Something Quite Peculiar

Something Quite Peculiar
Studio album by The Dear & Departed
Released May 22, 2007 (2007-05-22)
Recorded December 2006 (2006-12)
Genre new wave, post-punk, indie rock
Length 57:22
Label Science (cat: #102396)
Producer Chris Vrenna & Jade Puget
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link

Something Quite Peculiar is the debut album by The Dear & Departed. The album was released May 22, 2007, on Science Records. It features the single "Tonight's the Night" and a cover of The Church's "Under the Milky Way". It was recorded in November and December 2006 at the Mouse House (Pasadena, CA), Hurley Studio (Costa Mesa, CA) and Chris Vrenna's private studio (Eagle Rock, CA).

Track listing

All tracks written by The Dear & Departed except "Under the Milky Way" by Steve Kilbey and Karin Jansson[1].

No.TitleLength
1."And We Begin..."2:28
2."I Will Love Again"3:02
3."Masquerade"3:21
4."Fly Me Away"4:36
5."Tonight's the Night"3:58
6."Hometown Hero"4:10
7."To Cut a Long Story Short"5:07
8."Bordering on Ordinary"4:14
9."Return to Sender"5:00
10."Closer/Closure"3:58
11."Are You Feeling Awkward Yet?"3:49
12."The Fireflies"4:35
13."Running Against the Wind"4:27
14."Under the Milky Way" (The Church cover)4:42
B-sides

1. "Day to Day"

2. "If You Say So"

3. "Run Away"

Personnel

Band members
  • Dan Under – vocals, backing vocals
  • Simon O'Gorman – guitar
  • Joel Bourne – drums
  • Darren Parkinson – guitar
  • David Williams – bass, backing vocals
Guest musicians
  • Steven Looker – backing vocals
  • Anthony Navarro – backing vocals
  • Matt Baker – keyboards
  • Dallas Green – vocals on "To Cut a Long Story Short"
  • Jessica Origliasso – vocals on "Under the Milky Way"
  • Roxy Buster – vocals on "Bordering on Ordinary" & "Return to Sender".
  • Isabelle Buster – vocals on "Return to Sender".
Technical staff
  • Chris Vrenna – producer, engineer
  • Jade Puget – producer
  • Kevin Estrada – cover photography
  • Roc Aguilar – band photography
  • Scott Wade – art direction & design

References

  1. "Something Quite Peculiar". Retrieved 4 June 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.