Prayers on Fire

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Prayers on Fire
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Studio album by
Released6 April 1981 (1981-04-06)
RecordedDecember 1980 – January 1981
StudioA.A.V. Studio 2 and Richmond Recorders, Melbourne, Australia
GenrePost-punk
Length36:06
LabelMissing Link
ProducerTony Cohen, the Birthday Party
The Birthday Party chronology
The Birthday Party
(1980)
Prayers on Fire
(1981)
Drunk on the Pope's Blood
(1982)

Prayers on Fire is the debut studio album by Australian rock group the Birthday Party, released on 6 April 1981 on the Missing Link label in Australia, later licensed to the 4AD label. This was the band's first full-length release on an international record label and the first after changing the group's name from the Boys Next Door to the Birthday Party. It was recorded at Armstrong's Audio Visual Studios in Melbourne and Richmond Recorders in the nearby suburb of Richmond, between December 1980 and January 1981.

Background

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In February 1980 Melbourne-based new wave group, the Boys Next Door, changed their name to the Birthday Party.[1] They consisted of the same lineup of Phill Calvert on drums, Nick Cave on vocals, Mick Harvey on guitar and organ, Rowland S. Howard on guitar and Tracy Pew on bass guitar.[1] They relocated to London and signed with the 4AD label which issued the extended play, The Friend Catcher in the United Kingdom. In July, their Australian label, Missing Link Records, released "Mr Clarinet" from the EP as a single.[1] In November, Missing Link released the album, The Birthday Party / The Boys Next Door, which combined previously unreleased material with tracks that has been issued under the Boys Next Door name.[1]

Also in November 1980, the Birthday Party returned to Australia and toured.[1] According to Australian music historian, Ian McFarlane, "It was during this time that the band cemented its reputation as a peerless live act, with its omnipresent influence settling over the Melbourne scene".[1] On 6 April 1981 they issued the album and followed in June with its lead single, "Nick the Stripper".[1] The group returned to London.[1]

Members of Melbourne post-punk band Equal Local contributed the brass section to "Nick the Stripper" – tenor saxophonist Mick Hauser was mis-credited as "Mick Hunter". Equal Local had formed in 1980 by Dean Richards on guitar, Philip Jackson on synthesisers, trumpet and rhythm generator, Melissa Webb on synthesiser and piano, Bryce Perrin on acoustic bass, and Hauser.[2] Richards and Jackson were bandmates from the post-punk group Whirlywirld and contemporaries of the Boys Next Door.[2] Equal Local disbanded in early 1982.[2]

Composition and recording

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In Melbourne, in December 1980 and January 1981, they joined engineer and producer, Tony Cohen, in Armstrong's Audio Visual Studios (A.A.V. Studio 2) and Richmond Recorders, to record their tracks.[1] Music journalist Toby Creswell noted that the band "struggled with creating their own identity some of them also began indulging an appetite for alcohol and heroin".[3] Cave was embarrassed by "Zoo Music Girl" but noted "we were digging for something and we kind of just found it with some songs" and cited "King Ink" as an example of "a certain kind of sound that we wanted to work with on records after that".[3] Eight of the eleven tracks on Prayers on Fire were written or co-written by Cave, "[it] was a kind of reaction to the major disappointments we felt when we went to England... [we] began to see a vision and I don't think we were positively influenced ... we didn't want to be like the English New Wave pop groups of the time".[3] Pew observed "[it] stinks, quite honestly ... The engineer slept through the entire session for a start".[3]

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
About.comStarStarStarStar[4]
AllMusicStarStarStarStar[5]
The Austin ChronicleStarStarStarStar[6]
The Encyclopedia of Popular MusicStarStarStar[7]
The Great Rock Discography8/10[8]
MusicHound RockStarStarStarStarHalf star[9]
Ondarock8/10[10]
Record MirrorStarStarStarStar[11]
The Rolling Stone Album GuideStarStarStar[12]
Spin Alternative Record Guide9/10[13]

About.com's Anthony Carew felt Prayers on Fire was able to "capture the qualities of their infamous live-shows on record ... the evocatively-produced set dared dress key cuts in blaring brass; giving a sense of perverted-cabaret to their mordant racket, turning Cave from nihilist, self-destructive savant to theatrical, flamboyant showman".[4] AllMusic's Greg Maurer found "a fascination with the dark, (self-)destructive side of religion is more than evident in his later work... While there might not be any of the explicit Biblical imagery on [the album] that Cave would later ejaculate, the title ... is apt".[5] Ian McFarlane stated it showed the band was "irrevocably and unashamedly changing for the better, being more aggressive than anything they had ever recorded".[1] SoundStageDirect described it as "a creepy carnival of tribal rhythms, wonky discordance and garbled surrealism".[14] Music critic Ed St John summarised, "this is an expression which ebbs out beyond the confines of proficiently played music ... [it] is akin to watching a film of Jackson Pollock painting or listening to Dylan Thomas in full alcoholic flight".[3]

The track "Ho-Ho" is featured in the 2004 German film Head-On.

Accolades

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Publication/Source Country Accolade Year Rank
Neil Strauss US The 100 Most Influential Alternative Albums 1993 -[15]
Sounds UK The Top 80 Albums from the '80s 1989 43[citation needed]
The Guardian UK 1000 Albums to Hear Before You Die 2007 -[16]
Uncut UK The 100 Greatest Debut Albums 2006 93[17]
The Ultimate Record Collection - The 1980s 2018 -[18]
Rockdelux Spain The 100 Best Albums of the 1980s 1990 57[19]
Rolling Stone Australia Australia The 100 Greatest Albums of the 80s 1990 33[citation needed]
Triple J Australia Hottest 100 Australian Albums 2015 66[20]
Paste US The 50 Best Post-Punk Albums 2016 37[21]
PopMatters US The 50 Best Post-Punk Albums Ever 2017 41[22]

Track listing

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No.TitleLyricsMusic byLength
1."Zoo-Music Girl"Nick CaveRowland S. Howard2:38
2."Cry"CaveCave2:42
3."Capers"Genevieve McGuckinHoward2:39
4."Nick the Stripper"CaveCave3:52
5."Ho-Ho"HowardMcGuckin3:07
6."Figure of Fun"CaveCave, Howard2:48
7."King Ink"CaveCave, Howard4:41
8."A Dead Song"Anita LaneCave2:13
9."Yard"CaveCave5:04
10."Dull Day"HowardHoward3:04
11."Just You and Me"CaveMick Harvey2:03
Total length:36:06
CD reissue bonus tracks
No.TitleLyricsMusic byLength
12."Blundertown"HowardHoward3:10
13."Kathy's Kisses"CaveCave4:05

Personnel

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The Birthday Party members[23]
Equal Local members on "Nick the Stripper"
Recording details
  • Producer – Tony Cohen, the Birthday Party
  • Engineer – Tony Cohen
  • Studios – Armstrong's Audio Visual Studios (tracks 1–5, 7–9, 12–13), Richmond Recorders (tracks 6, 10, 11)
    • Mixing studios – Armstrong's Audio Visual Studios (tracks 6, 10, 11)
Art work

Chart positions

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Chart (1981) Peak
position
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[24] 96
UK Independent Albums (Record Business)[25] 4

References

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General
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Specific
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j McFarlane, 'The Birthday Party' entry. Archived from the original on 9 August 2004. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b c McFarlane, 'Equal Local' entry. Archived from the original on 13 August 2004. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
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