Shriekback
Oil and Gold

Island    90276-2  (1985)

Rock/Pop
CD, 10   Tracks, 44:12  Length
01 Malaria Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 04:29
02 Everything That Rises Must Converge Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 04:04
03 Fish Below the Ice Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 04:24
04 The Big Hush Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 06:11
05 Faded Flowers Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 03:44
06 Nemesis Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 03:43
07 Only Thing That Shines Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 04:23
08 Health and Knowledge and Wealth and Power Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 04:44
09 Hammerheads Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 04:17
10 Coelocanth Dave Allen; Barry Andrews; Martyn Barker; Carl Marsh 04:13
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Keyboards Barry Andrews
Guitar Carl Marsh
Bass Dave Allen
Drums Martyn Barker
Guitar Lu Edmonds
Musician Shriekback
Producer Barry Andrews
Engineer Austin Ince; Hans Zimmer; Ian Caple; Simaen Skolfield
Personal Details
Index # 3067
Owner Dave
Tags New Wave, Synth Pop
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Oil and Gold is surprising for several reasons. For one, the departure of singer/guitarist Carl Marsh midway through produced no noticeable dip in the record's quality. For another, live drums appear for the first time on a Shriekback album, thanks to Martyn Barker, a longtime associate who was added to the band at the tail end of the Jam Science sessions. Most surprising, though, is how much this album rocks out, particularly on the songs featuring ex-Damned guitarist Lu Edmonds. It even yielded an out of left field hit single in "Nemesis," which not only uses the word "parthenogenesis," but rhymes it successfully, and does so in the chorus. In truth, Oil and Gold is six-tenths of a great album. It leads off with the rip-roaring one-two-three punch of "Malaria," "Everything That Rises Must Converge," and "Fish Below the Ice," all featuring Marsh on vocals. These are followed by "This Big Hush" and "Faded Flowers," two tremendously beautiful slow numbers sung by Barry Andrews, who took over for Marsh as lead vocalist. The B side (vinylly speaking) begins nicely with "Nemesis" and quickly falls apart, with the nadir being the clunkers "Health and Knowledge and Wealth and Power" (sung by Marsh) and "Hammerheads" (sung by Andrews). Still, Oil and Gold's highlights make it a rewarding listen. -- Bill Cassel (allmusic.com)