Internationalist (album)

Internationalist (album)

Infobox Album |
Name = Internationalist
Type = studio
Artist = Powderfinger


Released = flagicon|Australia 7 September 1998
Recorded = Sing Sing Studios, Melbourne, Australia
Genre = Alternative rock
Reviews =
* Allmusic rating|3|5 [http://wm01.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:hbftxq8jldje link]
* "Rolling Stone" (favourable) November 1998
* "Juice" (mixed) November 1998
Length = 45:33
Label = Polydor
Producer = Nick DiDia
Last album = "Double Allergic"
(1996)
This album = "Internationalist"
(1998)
Next album = "The Triple M Acoustic Sessions"
(1999)
Misc = Singles
Name = Internationalist
Type = studio
single 1 = The Day You Come
single 1 date = 10 August 1998
single 2 = Don't Wanna Be Left Out"
"
Good-Day Ray

single 2 date = 9 November 1998
single 3 = Already Gone
single 3 date = 12 February 1999
single 4 = Passenger
single 4 date = 9 August 1999

"Internationalist" is the third studio album by Australian alternative rock band, Powderfinger. The album was released on 7 September 1998 and was often labelled Powderfinger's most adventurous work, with greater experimentation than in previous works.

"Internationalist" followed in the success of its predecessor, "Double Allergic", and was certified five times platinum in Australia. "Internationalist" received four ARIA Music Awards, including "Album of the Year". The album produced four singles for the band; "The Day You Come", "Don't Wanna Be Left Out/Good-Day Ray", "Already Gone" and "Passenger", which all appeared on Triple J's Hottest 100 poll in two consecutive years.

"Internationalist" received fairly positive reviewers in the Australian press, and cemented Powderfinger's position on the local music scene; however, the album failed to launch the band in the overseas market.

Background

Powderfinger spent much of early 1997 touring, after the success of "Double Allergic". Songwriter Bernard Fanning then spent much of 1997 writing songs for "Internationalist" in Brisbane, drawing on inspiration from a mid-1997 band trip to the United States. [cite news|title=Hot Ticket|publisher="The Sunday Telegraph"|date=2 November 1997|author=Fountaine, Angus ]

The album's title refers to escapism—namely, the ability that an "" has to escape from racial and social tension. When asked in a "Juice" interview, Bernard Fanning summarised the title of the album by stating;

Recording and production

"Internationalist" was recorded at Melbourne's Sing Sing Studios, with Powderfinger accompanied by American producer Nick DiDia for the first time. As the band had already prepared "about 30 or 40" songs when they entered the studio, DiDia's task was relatively minor. Bassist John Collins said of DiDia; "Nick was really good. The way Nick based the record was that he wanted to record the band how we were at that particular moment, he didn’t want to play around too much." As a result of this attitude, the band only spent one month in the studio, and the album was mixed by DiDia soon after.cite news|title=Taking Flight|publisher="Juice"|author=Clode, Samantha|date=October 1998 ] Powderfinger used the extra time to play table tennis, which was the band's recreation of choice during the "Internationalist" and "Odyssey Number Five" recording sessions. [cite news|title=Mission Impossible|publisher="Rolling Stone"|date=August 2000 ]

Collins described the album as not being as easy listening as their previous work, and that it contained numerous experiments in songwriting that they had not put into previous albums. Fanning later said "Internationalist" was "a better record" than "Double Allergic", but acknowledged that it was not as easily likeable—it was just an improvement in songwriting. Collins and Fanning acknowledged that the album's experimental nature could lose them some old fans, but the pair drew parallels with bands such as U2, who Collins said had "constantly re-invented themselves, and with success". He said Powderfinger's reinvention was as much for the band's own interest as it was for the "public's perception". Meanwhile, guitarist Ian Haug described the album as a "moderation" between "Parables for Wooden Ears" ("the complicated beast") and "Double Allergic" ("totally simplified"), Powderfinger's two previous albums.cite news|title=The Beckoning Finger|publisher="Juice"|author=Watts, Benedict|date=November 1998 ] He also agreed that the album was much more experimental, and described the album as the band's "most successful", as well as stating that the album that best replicated "the sound we have live".cite news|title=Allergic Internationalists|publisher="hEARd Online Music Magazine"|year=1999 ]

