Cold Chisel work in a nutshell
Cold Chisel 's first CD release in 1994 was the album
The Best of Cold Chisel. During those last 13 years, 25 albums of the artist were released (see our
discographies to learn more about these albums). Hereunder are some of Cold Chisel's best successes. By the way, did you ever wonder how the artist succeded ? Check out
Cold Chisel biography to find out !
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Review of Cold Chisel : The Last Wave of Summer One of the biggest Australian bands of the early 1980s and featuring Jimmy Barnes. After being unavailable for years this this '97/'98 reunion album is out again with 5 bonus tracks and a strictly limited bonus enhanced CD. *Note the first 5000 copies will come with a bonus enhanced CD, featuring 5 B-sides from the albums two singles and 5 interactive video clips. The bonus tracks are 'Hold Me', 'Child Of Mine', 'Small Town Motel Blues', 'Fallen Angel' & 'Better Time Better Place'.
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Your latest reviews - Cold Chisel : Chisel's last album
Twentieth Century of 1983/4 was to be Cold Chisel's final studio album (not counting their return to the studio and stage in 1998). It reminds me of the Beatles' Let it Be album in that both great bands were falling apart at the seams during the time of their respective albums' creations, and, like Let it Be, Twentieth Century is a slightly haphazard set which is dotted with a few classic Chisel jewels. Twentieth Century is Chisel's least cohesive effort, naturally enough given the band's grim circumstances at the time, and one reason for that is drummer Steve Prestwich is absent for all but three songs. Prestwich's drumming has a wonderful percussive elasticity about it which gives Chisel that wonderful `width', rush and power. The `band' sound at their best on those songs on which he's playing, otherwise, in truth, they almost sound like a session band...but not quite because 4 Chisels plus Ray Arnott (new drummer) pull through somewhat. Without that band unity and sound that is so marked on all of Chisel's previous albums, it's best to approach `Twentieth Century' on a song perspective rather than performance perspective. Don Walker's songwriting shines as always, `Saturday Night' is a classic Chisel radio track, one of the finest scat vocal / blues sax riffs you'll ever hear. That modulation at the end prior to the saxophone coming in sounds so good! Lyrically haunting and so perceptive, Walker nails that feeling of post-Saturday night emptiness and desolation. `Flame Trees' is a co-write by Prestwich (music) and Walker (lyrics) although it tends to lean musically towards Walker's influence. `Flame Trees' is possibly the finest country-style ballad to be written in this country, it's so poignant, yearning and stirring and it tends to capture a feeling of finality in such a heroic way, and it's probably Chisel's biggest anthem along with their debut single from the first album, `Khe Sahn'. And what Chisel album would be complete without a Don Walker penned jazz/blues classic (well....Circus Animals didn't have one!); `Janelle' is the song here, gorgeous, beautiful and straight from the school of Hoagy Carmichael and Ray Charles. That modulation in the middle is fantastic too. `Sing to me' is another fine jazz/blues song but it sounds like a rushed recording. Also, Jim Barnes was not at his singing best on this track. This is the album where he started screaming rather that singing, already he was metamorphosing into `Jimmy Barnes' of the solo era, his song `Only One' pretty much a pre-cursor to Barnes' solo career, and to be objective, very much a weak spot on the album. His other two songs on the album, `No Sense' and especially `Temptation', are much better. It's unfortunate though that `Sing to Me' and `Janelle' suffered a bit from Jimmy's lack of vocal poise (`Flame Trees' was good though). `Hold me tight' showcases Walker's precision-tight left-hand piano boogie. His `Build this love', the album opener something of a precursor in sound and style to his Catfish project some 5 years later. The blues/rock title track penned by Walker is something of a surreal yet streetwise statement about the advance of the nineteen eighties ; one of Walker's talents as a songwriter was the ability to articulate in song the mood and psyche of the times. It's arguable yet most likely that Cold Chisel articulated in their recorded works the heady changes and movements in Australian society between 1978 and 1983 better than anyone else, in any medium.
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