collectors (album)

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Hunters & Collectors
Hunters&Collectors album.jpg
Studio album by Hunters & Collectors
Released 26 July 1982 (1982-07-26)
Recorded October 1981–April 1982
AAV Studios, Melbourne
Genre Rock
Length 49:48
Label White/Mushroom
Producer Hunters & Collectors
Hunters & Collectors chronology
Hunters & Collectors
(1982)
The Fireman's Curse
(1983)The Fireman's Curse1983
Singles from Hunters & Collectors
  1. "Talking to a Stranger"
    Released: 12 July 1982
Hunters & Collectors
1983 US version (Oz/A&M)

Hunters & Collectors is the self-titled debut studio album by Australian rock band, Hunters & Collectors, which was released on 26 July 1982. It was produced by the band with Tony Cohen as audio engineer. The album peaked at No. 21 on the Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart and No. 14 on the New Zealand Albums Chart. The album's first single, "Talking to a Stranger", was released ahead of the album on 12 July, and was accompanied by a music video directed by film maker Richard Lowenstein, but it did not reach the Top 50 on the related singles chart.

Background

Hunters & Collectors was recorded by Australian rock band, Hunters & Collectors from October 1981 to the following April.[1][2] The group had formed earlier in 1981 with the line up of former members of Jetsonnes: John Archer on electric bass; Doug Falconer on drums; Robert Miles as live sound and art director; Mark Seymour on guitar and lead vocals; and Ray Tosti-Guerra on guitar and vocals; joined by Geoff Crosby on keyboards; and Greg Perano on percussion (ex-True Wheels).[1][2] They were expanded by a horn section, later dubbed Horns of Contempt, comprising Nigel Crocker and Michael Waters, both on trombone; Jack Howard, Andy Lynn and Chris Malherbe, each on trumpet; and Jeremy Smith on French horn.[1][2]

Mushroom Records specifically formed a new alternative label, White Label Records, when they signed Hunters & Collectors.[1][3] Their first release was World of Stone, a three-track extended play in January 1982.[1][2] Hunters & Collectors, followed on 26 July 1982 and was produced by the group with Sydney-based engineer Tony Cohen recording at AAV Studios, Melbourne.[1][2] The album peaked at No. 21 on the Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart.[4] Their first single from the album, "Talking to a Stranger" was released ahead of the album on 12 July,[5] and was accompanied by a music video directed by film maker Richard Lowenstein,[1] but it did not reach the Top 50 singles chart.[4]

By this time, Tosti-Guerra was replaced by Martin Lubran on guitar and the Horns of Contempt were reduced to three, Howard, Smith and Waters.[1][2] In July this line up contributed four new tracks for the United States version of Hunters & Collectors, which retained three tracks from the Australian version.[6] The co-producer for the new tracks was Mike Howlett, which were released in Australia as the group's second extended play, Payload, on 6 December 1982.[1][2] Howlett had also remixed "Talking to a Stranger" for the US version of the album.[5]

In early 1983, the band began a six-month tour of the United Kingdom and signed to Virgin Records, who combined their album, Hunters & Collectors and the Payload EP into a UK LP re-release of Hunters & Collectors.[1][2] The US version of the album was released on the Oz Records label, the US imprint of Mushroom Records and was distributed by A&M Records.[2] In July 1991 the album was re-issued on compact disc, which included all three tracks from World of Stone.[2][7] In August 2003 the latter version was re-released by Liberation Blue.[2]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars[6]

Some years later, Allmusic's Bill Cassel found Hunters & Collectors (US version) to be "seething art funk comparable to a harder-edged Shriekback or less political Gang of Four";[6] at the time of its launch, Shriekback had only released one EP. Their lyrics "are stream-of-consciousness poetics that range from the merely incomprehensible to the downright silly".[6] Seymour's vocal delivery "does not sound entirely comfortable" while the "muscular rhythms" of Archer and Falconer "motor right over the young band's shortcomings".[6]

Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, felt that the album provided "one of the band's early classics" with the lead single, "Talking to a Stranger", and lauded its "radical film clip" by Lowenstein.[1] The track was "an expression of alienation and sheer anguish".[1] While fellow music journalist, Ed Nimmervoll, opined "[its] theme of alienation and anguish is one the band would return to, but for the moment the group's emphasis was the free-form side of their work".[3]

Track listing

The original release (White Label L-42002) was as an LP plus a 12" single.

All writing: John Archer, Geoff Crosby, Doug Falconer, Robert Miles, Greg Perano, Mark Seymour, Ray Tosti-Guerra;[8] unless otherwise indicated

Side 1
No. Title Length
1. "Talking to a Stranger"   7:18
2. "Alligator Engine" (Perano, Tosti-Guerra, Seymour, Miles) 5:45
3. "Skin of Our Teeth"   7:51
Side 2
No. Title Length
1. "Scream Who"   4:04
2. "Junket Head"   5:39
3. "Boo Boo Kiss"   5:39
Side 3
No. Title Length
1. "Tender Kinder Baby"   4:38
Side 4
No. Title Length
1. "Run Run Run" (Archer, Crosby, Falconer, Seymour) 8:54

All songs written and composed by John Archer, Geoff Crosby, Doug Falconer, Robert Miles, Greg Perano, Mark Seymour, Ray Tosti-Guerra;[8] unless otherwise indicated. 

Personnel

Credited to:[1][2]

Production details
  • Producer – Hunters & Collectors
  • Engineer – Tony Cohen (except "Boo Boo Kiss"), Jim Barton (track "Boo Boo Kiss")
  • Mixer – Robert Miles, Jim Barton
  • Studios – AAV Studios, Melbourne

Chart performance

Year Chart Peak
position
Certifications
1982 Australian Albums Chart[4][10] 21 Gold
New Zealand Albums Chart[11] 14 Gold

Release history

Region Date Label Format Catalogue
Australia/New Zealand 26 July 1982 White/Mushroom Vinyl album L42002
US/Canada 1983 Oz/A&M SP-04973
UK/Europe 1983 Virgin VS 566-12
Australia July 1991 White/Mushroom CD D19490
August 2003 Liberation Blue BLUE020.2

References

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