Quench (album)

Quench
Studio album by The Beautiful South
Released 17 October 1998
Genre Pop, rock, jazz[1]
Length 52:42
Label Go! Discs Records
Producer Paul Heaton, Jon Kelly
The Beautiful South chronology
Blue Is the Colour
(1996)
Quench
(1998)
Painting It Red
(2000)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Quench released in the UK on 17 October 1998 is The Beautiful South's sixth original album. Including the compilation Carry On Up The Charts it was the band's third album in a row to reach the top of the charts.

The cover depicts a boxer by Scottish painter Peter Howson. Commissioned for the album, the original painting can be seen in the Ferens Art Gallery, Hull. After the band cropped the image and used it in merchandise and promotional material, Howson took legal action against the band, receiving around £30,000 in damages.[2] Whilst the first two singles from the album also have artwork by Howson, "How Long's a Tear Take to Dry?" and "The Table" do not.

Singles

Track listing

All songs written by Paul Heaton and Dave Rotheray

  1. "How Long's a Tear Take to Dry?"
  2. "The Lure of the Sea"
  3. "Big Coin"
  4. "Dumb"
  5. "Perfect 10"
  6. "The Slide"
  7. "Look What I Found in My Beer"
  8. "The Table"
  9. "Window Shopping for Blinds"
  10. "Pockets"
  11. "I May Be Ugly"
  12. "Losing Things"
  13. "Your Father and I"

B-sides

As was their usual modus operandi, The Beautiful South included unreleased material on the B-sides of the singles taken from their albums.[3]

from the "Perfect 10" CD1

from the "Perfect 10" CD2

from the "Dumb" CD1

from the "Dumb" CD2

from the "How Long's a Tear Take to Dry?" CD1

from the "How Long's a Tear Take to Dry?" CD2

from "The Table" CD1

from "The Table" CD2

All the acoustic tracks were recorded for BBC Radio 2 and UK Arena's songwriter circle 'In The Round' Dec. 2, 1998.

Personnel

with

References

  1. 1 2 Allmusic review
  2. Beautiful South Legal Action Settled Accessed 2008-10-09
  3. King, David. ""The Beautiful South Discography"". xmission.com. Retrieved 2014-11-15.
Preceded by
Hits by Phil Collins
UK number one album
24 October 1998 – 6 November 1998
Succeeded by
I've Been Expecting You by Robbie Williams
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