Your Funeral... My Trial: Difference between revisions
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| label = [[Mute Records|Mute]] | | label = [[Mute Records|Mute]] | ||
| producer = * [[Flood ( | | producer = * [[Flood (producer)|Flood]] | ||
* [[Tony Cohen]] | * [[Tony Cohen]] | ||
| prev_title = [[Kicking Against the Pricks]] | | prev_title = [[Kicking Against the Pricks]] | ||
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'''''Your Funeral... My Trial''''' is the fourth studio album by the Australian [[Rock music|rock]] band [[Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds]], released on 3 November 1986 by [[Mute Records]]. The album was originally released as a double [[extended play]] (EP), while also issued on CD with a different running order and the additional track "Scum". During this period in his life, Cave was steeped in heroin [[Addiction#Drug addiction|addiction]], perhaps evidenced by the melancholy, desperate mood of this album.<ref name="BBC">{{cite web |first=Chris |last=Long |title=BBC – Music – Review of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Your Funeral... My Trial |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/5c8c |publisher=[[BBC Music]] |date=8 May 2009 |access-date=22 December 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |first=Adrian |last=Denning |title=Nick Cave – album reviews |url=http://www.adriandenning.co.uk/cave.html |website=adriandenning.co.uk |date=19 September 2010 |access-date=22 December 2010}}</ref> | '''''Your Funeral... My Trial''''' is the fourth studio album by the Australian [[Rock music|rock]] band [[Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds]], released on 3 November 1986 by [[Mute Records]]. The album was originally released as a double [[extended play]] (EP), while also issued on CD with a different running order and the additional track "Scum". During this period in his life, Cave was steeped in heroin [[Addiction#Drug addiction|addiction]], perhaps evidenced by the melancholy, desperate mood of this album.<ref name="BBC">{{cite web |first=Chris |last=Long |title=BBC – Music – Review of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Your Funeral... My Trial |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/5c8c |publisher=[[BBC Music]] |date=8 May 2009 |access-date=22 December 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |first=Adrian |last=Denning |title=Nick Cave – album reviews |url=http://www.adriandenning.co.uk/cave.html |website=adriandenning.co.uk |date=19 September 2010 |access-date=22 December 2010}}</ref> | ||
This was the final Bad Seeds album to feature [[Barry Adamson]] until he returned for ''[[Push the Sky Away]]'' (2013). | This was the final Bad Seeds album to feature bassist [[Barry Adamson]] until he returned for the band's fifteenth studio album ''[[Push the Sky Away]]'' (2013). | ||
Cave later said, "That particular record, which is my favourite of the records we've done, is very special to me and a lot of amazing things happened, musically, in the studio. There are some songs on that record that as far as I'm concerned are just about perfect as we can get really- songs like "[[The Carny]]", "Your Funeral, My Trial", and "Stranger Than Kindness", I think are really quite brilliant."<ref>{{cite book | author= Tracee Hutchison | author-link= Tracee Hutchison |title=Your Name's On The Door|page=117|year=1992|publisher=[[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC Enterprises]] |location=Sydney |isbn=0-7333-0115-0}}</ref> ''Your Funeral... My Trial'' was the band's first album to reach the [[ARIA Charts|ARIA Top 100 Albums Chart]], where it peaked at number 98, and also reached number one on the [[UK Independent Singles and Albums Charts|UK Independent Albums Chart]]. | Cave later said, "That particular record, which is my favourite of the records we've done, is very special to me and a lot of amazing things happened, musically, in the studio. There are some songs on that record that as far as I'm concerned are just about perfect as we can get really- songs like "[[The Carny]]", "Your Funeral, My Trial", and "Stranger Than Kindness", I think are really quite brilliant."<ref>{{cite book | author= Tracee Hutchison | author-link= Tracee Hutchison |title=Your Name's On The Door|page=117|year=1992|publisher=[[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC Enterprises]] |location=Sydney |isbn=0-7333-0115-0}}</ref> ''Your Funeral... My Trial'' was the band's first album to reach the [[ARIA Charts|ARIA Top 100 Albums Chart]], where it peaked at number 98, and also reached number one on the [[UK Independent Singles and Albums Charts|UK Independent Albums Chart]]. | ||
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== Recording == | == Recording == | ||
Record producer [[Flood (producer)|Flood]] said, "I remember [[Mick Harvey]] arrived in the studio with the guts of an old grand piano, that was the basis of the sound. It was just the strings, attached to a metal frame. He tuned certain notes, and used a guitar plectrum to pick the notes. It then ended up as "[[The Carny]]". That was the first day of recording ''Your Funeral… My Trial'', and that kind of set the tone for the whole record."<ref>{{cite web| work= Uncut | title=Nick Cave 20 Best Songs | date=18 February 2015 | url=https://www.uncut.co.uk/features/nick-cave-s-30-greatest-songs-chosen-by-the-bad-seeds-his-famous-fans-and-cave-himself-37741/5/}}</ref> | |||
