Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Diesel and Dust

 
Album Review: Diesel and Dust

  • Artist: Midnight Oil
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1988 08
  • Total Time: 42:54
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Midnight Oil frontman Peter Garrett has long been active in elective politics in Australia, and like any good politician, he knows that sometimes the most important thing is to get your message out to the masses, even it means speaking with a bit less force than might be your custom. While the hard edges and challenging angles of 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 and Red Sails in the Sunset made Midnight Oil bona fide superstars in Australia, they were little more than a rumor in most of the rest of the world, and for their sixth album, Diesel and Dust, Midnight Oil made some changes in their approach. On Diesel and Dust, there's less in the way of bruising hard rock like "Best of Both Worlds," nothing as eccentric as "Outside World," and very little as esoterically regional as "Jimmy Sharman's Boxers," while the production favors the tuneful side of the band's songwriting (which, truth to tell, was always there) and buffs away some of the group's harsher edges. As a result, Diesel and Dust isn't an album for hardcore Oils fans, but as a bid for a larger audience, it was both shrewd and well executed -- it was the group's first real worldwide success, going platinum in America and spawning a massive hit single, "Beds Are Burning." While the album lacks the kick-in-the-head impact of their earlier work, Diesel and Dust also makes clear that the bandmembers could apply their intelligence and passion to less aggressive material and still come up with forceful, compelling music, as on the haunting "The Dead Heart" and the poppy but emphatic "Dreamworld." And as always, there was no compromise in the band's forceful political stance -- most of the album's songs deal openly with the issues of Aboriginal rights (hardly an issue pertinent only to Australians), and one of Midnight Oil's greatest victories may well be writing a song explicitly demanding reparations for indigenous peoples, and seeing it top the charts around the world. And the closer, "Sometimes," may be the finest and most moving anthem the band ever wrote ("Sometimes you're beaten to the core/Sometimes you're taken to the wall/But you don't give in"). Diesel and Dust is that rarity, a bid for the larger audience that's also an artistic success and a triumph for leftist politics -- even the Clash never managed that hat trick this well. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Beds Are Burning (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (4:16)
Put Down That Weapon (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (4:38)
Dreamworld (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (3:36)
Arctic World (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (4:21)
Warakurna (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (4:37)
The Dead Heart (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (5:10)
Whoah (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (3:51)
Bullroarer (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (4:58)
Sell My Soul Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (3:37)
Sometimes (Lyrics) Midnight Oil Midnight Oil (3:52)

Credits

Midnight Oil (Group), Midnight Oil (Producer), Midnight Oil (Main Performer), Gary Morris (?), Peter Garrett (Vocals), Peter Garrett (Singer), Rob Hirst (Drums), Rob Hirst (Vocals), Rob Hirst (Singer), Nick Launay (Mixing), Warne Livesey (Keyboards), Warne Livesey (Producer), Warne Livesey (String Arrangements), Jim Moginie (Guitar), Jim Moginie (Keyboards), Jim Moginie (Vocals), Jim Moginie (Singer), Jim Moginie (String Arrangements), Martin Rotsey (Guitar), Jeremy Smith (French Horn), Peter Gifford (Bass), Peter Gifford (Vocals), Peter Gifford (Singer), Guy Gray (Engineer), John Ockwell (Cello), Glad Reed (Trombone), Greg Henderson (Engineer)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Diesel and Dust
Top
Diesel and Dust
Studio album by Midnight Oil
Released August 1987
Recorded Albert Studios, Sydney, Australia
Genre Rock
Length 46:37 (Full version), 42:54 (Censored version)
Label Sprint Music / Columbia
Producer Warne Livesey & Midnight Oil
Professional reviews
Midnight Oil chronology
Species Deceases (EP)
(1985)
Diesel and Dust
(1987)
Blue Sky Mining
(1990)

Diesel and Dust is an album by Midnight Oil that was released in 1987 under the CBS record label. The album is a concept album about the struggles of the Australian Aborigines and environmental causes, issues both near and dear to the band, and drew inspiration from the Black Fella White Fella tour of remote Indigenous communities with the Warumpi Band in 1985. The rhythm of "Beds are Burning" is said to be inspired by the noise of their vehicles' wheels on the corrugated dirt roads in the region.[citation needed]

The track "Gunbarrel Highway" was not included on the United States release of the album. Reportedly, it is because the line "shit falls like rain on a land that is brown" was deemed too strong for U.S. audiences.[1][2]

In 1989, Rolling Stone magazine ranked it number 13 on their list of the 100 best albums of the 1980s.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Beds Are Burning" (Rob Hirst, James Moginie, Peter Garrett) – 4:16
  2. "Put Down That Weapon" (Moginie, Hirst, Garrett) – 4:38
  3. "Dreamworld " (Moginie, Garrett, Hirst) – 3:36
  4. "Arctic World" (Moginie, Garrett) – 4:21
  5. "Warakurna" (Moginie) – 4:37
  6. "The Dead Heart" (Hirst, Moginie, Garrett) – 5:10
  7. "Whoah" (Moginie, Garrett) – 3:51
  8. "Bullroarer" (Hirst, Moginie, Garrett) – 4:58
  9. "Sell My Soul" (Moginie, Garrett) – 3:37
  10. "Sometimes" (Moginie, Garrett, Hirst) – 3:52
  11. "Gunbarrel Highway" (Midnight Oil) - 3:38 ^

^ Not available on the U.S. or the Canadian LP. As of 2008, the track is available on Canadian CD.

Personnel

Notes

  • "Holden wrecks" ("Beds Are Burning") refers to the GMH Holden, the Australian make of car.
  • Warakurna is a small town in Western Australia, close to the Northern Territory border, which the band visited on their Black Fella White Fella tour.
  • "In Redfern as there is in Alice" ("Warakurna") refers to Redfern, an area in Sydney, and to Alice Springs, principal town in the centre of Australia
  • "Lasseter" ("Warakurna") was a gold-seeking con man (died 1931), after whom the Northern Territory highway to Ayers Rock is named
  • The "dead heart" is a traditional way of referring to the underpopulated desert centre of Australia, a continent which is largely desert with most of the people distributed along the coasts.
  • A bullroarer is a traditional Aboriginal musical instrument which produces a whirring sound.

Chart positions

Year Chart Position
1987 Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart 1

References

  1. ^ The Dead Heart Midnight Oil FAQ, retrieved 11 March 2007.
  2. ^ The Dead Heart Midnight Oil data bank, retrieved 11 March 2007.

External links

Preceded by
Slippery When Wet by Bon Jovi
Australian Kent Music Report number-one album
24 August - 4 October 1987
Succeeded by
Man of Colours by Icehouse

 
 
Learn More
Diesel and Dust [CD/DVD] (2008 Album by Midnight Oil)
Diesel and Dust [Australia Bonus Track] (1988 Album by Midnight Oil)
Blue Sky Mining (1990 Album by Midnight Oil)

Which poet wrote dust to dust and dust return was not written of the soul? Read answer...
Is dust a mixture? Read answer...
What was the Dust Bowl? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What does the dust symbolize in out of the dust?
How do you get more dust?
What is dust-try?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Diesel and Dust" Read more

 

Mentioned in