You Am I returned
to the rock for their fourth album, aptly titled You
Am I's #4 Record. The album was recorded during July
1997, again in America at Hollywood's Sunset Studios, where
the Rolling Stones' Exile on Main
Street was mixed with sloppy perfection ("that's
why we chose it" - Tim) in 1972. The band also brought
in big-name producer George Drakoulias
(Black Crowes, Primal Scream)
who worked with the band previously on Trike
and Opportunities for the international
release of Hourly, Daily.
"We've never had anyone crack the
whip before and we've so little patience for really nutting
things through," says Tim, about working with Drakoulias.
"Fifteen times through we go, 'yeah, let's record this'
but the way they do things for that production quality,
they wanted this clarity... really dissected arrangements.
"When bands say, 'we're not going to be fucked around
(by a producer)', I can appreciate that if they really know
what they want. But I don't think we know what we want,
we're not afraid to listen to someone else... and then slag
them off in interviews for years."
The band were also afforded the luxury
of recording with the Memphis Horns
(who appeared on tracks such as Junk
and Come Home Wit' Me) and
members of US punk outfit The Muffs
who belted out the chant "R.A.D.I.O." on Rumble.
The return to rock wasn't intentional,
but more of a reaction to the bands life on the road during
a gruelling year of festivals, ordinary support slots and
desperate headlining affairs across Europe and the US.
"We finished Hourly,
Daily so long ago and since played all these shows
so we really felt like digging in and doing more rockin'
material," Rogers explains, "That's what we're
good at, doing entertaining shows rather than the sensitive
singer-songwriter bit, which is more my thing. When the
three of us get together it's like, let's make a racket.
It's very special and very exciting. Gut level stuff."
"I honestly wanted to make an album
that was just about real things," Rogers said "It's
not vignettes to suburban heroes any more. It's about love
and hate and spite and the whole gamut of emotions in between."
You Am I took it's place in the annals
of Australian music history when #4
Record debuted at No. 1 on the national ARIA charts
- their third consecutive album to do so. |