The Black Swan (The Triffids Album)
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''The Black Swan'' is the fifth and final studio album by
The Triffids The Triffids were an Australian alternative rock and pop band, formed in Perth in Western Australia in May 1978 with David McComb as singer-songwriter, guitarist, bass guitarist and keyboardist.McFarlane (1999). Encyclopedia entry fo"The Triff ...
, released in April 1989 and peaking at No. 59 on the Australian Album Charts. NOTE: Used for Australian Singles and Albums charting from 1970 until
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created their own
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in mid-1988.
The album was originally conceived as a double album. In the recording sessions the Triffids were joined by producer Stephen Street (
the Smiths The Smiths were an English rock band formed in Manchester in 1982. They comprised the singer Morrissey, the guitarist Johnny Marr, the bassist Andy Rourke and the drummer Mike Joyce. They are regarded as one of the most important acts to eme ...
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Strangeways, Here We Come ''Strangeways, Here We Come'' is the fourth and final studio album by English rock band the Smiths. It was released on 28 September 1987 by Rough Trade Records, several months after the group had disbanded. All of the songs were composed by Jo ...
'' and Morrissey's ''
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''). ''The Black Swan'' used a greater variety of musical instruments than their previous albums with
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, güiro and accordion and a more obvious use of synths and programming. The title of the album was originally going to be ''Disappointment Resort Complex'' but was renamed to ''The Black Swan'', which according to a 1989 interview by Stephen Phillips (''
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'') with David McComb is based on the 1954 novel of the same name by
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.


Background

The chosen single from the album, " Goodbye Little Boy", featured Jill Birt on vocals and 'glammed up' for the record sleeve. "Too Hot To Move" was one of three songs written by David McComb which were used in the ABC TV series ''
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'' (1984) it had lead vocals by
Deborah Conway Deborah Ann Conway (born 8 August 1959) is an Australian rock singer-songwriter and guitarist, and had a career as a model and actress. She was a founding member of the 1980s rock band Do-Ré-Mi with their top 5 hit "Man Overboard". Conw ...
(of Do-Ré-Mi). McComb bought back the rights to "Too Hot To Move" so that The Triffids could perform it again. The cover photograph was taken in the stables at the rear of The Cliffe, the historic
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home in which David and Robert McComb grew up. A deluxe version of the album, with a 17-track bonus disc of demos, was released in Australia on 7 June 2008 through Liberation Music. When the album was reissued with extra tracks, "Evil" Graham Lee noted it had, "often been considered a stylistic mess but we thought it just our kind of mess. What's the matter with mess anyway? I've gone out on a limb with this one, at Dave's request. He had hoped this record could be a double album when it was recorded - he knew it was so varied that it sounded like nothing else anyone was doing at the time and he thought you shouldn't do things by halves.


Reception

Q said, "All 13 songs develop like variations on a theme. McComb usually portrays one half of a broken relationship contemplating sober or unsober home truths about life's fallibilities from uncomfortable isolation. The musical settings are constantly stunning."
AllMusic AllMusic (previously known as All Music Guide and AMG) is an American online music database. It catalogs more than three million album entries and 30 million tracks, as well as information on musicians and bands. Initiated in 1991, the databa ...
noted, "while previous Triffids albums were never homogeneous, on ''The Black Swan'' strikingly disparate stylistic elements rub shoulders, sometimes during the same song, from opera to funk to jazz to rap and hip-hop. Frontman David McComb saw the potential of rap and hip-hop to reenergize rock's increasingly dull, uniform idiom and several numbers blend genres in modest but prescient ways."
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said, "''Black Swan'' was intended to be the Triffids' '' White Album''. As is the often the way with such things, it wasn't - though the band's leader, the late David McComb, certainly had no shortage of ideas on how acoustic and electronic music could be put together. (Too many ideas, in fact: half of this could be painlessly dropped.)


Track listing

All tracks written by Dave McComb unless otherwise noted.APRA database
at the Australasian Performing Right Association website (search each song title) # "Too Hot to Move" - 4:12 # "American Sailors" - 0:41 # " Falling Over You" (David McComb, Adam Peters) - 3:43 # " Goodbye Little Boy" (David McComb, Adam Peters) - 3:28 # "Bottle of Love" (David McComb, Phil Kakulas, James Patterson) - 2:54 # "The Spinning Top Song" (David McComb, Adam Peters) - 3:36 # "Butterflies into Worms" (David McComb, Phil Kakulas) - 3:20 # "New Year's Greetings" - 5:43 # "Good Fortune Rose" (Jill Birt, Alsy MacDonald) - 3:33 # "One Mechanic Town" - 3:11 # "Blackeyed Susan" (David McComb, Phil Kakulas) - 4:02 # "The Clown Prince" (David McComb, Phil Kakulas) - 4:37 # "Fairytale Love" - 3:51


2008 Reissue

Disc 1: # Too Hot to Move, Too Hot to Think # American Sailors # Falling Over You # Goodbye Little Boy # Bottle of Love # Go Home Eddie # The Spinning Top Song # Butterflies into Worms # I Can't Help Falling in Love # New Year's Greetings # Good Fortune Rose # Shell of the Man # One Mechanic Town # Jack's Hole # Black-Eyed Susan # You Minus Me # The Clown Prince # Fairytale Love # How Could I Help But Love You Disc 2: # Too Hot to Move, Too Hot to Think (Demo) # American Sailors (Demo) # Why Don't You Leave for Good This Time (Demo) # Bottle of Love (Demo) # The Spinning Top Song (Demo) # Butterflies into Worms (Demo) # New Year's Greetings (The Country Widower) (Demo) # Good Fortune Rose (Demo) # One Mechanic Town (Demo) # Jack's Hole (Demo) # Black-Eyed Susan (Demo) # You Minus Me (Demo) # The Clown Prince (Demo) # Fairytale Love (Demo) # (You've Got) A Funny Way of Showing You Love Me (Demo) # No More After You (Demo) # In the Dark (Demo)


Personnel


The Triffids

Credited to: * David McComb * Alsy MacDonald *
Robert McComb Robert Harold McComb is an Australian musician who played guitar, violin, organ, and other instruments with Perth-based rock group The Triffids, from 1979 to 1989. He is the older brother of the band's founder and lead singer-songwriter, Davi ...
* Martyn Casey * 'Evil' Graham Lee * Jill Birt


Additional musicians

* Adam Peters * Philip Kakulas * Rita Menendez


References


External links

*
A Retrospective with Graham Lee and Rob McComb by Wilson Neate
{{DEFAULTSORT:Black Swan, The 1989 albums The Triffids albums Albums produced by Stephen Street