Cold Chisel
Cold Chisel

Atlantic    8573804492  (1978)

Rock/Pop
CD, 12   Tracks, 52:24  Length
01 Juliet Don Walker; Jimmy Barnes 02:44
02 Khe Sanh Don Walker 04:13
03 Home And Broken Hearted Don Walker 03:25
04 One Long Day Don Walker 07:22
05 Northbound Don Walker 03:14
06 Rosaline Don Walker 04:46
07 Daskarzine Don Walker 05:09
08 Just How Many Times Don Walker 05:23
09 Teenage Love Affair Don Walker 06:03
10 Drinkin' In Port Lincoln Don Walker 03:24
11 H-Hour Hotel Don Walker 03:26
12 On The Road Don Walker 03:15
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Jimmy Barnes
Guitar Ian Moss
Keyboards Don Walker
Bass Phil Small
Drums Steve Prestwich
Musician Cold Chisel
Producer Peter Walker
Engineer Peter Walker
Personal Details
Index # 700
Owner Dave
Tags Hard Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Imported from Australia
Notes
By the time Aussie rockers Cold Chisel did their sold-out farewell shows at the Sydney Entertainment Centre in December of 1983, they had established themselves as one of the all-time legendary bands down under. But this is the album that lit the fuse in the days when the crowds were eager but thin. After migrating from their home town of Adelaide, South Australia, to the big smoke of Sydney in 1977, the Chisels gained a rep for slugging it out on the pub circuit with an ardor worthy of their illustrious forebears AC/DC. But as Cold Chisel clearly illustrates, Chisel was a band married as much to melody as power. Pianist Don Walker's songwriting reflects an emotional depth and range rarely rivaled by other max-volume outfits. The Vietnam-vet song "Khe Sanh" became one of Aussie rock's most enduring anthems with its punchy piano line and everyman pathos. But full-throttle rockers like "Juliet," "Home and Broken Hearted," and "Daskarzine" -- with Ian Moss' Page/Hendrix-tinted guitar histrionics blitzing away -- packed all the clout pub fans could want. At the other end of the spectrum, gin-soaked ballads like "Rosaline" and "Just How Many Times" reveal the band's predilection for the occasional jazz/blues-inflected number. An enhanced, remastered version of the disc was released in May 2000 and included four bonus tracks. The lyrical imagery, the mix of musical finesse and freneticism, and Barnes' razor-wire vocals all came together in perfect synergy on this stunning debut album. At once polished and raw, this is a classic. -- Adrian Zupp (allmusic.com)