Numerous songs on "Internationalist" were politically and socially influenced, although the band denied it being a deliberate motif. Fanning explaining that the band did not intentionally discuss political issues, saying "we don't try to do anything in particular". He noted, however, that the songs, as his emotional responses to recent events, could inevitably be interpreted as being political.cite news|title=Talkin' Politics?|publisher="Beat"|author=Johnson, Neala|date=December 1998 ] When "The Day You Come" was released, there was speculation that it alluded to Pauline Hanson's One Nation political party, although the band claimed the song was vague and didn't specifically refer to one person. Fanning said of "The Day You Come";

Single releases

The first single from the album was "The Day You Come", a politically and socially influenced song that mused about Pauline Hanson's One Nation party. The band did not intend for it to be the first single, and released it only when they could not decide on anything else. Haug said it being "a pretty inoffensive song musically" helped Powderfinger make that decision. "The Day You Come" spent nine weeks on the ARIA Charts, peaking at #25. [cite web|url=http://www.australian-charts.com/showitem.asp?key=286146&cat=s|title=Powderfinger - The Day You Come|publisher=australian-charts.com|accessdate=2007-12-17]

The second single was the double a-side, "Don't Wanna Be Left Out/Good-Day Ray", released on 9 November 1998. "Don't Wanna Be Left Out", a song about a friend of Fanning's who had difficulty in social situations, was one of the roughest Powderfinger songs to date. Drummer Jon Coghill described it as the most difficult Powderfinger song to play live at the time, because it was so "fast and offbeat".cite web|title=Powderfinger (Int. With Jon Coghill)|url=http://www.australianmusician.com.au/mag/spring99/powderfinger.html|publisher="Australian Musician"|month=September | year=1999|author=Eliezer, Christie|accessdate=2008-08-10] The music video for "Don't Wanna Be Left Out" was unpopular and drew criticism from band members. "Good-Day Ray" was dedicated to Australian television presenter Ray Martin and his public disagreements with former "Media Watch" host Stuart Littlemore. Its lyrics verged on punk, though Coghill denied that Powderfinger were a punk band.cite news|title=Fingers feted at home|author=Yorke, Ritchie|date=15 November 1998|publisher="The Sunday Mail" ] He also described the music video for "Good-Day Ray" as being one of the better videos the band had made.

"Internationalists third single was "Already Gone", released on 12 February 1999. The song was a tribute to The Beatles and their influence on Powderfinger's music.Powderfinger (2004). ' companion booklet.] The fourth and final single from the album was "Passenger", released on 9 August 1999. "Passenger" was influenced by Elvis Presley, and included a big horn section, as well as backing vocals from folk group Tiddas.cite news|title=Primed for P2K Tour|author=Pascuzzi, Carmine |publisher="Media Search"] "Passenger" won the ARIA Award for "Song Of The Year" in 1999.cite news|title=Trusty Old Jackets|publisher="Massive"|author=Yates, Rod|date=September 2000|accessdate=2007-11-11] The song's music video was one of Powderfinger's first to feature computer graphics, and was produced by Fifty Fifty Films.cite web|url=http://www.fiftyfifty.tv/cgi-bin/CMS.pl?T=1&P=0|title=www.fiftyfifty.tv|publisher=Fifty Fifty films|accessdate=2007-10-18] "Passenger" spent 11 weeks on the ARIA Charts, peaking at #30. [cite web|url=http://www.australian-charts.com/showitem.asp?key=286152&cat=s|title=Powderfinger - Passenger|publisher=australian-charts.com|accessdate=2007-12-17] It appeared at #48 on Max's top 100 songs from the 90s list.cite web|url=http://maxtv.com.au/Max/Article.aspx?id=1282 |title=MAX's Top 500 90s Songs - Essential 100|publisher=MAX|accessdate=2008-08-10|date=2 August 2007]

Touring and promotion

Powderfinger went on a nationwide tour after the release of "Internationalist", performing with British band Swervedriver and fellow Brisbane band Not From There in capital cities across Australia. In 1999, the band also toured with Something for Kate and Alex Lloyd.cite news|title=Powder And The Glory|publisher="The Sydney Morning Herald"|pages=3|author=Mathieson, Craig|date=23 July 1999 ] Collins described the process of choosing who the band would play with as a simple matter of choosing whose music the band preferred, stating "we had played with most of the bands, and if you're going on tour with someone you may as well go with someone you get along with and whose music you enjoy." Despite being fans of Swervedriver, who were renowned for "their capability to reproduce their album sound perfectly in the live setting" according to "Beat"'s Neala Johnson, Fanning said Powderfinger would never attempt to replicate them, because he believed their live shows to be much more "emotionally powerful" than recordings.

