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Golden Rule (Deluxe Edition)
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Album: Golden Rule (Deluxe Edition)
# Song Title   Time
1)    Camino de la Muerte, El
2)    All of the Dreamers
3)    Burn Your Name
4)    Fight About Money, A
5)    Sail the Wildest Stretch
6)    Poison in Your Mind
7)    Iberian Dream
8)    Jewel
9)    Think It Over
10)    Awake
11)    Stand Yourself
12)    Golden Rule
1)    Waiting for the Sun
2)    My Kind of Scene
3)    Nobody Sees
4)    Sweetlip
5)    Bless My Soul
6)    Lost and Running
7)    JC
8)    Trading Places
9)    These Days
 

Album: Golden Rule (Deluxe Edition)
# Song Title   Time
1)    Camino de la Muerte, El
2)    All of the Dreamers
3)    Burn Your Name
4)    Fight About Money, A
5)    Sail the Wildest Stretch
6)    Poison in Your Mind
7)    Iberian Dream
8)    Jewel
9)    Think It Over
10)    Awake
11)    Stand Yourself
12)    Golden Rule
1)    Waiting for the Sun
2)    My Kind of Scene
3)    Nobody Sees
4)    Sweetlip
5)    Bless My Soul
6)    Lost and Running
7)    JC
8)    Trading Places
9)    These Days
 
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Performer Notes
  • Personnel: Bernard Fanning (vocals, guitar, keyboards, percussion); Darren Middleton (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, hurdy-gurdy, piano, keyboards, background vocals); Ian Haug (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, keyboards, background vocals); Veronique Serret, Rebecca Chan, Ilya Isakovich, Belinda Jezek, Alice Evans, Holly Piccoli, Janet Anderson, James Cuddeford, Mirabai Peart, Madeline Boud (violin); Virginia Commerford, Nikki Divall, Stephen King (viola); Daniel Yeadon, Julian Thompson, Heather Lindsay (cello); Graham Jesse, Adrian Cunningham (saxophone); Simon Sweeney (trumpet); Euan Harvey, Marnie Sebire (French horn); Anthony Kable (trombone); Maxime Bibeau (double bass); Jonathan Coghill (drums, cowbells, background vocals); Rebecca Lagos (percussion); Kram, Andrew Morris, The Splendour People's Choir, Mark McElligott, Pete Murray (background vocals).
  • Additional personnel: Lachlan Doley (piano, clavichord, organ); Alex Pertout (percussion).
  • Audio Mixers: Mark McElligott; Nick DiDia.
  • Recording information: Studio 301, Byron Bay, NSW; Studio 301, Sydney, NSW.
  • After disappointing some fans with their previous album, Dream Days at the Hotel Existence (2007), Powderfinger teamed up once again with producer Nick DiDia for Golden Rule, one of the band's best full-lengths to date. One of the most reliable rock bands in the business, Powderfinger experienced nothing but success in their homeland after their first album was a flop. Their second, Double Allergic (1996), broke them into the Top Five of the Australian albums chart, and each successive full-length release reached number one. Internationalist (1998), the first of Powderfinger's chart-toppers, marked their initial collaboration with DiDia, best known for engineering Brendan O'Brien-produced albums by Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, and several other radio-friendly rock bands of the 1990s. Following the success of Internationalist, Powderfinger collaborated with DiDia again on Odyssey Number Five (2000) and Vulture Street (2003), both of which were similarly well received. Dream Days at the Hotel Existence, recorded in Los Angeles with producer Rob Schnapf after a three-year hiatus, was a change of course for the band that left some fans unimpressed. Those same fans should give Golden Rule a listen. It's something of a return to form for the band. Recorded in Byron Bay, New South Wales, it finds Powderfinger in their comfort zone. While it's not a rehash of any album in particular, Golden Rule is often reminiscent of the band's past work with DiDia, at times harking back to Odyssey Number Five, at other times harking back to Vulture Street. This is part of what makes Powderfinger so reliable: their production style is synonymous with DiDia, their songwriting is formulaic yet still inventive, and they tend to come up with signature-sounding melodies and riffs. They also have a knack for penning sure-fire hits, and Golden Rule kicks off with a pair of them: "All of the Dreamers" and "Burn Your Name." In fact, the entire first half of the album is excellent, including the additional highlights "A Fight About Money," "Sail the Wildest Stretch," "Poison in Your Mind," and "Iberian Dream." In some ways, Golden Rule is Powderfinger's best album to date. The song selection is diverse and finely balanced, and the band has never sounded more comfortable and self-assured. All that's lacking on Golden Rule is an element of surprise. Anyone familiar with the band's past work with DiDia knows more or less what to expect here. ~ Jason Birchmeier
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