Hunters & Collectors
The Way To Go Out

White    D 27148  (1985)
Recording Date   1984

Rock/Pop
CD, 8   Tracks, 39:05  Length
01 Throw Your Arms Around Me John Archer; Geoff Crosby; Doug Falconer; Jack Howard; Robert Miles; Mark Seymour; Michael Waters 05:08
02 The Way To Go Out John Archer; Geoff Crosby; Doug Falconer; Jack Howard; Robert Miles; Mark Seymour; Michael Waters 04:35
03 Little Chalkie John Archer; Geoff Crosby; Doug Falconer; Martin Lubran; Robert Miles; Greg Perano; Mark Seymour; Michael Waters 03:30
04 Follow Me No More John Archer; Geoff Crosby; Doug Falconer; Robert Miles; Mark Seymour; Michael Waters 06:46
05 I Couldn't Give It To You John Archer; Geoff Crosby; Doug Falconer; Robert Miles; Mark Seymour; Michael Waters 03:52
06 The Slab John Archer; Geoff Crosby; Doug Falconer; Robert Miles; Mark Seymour; Michael Waters 04:54
07 Carry Me John Archer; Geoff Crosby; Doug Falconer; Robert Miles; Mark Seymour; Michael Waters 04:19
08 I Believe Ray Charles 06:01
Music Details
Product Details
Venue Venue, The
City, State/Country Melbourne, Australia
Packaging Jewel Case
Live Yes
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Mark Seymour
Bass John Archer
Drums Doug Falconer
Trumpet Jack Howard
French Horn Jeremy Smith
Trombone Michael Waters
Musician Hunters & Collectors
Producer Hunters & Collectors
Engineer Robert Miles
Personal Details
Index # 1567
Owner Dave
Tags Garage Rock
User Defined
Purchased Used
Imported from Australia
Notes
Comments from the “Natural Selection” liner notes (by Mark Seymour):

Love songs are hard enough to pull off tastefully. The strength of Arms is in its honesty, and a very simple hooky chorus. Other than that there isn’t much else to say. It’s personal. Hunters played it with great force and conviction. Though many have covered it, the best version is this live one from ‘Under One Roof’.



“Throw Your Arms Around Me” is the song that Hunters and Collectors are best remembered for – for better or worse. It still gets played at least somewhere in the country at most times of the day. Whenever a “best Australian songs” list comes up, the chances are Throw Your Arms will be in there somewhere. Big names have covered the song – artists such as Pearl Jam and Crowded House, who have sold more records than Hunters and Collectors could have dreamed of.

The first version of Throw Your Arms to surface was a very raw very on the live album “The Way To Go Out”. It often seems hard to imagine that this extremely raw song went on to become as popular as it is. This version is never played on radio and generally not that well known about. If you are new to Hunters and Collectors, this is NOT the version to start with. Most people who are not fans do not think much of this version at all.

Throw Your Arms was popularised with the 1986 “Human Frailty” version, a more refined but still decidedly raw guitar driven pop song. This version did not chart that well (peaked at number 49) but would have contributed a lot towards sales of “Human Frailty” and is still played on radio today. Modern rock stations prefer this version to the extremely refined 1990 version.

The band had another shot at the song with the release of “Collected Works” in 1990. This version is a very refined version with a much improved vocal. While this suits it to pop radio, it lacks a bit of the appeal of the 1986 version in that it is not so raw.