Wanted Man (Paul Kelly album)
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| Wanted Man | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Paul Kelly | |||||
| Released | September, 1994 | ||||
| Recorded | Stagg St, Cleardale, Metropolis, O.Henry | ||||
| Genre | Folk Rock | ||||
| Length | 49:08 | ||||
| Label | Mushroom White Label |
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| Producer | Paul Kelly, Randy Jacobs, David Bridie | ||||
| Professional reviews | |||||
| Paul Kelly chronology | |||||
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Wanted Man is an album by Paul Kelly and was originally released in September, 1994. It was released on Mushroom Records in Australia, and was Kelly's first solo studio album after disbanding his band, The Messengers. Tracks 1-10 were recorded at three Los Angeles studios. Tracks 11-13 were recorded in Melbourne. The cover art for Wanted Man is a colophon rendering of Australia's mythic outlaw Ned Kelly.
The album peaked at #11 on the Australian album charts[1] and resulted in Kelly being nominated for 'Best Male Artist' at the 1994 ARIA Awards.[2]
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
All songs written by Paul Kelly, except where noted[3]
- "Summer Rain" - 2:42
- "God's Hotel" - 5:09
- "She's Rare" - 4:20
- "Just Like Animals" - 4:39
- "Love Never Runs On Time" - 2:57
- "Song from the Sixteenth Floor" (J. Clifforth, Paul Kelly) - 3:57
- "Maybe This Time For Sure" - 2:54
- "Ball and Chain" (Randy Jacobs, Paul Kelly) - 3:50
- "You're Still Picking the Same Sore" - 3:35
- "Everybody Wants To Touch Me" - 3:05
- "We've Started a Fire" - 5:12
- "Lately" (Renee Geyer, Paul Kelly) - 3:30
- "Nukkanya" - 3:18
[edit] Credits
- Produced by Paul Kelly, Randy Jacobs, David Bridie
- Engineered by Terry Becker, Richard Bosworth, Warren Croyle, Mark Linett, Simon Polinski, Tony Cohen
- Assistant Engineers: Jeff Shannon, Bruce Curnow, Tim Johnston
- Recorded at Studios: Stagg St, Los Angeles; Clearlake, Los Angeles; Metropolis, Melbourne; O'Henry, Los Angeles
[edit] Personnel
- David Bridie
- John Molo
- Debra Dobkin
- John Gilutin
- Hutch Hutchinson
- Randy Jacobs
- Robert Lloyd
- Peter Luscombe
- Bill McDonald
- Ian McLagan
- Helen Mountfort
- Shane O'Mara
- Paul Williamson
[edit] References
- ^ Kent, David (2006). Australian Chart Book 1993-2005 (doc), Australian Chart Book, St Ives, N.S.W.. ISBN 0-646-45889-2.
- ^ ARIA Award History:Paul Kelly. Australian Recording Industry Association. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
- ^ APRA database at the Australasian Performing Right Association website (search each song title)

