Doughboy_Hollow

<i>Doughboy Hollow</i>

Doughboy Hollow

1991 studio album by Died Pretty


Doughboy Hollow is the fourth album by Australian rock band Died Pretty. The album, recorded with English producer Hugh Jones, was released in 1991.

Quick Facts Doughboy Hollow, Studio album by Died Pretty ...

Described by Ian McFarlane's Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop as "brimming with passionate, dramatic and alluring musical vistas", it took the band into the Top 20 album charts for the first time, peaking at No.19 in September 1991.[1] The album led to three ARIA Award nominations in 1992—Album of the Year for Doughboy Hollow, Independent Single of the Year for "D.C." and Best Video, also for "D.C.".[2] It was also included in the 2010 book 100 Best Australian Albums.[3]

Impact and legacy

Interviewed in 1996, five years after Doughboy Hollow's 1991 release, singer and co-writer Ron Peno said the album remained the band's creative watermark. "Now there's an album that should have done something," he told the Daily Telegraph. "It's a very loved album and I think it was a special record for us. I think it was criminal that it got ignored."[4]

Thirty years after the album's release, Double J featured Doughboy Hollow on their weekly Classic Albums show in August 2021. Caz Tran reflected that "Doughboy Hollow should have made Died Pretty a household name", and that "its songs show the Sydney band at the peak of their creative powers." She concluded: "Thirty years on though, it is clear Doughboy Hollow occupies a special place in Australian music, popping up with stubborn consistency on essential albums lists to this day."[5]

Named the 96th best Australian album by Rolling Stone Australia in 2021, they said, "More closely aligned with the overcast melodies of bands like R.E.M. and The Dream Syndicate, the Sydney ensemble were almost anti-grunge in their love of crystalline adornment and poetic melodrama. And most damning of all, singer Ron Peno rendered his tortured emotions through subtle delicacy rather than angsty outbursts."[6]

Track listing

(All songs by Brett Myers and Ron Peno except where noted)

  1. "Doused" – 4:10
  2. "D.C" (Ron Peno, Steve Clark) – 4:33
  3. "Sweetheart" – 4:13
  4. "Godbless" (Ron Peno, John Hoey) – 3:31
  5. "Satisfied" – 6:04
  6. "Stop Myself" – 3:34
  7. "Battle of Stanmore" – 2:19
  8. "The Love Song" – 5:00
  9. "Disaster" – 3:54
  10. "Out in the Rain"– 4:21
  11. "Turn Your Head" – 5:19

Personnel

  • Ron Peno — vocals
  • Brett Myers — guitar
  • John Hoey — keyboards
  • Steve Clark — bass
  • Chris Welsh — drums

Additional personnel

  • Amanda Brown — violin ("The Love Song," "D.C.," "Battle of Stanmore")
  • Sarah Peet — cello ("The Love Song," "D.C.," "Disaster")
  • Sunil de Silva — percussion

Charts

More information Chart (1991), Peak position ...

References

  1. McFarlane, Ian (1999). The Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. p. 171. ISBN 1-86448-768-2.
  2. Dino Scatena, "Band that never says die," The Daily Telegraph, 17 October 1996.
  3. "Doughboy Hollow should have made Died Pretty a household name" (Radio interview). Interviewed by Richard Kingsmill. 2 August 2021. Archived from the original (audio) on 22 August 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  4. Doug Wallen. "200 Greatest Australian Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone Australia.
  5. "Australiancharts.com – Died Pretty – Doughboy Hollow". Hung Medien. Retrieved 15 September 2023.

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