With "Internationalist", Powderfinger first set their sights overseas, appearing at numerous music festivals in the U.S., including South by Southwest in Texas.cite news|title=Day Dream Believers|publisher="The Courier-Mail"|author=Six, Nicola|date=19 November 1998 ] While in the U.S., Powderfinger played several showcase performances to record-label representatives in Los Angeles and New York City. In a later interview in Australia, Fanning said these shows were difficult due to the lack of any homegrown fan support. He also said the band were not focused at the shows, and thus they did not go as well as he had hoped.cite news|title=Finger On The Pulse|publisher="HIT"|author=Bolster, Teresa|date=December 1998 ] Coghill, however, described the showcases, and the performances in Austin, as "worthwhile" and "fun". After performing in the United States, Powderfinger completed a tour of Canada. Fanning described the band's overseas outlook as a necessity for an Australian-based band, as "people [in Australia] are going to get sick of you pretty quickly if you're going to do five tours a year, so that you can sustain yourself financially."

Reception

"Internationalist" debuted at the top of the ARIA Albums Chart, and was certified gold in its first week, selling over 35,000 copies. [cite web|url=http://www.aria.com.au/pages/aria-charts-accreditations-albums-1998.htm|title=ARIA Charts - Accreditations - 1998 Albums|publisher=ARIA|accessdate=2007-11-19] It then went on to go platinum, [cite web|url=http://www.aria.com.au/pages/aria-charts-accreditations-albums-1999.htm|title=ARIA Charts - Accreditations - 1999 Albums|publisher=ARIA|accessdate=2007-11-19] and is currently certified platinum five times, for 350,000 copies.cite web|url=http://www.aria.com.au/pages/httpwww.aria.com.aupagesARIACharts-Accreditations-2007Albums.htm |title=ARIA Charts - Accreditations - 2007 Albums|publisher=Australian Recording Industry Association|accessdate=2007-12-22] At the 1999 ARIA Awards, the album received three awards—"Album of the Year", "Best Rock Album", and "Best Cover Art". "The Day You Come" also won "Single of the Year". In 2000, "Passenger" was nominated for three awards, but did not win any.

Haug said he was amazed with the highly positive critical response the album had received, surprised that "even Molly [Meldrum] gave it nine out of ten." The positivity of the album's reception created a feeling of surrealism, and Haug told "Juice" "I wish someone would write a really bad [review] ." Nonetheless, he appreciated the credibility the album helped Powderfinger develop. Coghill agreed with Haug on the album's popularity, stating "you couldn't ask for much better", and saying he really took notice of the album's positive critical commentary. "Juice"'s Benedict Watts said it received "a level of universal praise not yet dished out on an Australian release since You Am I's "Hi Fi Way". Despite Polydor telling the band the album would be heavily marketed, Fanning still found its success surprising.cite news|title=Fish Tales|publisher=Juice|author=Clode, Samantha|date=December 1998 ] "HIT"'s Teresa Bolster suggested Fanning feared the worst during songwriting; "Celebrity Head", a song on the album, was seen as a "pre-emptive, scathing attack on music writers", which he argued was intended as a joke.

"Internationalist"'s critical reception was positive, following in its chart success. "The Courier-Mail"'s Nicola Six called it the band's most diverse album yet, using "The Day You Come" as an example; its "opening staccato guitar riff to the way the bass blends with Bernard Fanning's almost-falsetto in the final chorus" made it the "perfect first single". Watts said it "brilliantly pre-empts the mood and progressive nature of the album", and Allmusic's Jonathan Lewis described it as the best track on the album.cite web|url=http://wm01.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:hbftxq8jldje |title=Internationalist > Review|publisher=Allmusic|author=Lewis, Jonathan|accessdate=2008-08-10] "The Weekend Australian"'s Iain Shedden said it was "one of the best Australian rock songs of the decade".cite news|title=Up Close (And Not Too) Personal|publisher="The Weekend Australian"|author=Shedden, Iain|date=10 July 1999 ]

"The Day You Come" was not the only single to draw praise; "Don't Wanna Be Left Out" was described as "surf guitar-fuelled", "Good Day Ray" as "thrashy", and "HIT"'s Teresa Bolster wrote that the released of the two as an a-side displayed the album's true scope to the public. Allmusic approved of the "rocking" "Don't Wanna Be Left Out", but said Powderfinger sacrificed their uniqueness on "Good Day Ray", which Lewis argued was heavily Foo Fighters influenced. Lewis approved of the "melodic" "Already Gone", while "Juice"'s Simon Wooldridge said it and "Passenger" demonostrated Powderfinger's "flair for the big hook".cite news|title=This Sporting Life|publisher="Juice"|author=Wooldridge, Simon|date=September 2000 ]

