From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Apartment"
Single by Custard
from the album Wisenheimer
Released1995 (1995)
Genre Pop, rock
Length2:26
Label rooArt
Songwriter(s) David McCormack, Paul Medew, Matthew Strong, Glenn Thompson
Producer(s) Magoo
Custard singles chronology
"Alone"
(1995)
"Apartment"
(1995)
"Lucky Star"
(1996)

"Apartment" is the first single from Wisenheimer, the third album by Australian band Custard. It reached #7 in the 1995 Hottest 100. [1]

Lyrics

McCormack said the song was about, "hearing loss. You know when you hear too much loud music you get that ringing in your ears. I just thought it was the most obvious song I'd ever written. And the interior's red because, I imagine your head is red on the inside, and the 'Ears! Sing to me' bit is like because your ears are just going 'EEEEEEEEEEEEE'. And I don’t think that's a very happy song." [2] McCormack later expanded on the song's evolution, indicating it had come together at a soundcheck at Melbourne's Public Bar in 1994. "In a moment of panic I remembered I had been working on a little guitar riff that sounded a bit like 'Heard it Through the Grapevine by Creedence Clearwater Revival. I played it to the band and within a few minutes we had the basic verse section worked out. I don't think I had any lyrics worked out for it until we were in the studio with Eric Drew Feldman. I couldn't get a vibe happening so Eric suggested we do it line by line, phrase by phrase. Somehow, that made it come together a little bit more." [3]

Reception

The Sydney Morning Herald described it as, "One-hundred and fifty seconds of smashing guitar momentum and offbeat lyrics that would probably now be loved by The Block's music supervisor." [4] Rolling Stone Australia said the song had, "been fashioned with melody, imagination and undeniable craft and Eric Drew Feldman's production comes close to capturing the skill and energy of Custard live." [5]

Double J named it in the top ten Australian songs of the 1990s, saying, "The furious pace at which this song hurtles is exhausting, its cavalcade of motifs completely overwhelming. How they managed to bring it all together into something so perfectly succinct truly beggars belief." [6]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Apartment"2:26
2."Roadside"4:06
3."Streetwaves"2:03

References

  1. ^ http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hottest100/archive/archive.htm?year=1995&alltime=0
  2. ^ "Custaro". Semper Floreat. 1995.
  3. ^ Gazzo, Jane (2022). Sound as Ever - The Greatest Decade in Australian Music 1990-1999. Melbourne Books. p. 64.
  4. ^ Craig Mathieson. "Dave McCormack's Custard comes back (and all is forgiven)". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. ^ Dwyer, Michael (December 1995). "The Year in Recordings". Australian Rolling Stone Yearbook. Tilmond. p. 123.
  6. ^ Dan Condon. "The 50 best Australian songs of the 90s". Double J.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Apartment"
Single by Custard
from the album Wisenheimer
Released1995 (1995)
Genre Pop, rock
Length2:26
Label rooArt
Songwriter(s) David McCormack, Paul Medew, Matthew Strong, Glenn Thompson
Producer(s) Magoo
Custard singles chronology
"Alone"
(1995)
"Apartment"
(1995)
"Lucky Star"
(1996)

"Apartment" is the first single from Wisenheimer, the third album by Australian band Custard. It reached #7 in the 1995 Hottest 100. [1]

Lyrics

McCormack said the song was about, "hearing loss. You know when you hear too much loud music you get that ringing in your ears. I just thought it was the most obvious song I'd ever written. And the interior's red because, I imagine your head is red on the inside, and the 'Ears! Sing to me' bit is like because your ears are just going 'EEEEEEEEEEEEE'. And I don’t think that's a very happy song." [2] McCormack later expanded on the song's evolution, indicating it had come together at a soundcheck at Melbourne's Public Bar in 1994. "In a moment of panic I remembered I had been working on a little guitar riff that sounded a bit like 'Heard it Through the Grapevine by Creedence Clearwater Revival. I played it to the band and within a few minutes we had the basic verse section worked out. I don't think I had any lyrics worked out for it until we were in the studio with Eric Drew Feldman. I couldn't get a vibe happening so Eric suggested we do it line by line, phrase by phrase. Somehow, that made it come together a little bit more." [3]

Reception

The Sydney Morning Herald described it as, "One-hundred and fifty seconds of smashing guitar momentum and offbeat lyrics that would probably now be loved by The Block's music supervisor." [4] Rolling Stone Australia said the song had, "been fashioned with melody, imagination and undeniable craft and Eric Drew Feldman's production comes close to capturing the skill and energy of Custard live." [5]

Double J named it in the top ten Australian songs of the 1990s, saying, "The furious pace at which this song hurtles is exhausting, its cavalcade of motifs completely overwhelming. How they managed to bring it all together into something so perfectly succinct truly beggars belief." [6]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Apartment"2:26
2."Roadside"4:06
3."Streetwaves"2:03

References

  1. ^ http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hottest100/archive/archive.htm?year=1995&alltime=0
  2. ^ "Custaro". Semper Floreat. 1995.
  3. ^ Gazzo, Jane (2022). Sound as Ever - The Greatest Decade in Australian Music 1990-1999. Melbourne Books. p. 64.
  4. ^ Craig Mathieson. "Dave McCormack's Custard comes back (and all is forgiven)". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. ^ Dwyer, Michael (December 1995). "The Year in Recordings". Australian Rolling Stone Yearbook. Tilmond. p. 123.
  6. ^ Dan Condon. "The 50 best Australian songs of the 90s". Double J.

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