Reflecting on the album in 2020, guitarist Mick Harvey noted: "[The album] gave us the template to go forward with. It was organised rather than rambling. It all felt complete even though it was a disparate set of sounds and styles. It felt like it belonged to us. It sounded like The Bad Seeds."<ref name="Mojo">{{cite magazine|last=Male |first=Andrew |date= April 2020 |title=Nick Cave's 50 Greatest Songs: 'Something Monstrous Was Taking Shape' |magazine= [[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]] }}</ref> | Reflecting on the album in 2020, guitarist Mick Harvey noted: "[The album] gave us the template to go forward with. It was organised rather than rambling. It all felt complete even though it was a disparate set of sounds and styles. It felt like it belonged to us. It sounded like The Bad Seeds."<ref name="Mojo">{{cite magazine|last=Male |first=Andrew |date= April 2020 |title=Nick Cave's 50 Greatest Songs: 'Something Monstrous Was Taking Shape' |magazine= [[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]] }}</ref> | ||
== | == Films == | ||
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds appeared in the [[Wim Wenders]] film ''[[Wings of Desire|Der Himmel über Berlin]]'' (1987), performing "The Carny" (which is heard once before the performance scene) and "[[From Her to Eternity (song)|From Her to Eternity]]". "The Carny" also inspired the animated twelve-minute film ''[[Jo Jo in the Stars]]'' (2003), which won the [[British Academy of Film and Television Arts|BAFTA]] [[57th British Academy Film Awards#Best Short Film - Animation|Award for Best Animated Short Film]]. The film was created and directed by Marc Craste, who said about "The Carny": "The lyrics read like a short story, it seemed to suggest a film – a straight visual interpretation of the text ..."<ref>[http://www.computerarts.co.uk/in_depth/interviews/inspirations Inspirations] (XHTML). ''In depth'', ''Interviews''. Computer Arts. Retrieved on 29 November 2008.</ref> | Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds appeared in the [[Wim Wenders]] film ''[[Wings of Desire|Der Himmel über Berlin]]'' (1987), performing "The Carny" (which is heard once before the performance scene) and "[[From Her to Eternity (song)|From Her to Eternity]]". "The Carny" also inspired the animated twelve-minute film ''[[Jo Jo in the Stars]]'' (2003), which won the [[British Academy of Film and Television Arts|BAFTA]] [[57th British Academy Film Awards#Best Short Film - Animation|Award for Best Animated Short Film]]. The film was created and directed by Marc Craste, who said about "The Carny": "The lyrics read like a short story, it seemed to suggest a film – a straight visual interpretation of the text ..."<ref>[http://www.computerarts.co.uk/in_depth/interviews/inspirations Inspirations] (XHTML). ''In depth'', ''Interviews''. Computer Arts. Retrieved on 29 November 2008.</ref> | ||
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== Personnel == | == Personnel == | ||
Personnel for ''Your Funeral... My Trial'' adapted from the album's liner notes.<ref>{{cite AV media notes|title=Your Funeral... My Trial|title-link=Your Funeral... My Trial|others=Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds|year=1986|type=CD|publisher=[[Mute Records]]|id=LC 05834}}</ref> | |||
'''Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds''' | '''Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds''' | ||
* [[Nick Cave]] – vocals <small>(1–9)</small>; piano <small>(5, 7, 8)</small>; [[Hammond organ|Hammond]] <small>(1, 3, 4, 6)</small>; harmonica <small>(1, 2)</small> | * [[Nick Cave]] – vocals <small>(1–9)</small>; piano <small>(5, 7, 8)</small>; [[Hammond organ|Hammond]] <small>(1, 3, 4, 6)</small>; harmonica <small>(1, 2)</small> | ||
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'''Technical personnel''' | '''Technical personnel''' | ||
* [[Flood ( | * [[Flood (producer)|Flood]] – producer; [[Audio engineering|engineer]]; [[Audio mixing (recorded music)|mixing]] | ||
* [[Tony Cohen]] – producer; engineer | * [[Tony Cohen]] – producer; engineer | ||
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* Paul White – art direction | * Paul White – art direction | ||
* [[Christoph Dreher]] – photography | * [[Christoph Dreher]] – photography | ||
== Chart positions == | == Chart positions == | ||
Latest revision as of 15:45, 1 July 2025
Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Unsubst-infobox". Template:Music ratings Your Funeral... My Trial is the fourth studio album by the Australian rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, released on 3 November 1986 by Mute Records. The album was originally released as a double extended play (EP), while also issued on CD with a different running order and the additional track "Scum". During this period in his life, Cave was steeped in heroin addiction, perhaps evidenced by the melancholy, desperate mood of this album.[1][2] This was the final Bad Seeds album to feature bassist Barry Adamson until he returned for the band's fifteenth studio album Push the Sky Away (2013).