"Beat"'s Neala Johnson compared the album's political motifs to the Manic Street Preachers—"an earnest, sometimes cynical, social and personal conscience displayed in the lyrics". Noel Mangel of "The Courier-Mail" said it had "a lightness of touch and boisterous spirit", especially compared to the distorted guitars on debut album "Parables for Wooden Ears".cite news|title=Budding Internationalists|author=Mangel, Noel|publisher="The Courier-Mail"|date=16 November 1999 ] "Time Off"'s Geoff Nicholson said "Internationalist" was "a blend of shimmering pop songs and thought-provoking probing".cite news|title=Keeping An Even Keel |publisher="Time Off"|author=Nicholson, Geoof|date=17 November 1999 ]

Track listing

# "Hindley Street" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 3:41
# "Belter" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 4:13
# "The Day You Come" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 4:00
# "Already Gone" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 3:28
# "Passenger" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 4:20
# "Don't Wanna Be Left Out" (Fanning/Middleton/Powderfinger) – 2:12
# "Good-Day Ray" (Coghill/Fanning/Powderfinger) – 1:58
# "Trading Places" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 4:27
# "Private Man" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 3:40
# "Celebrity Head" (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 2:20
# "Over My Head" (Middleton) – 1:36
# "Capoicity" (See Powderfinger's Oi Song Trilogy) (Fanning/Powderfinger) – 5:44
# "Lemon Sunrise" (Fanning/Middleton/Powderfinger) – 3:34

"P2K" bonus disc

The second release of pressings of the album were released in late November 1998 which included a bonus disc featuring a live recording of Powderfinger's performance at the Sydney Opera House 25th birthday celebration in October 1998.

# "Passenger" – 4:42
# "Private Man" – 4:01
# "Don't Wanna Be Left Out" – 2:55
# "Pick You Up" – 5:51
# "The Day You Come" – 4:36

Personnel

*Bernard Fanningvocals, guitars, piano, keyboards
*Darren Middleton — backing vocals, guitars, piano, keyboards
*Ian Haug — guitar, handclaps, backing vocals
*John Collinsbass guitar, bass and organ pedals, backing vocals
*Jon Coghilldrums, percussion, handclaps, backing vocals
*Tiddas — backing vocals
*Nick DiDiaproduction, engineering, mixing
*Lachlan "Magoo" Goold, Mark McElligott — additional engineering
*Michael Mucci — artwork
*Sophie Howarth — photography

Award nominations and accolades

ARIA Awards

"Internationalist" and singles from it have been nominated to win ARIA Music Awards from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) in two consecutive years.

Other awards

In 1999, "The Day You Come" was nominated to win the "Song of the Year" APRA Award from the Australasian Performing Right Association, [cite web|url=http://www.apra.com.au/awards/music/noms1999.asp|title=APRA Music Awards 1999|work=Nominations|publisher=Australasian Performing Right Association|accessdate=2007-12-16] and "Passenger" was won the same award the following year.cite web|url=http://www.apra.com.au/awards/music/winners2000.asp|title=APRA Music Awards 2000|work=Winners|publisher=Australasian Performing Right Association|accessdate=2007-12-16] The same year, the tracks "Already Gone", "Good-Day Ray" and "Passenger" all featured in Triple J's Hottest 100 list,cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hottest100/history/1999.htm|title=Hottest 100 History 1999|publisher=Triple J|work=History|accessdate=2007-12-16] and "Don't Wanna Be Left Out" and "The Day You Come" featured in the list in 1998. [cite web | title=Hottest 100 History 1998 | url=http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hottest100/history/1998.htm | work=History|publisher=Triple J | accessdate=2007-12-16] Australian music magazine "Juice" selected "Internationalist" as #80 of their top 100 albums of the 1990s. [cite web|url=http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/juice.html|title=JUICE 100 Greatest Albums of the '90s|publisher=Rocklistmusic.co.uk|work=Juice|accessdate=2007-12-17]

See also

*
* Full discography

References

succession box
before = "Follow the Leader" by KoЯn
title = Australian ARIA Albums Chart number-one album
years = September 20 - September 26, 1998
after = "Mechanical Animals" by Marilyn Manson


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