Shangri-La | ||||
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Studio album by The Blackeyed Susans | ||||
Released | July 21, 2003 | |||
Recorded | Sing-Sing Studios, Melbourne (2002) |
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Genre | Rock / Folk rock | |||
Length | 56:14 | |||
Label | Teardrop | |||
Producer | Phil Kakulas, Craig Pilkington The Blackeyed Susans |
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Professional reviews | ||||
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The Blackeyed Susans chronology | ||||
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Shangri-La is the sixth and most recent studio album by The Blackeyed Susans, released in July 2003. After initial writing sessions in mid-1999,[1] recording of the album was scheduled for 2000[2]. It was postponed when the band’s then record company, Mds, was bought by Festival Records. The band eventually returned to the project in 2002, after their covers album Dedicated to the Ones We Love.[3] It was released on their own label, Teardrop, the following year.[4]
The title of the album Shangri-La, refers to an illusory island paradise, a lost utopia that exists only in imagination and metaphor an apt name considering it was almost abandoned as an impossible project. In an interview Phil Kakulas commented
"It was named before, back when I still had all faith that it would be released," Kakulas begins, "but it seems almost prophetic in that we did almost lose it. The name 'Shangri-La' seems to sum up a lot of what the album is about. The songs seem to deal with what happiness might be and where you might find happiness. Also I've been listening to a lot of the Shangri-Las, the girl group, and I like that seedy neon lights appeal. My vision of Shangri-La is much more like Vegas or something like that. It's a fools paradise."[5]
Shangri-La was nominated for 'Best Adult Contemporary Album' at the 2003 ARIA Awards,[6][7] missing out to John Farnham's The Last Time.[8]
Contents |
All songs written by Phil Kakulas and Rob Snarski, except where noted.[9]