Sounds Like An Ending: Midnight Oil 10-1 and Red Sails in the Sunset


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About The Book

In 1982 Midnight Oil was a band in trouble. Their last album Place Without a Postcard was supposed to be their big breakthrough but it hadnt worked out that way. So they found themselves in London feeling the pressure of recording what was a make or break album. Members threatened to leave others had nervous breakdowns and the ANZ bank manager back home was sweating as he watched the overdraft hed approved for the band get bigger and bigger.If this album went the same way as the last one it could be the end of Midnight Oil. Out of the crisis came 10987654321 an album that changed everything for the band. It entered the charts and stayed there for more than three years. They started playing bigger venues - and they were able to pay back the bank manager.Two years later they headed to Japan to record the polarising Red Sails in the Sunset. It managed to do what 10-1 couldnt - give the band their first No1 album. But again the band found themselves facing the possibility it could all be over courtesy of lead singer Peter Garretts tilt at federal politics. If he wins the band loses.In Sounds Like an Ending journalist and author Glen Humphries takes a track-by-track look at these two albums and the times and turmoil that fuelled them. That includes wondering whether the 10-1 title was a sly dig at a certain Australian music TV show finding out the stories behind some of the songs and explaining whats really happening on the cover of Red Sails in the Sunset.
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