Cave later said, "That particular record, which is my favourite of the records we've done, is very special to me and a lot of amazing things happened, musically, in the studio. There are some songs on that record that as far as I'm concerned are just about perfect as we can get really- songs like "The Carny", "Your Funeral, My Trial", and "Stranger Than Kindness", I think are really quite brilliant."[3] Your Funeral... My Trial was the band's first album to reach the ARIA Top 100 Albums Chart, where it peaked at number 98, and also reached number one on the UK Independent Albums Chart.
The album was remastered and reissued on 27 April 2009 as a collector's edition CD/DVD set. The CD features the original 8-song vinyl double EP's track listing and track order, while "Scum" is featured as a bonus audio track on the accompanying DVD.
Recording
Record producer Flood said, "I remember Mick Harvey arrived in the studio with the guts of an old grand piano, that was the basis of the sound. It was just the strings, attached to a metal frame. He tuned certain notes, and used a guitar plectrum to pick the notes. It then ended up as "The Carny". That was the first day of recording Your Funeral… My Trial, and that kind of set the tone for the whole record."[4]
Reflecting on the album in 2020, guitarist Mick Harvey noted: "[The album] gave us the template to go forward with. It was organised rather than rambling. It all felt complete even though it was a disparate set of sounds and styles. It felt like it belonged to us. It sounded like The Bad Seeds."[5]
Films
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds appeared in the Wim Wenders film Der Himmel über Berlin (1987), performing "The Carny" (which is heard once before the performance scene) and "From Her to Eternity". "The Carny" also inspired the animated twelve-minute film Jo Jo in the Stars (2003), which won the BAFTA Award for Best Animated Short Film. The film was created and directed by Marc Craste, who said about "The Carny": "The lyrics read like a short story, it seemed to suggest a film – a straight visual interpretation of the text ..."[6]
Track listing
Template:Track listing Template:Tracklisting Template:Track listing
Personnel
Personnel for Your Funeral... My Trial adapted from the album's liner notes.[7]
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
- Nick Cave – vocals (1–9); piano (5, 7, 8); Hammond (1, 3, 4, 6); harmonica (1, 2)
- Mick Harvey – bass guitar (1, 6–9); guitar (1, 3, 5–8); drums (1, 3, 4, 8); snare drum (7); piano (2, 3); organ (2); glockenspiel (2); xylophone (2, 7); backing vocals (6)
- Blixa Bargeld – guitar (1–9); co-lead vocals (2)
- Barry Adamson – bass (3, 5)
- Thomas Wydler – drums (2, 3, 5, 7, 9); fire extinguisher (7)
Technical personnel
- Flood – producer; engineer; mixing
- Tony Cohen – producer; engineer
Design personnel
- Nick Cave – art direction
- Paul White – art direction
- Christoph Dreher – photography
Chart positions
| Chart (1986) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| UK Independent Albums Chart[8] | 1 |
References
External links
- Your Funeral... My Trial on the band's official web site
- Template:Discogs master
- Template:MusicBrainz release group
Template:Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
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- ↑ Template:Cite magazine
- ↑ Inspirations (XHTML). In depth, Interviews. Computer Arts. Retrieved on 29 November 2008.
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