Prehistoric Sounds


title: "Prehistoric Sounds" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["the-saints-(australian-band)-albums", "1978-albums", "ed-kuepper-albums", "harvest-records-albums"] topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Sounds" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox album"]

FieldValue
namePrehistoric Sounds
typestudio
artistThe Saints
coverA_prehist.jpg
released
recordedMid-1978
studioWessex Sound Studios, London
genre
labelHarvest
producerChris Bailey, Ed Kuepper
prev_titleEternally Yours
prev_year1978
next_titleParalytic Tonight, Dublin Tomorrow (EP)
next_year1980
::

| name = Prehistoric Sounds | type = studio | artist = The Saints | cover = A_prehist.jpg | alt = | released = | recorded = Mid-1978 | venue = | studio = Wessex Sound Studios, London | genre = | length = | label = Harvest | producer = Chris Bailey, Ed Kuepper | prev_title = Eternally Yours | prev_year = 1978 | next_title = Paralytic Tonight, Dublin Tomorrow (EP) | next_year = 1980

Prehistoric Sounds is the third album by the Australian punk rock group The Saints, released in 1978 via Harvest. This was the final album to feature founding lead guitarist, Ed Kuepper, who left the band shortly after its release. In October 2010, the album was listed in the top 50 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums with their debut, (I'm) Stranded, at No. 20.

Background

Australian punk rock group, The Saints, had relocated to the United Kingdom in mid-1977. They released their second album, Eternally Yours, in May the next year on EMI/Harvest with band members Chris Bailey (also on lead vocals) and Ed Kuepper (also on lead guitar) producing. The other members of The Saints were Ivor Hay on drums and Algy Ward on bass guitar. The album reached the Top 100 on the Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart.

The soul influenced third album, Prehistoric Sounds, followed in October 1978 (January 1979 in Australia). Its commercial failure led EMI to drop the band. During 1978, relations between Kuepper and Bailey had deteriorated, with Bailey preferring rock and pop songs and Kuepper pursuing less commercial and more intellectual material. Bailey later admitted Prehistoric Sounds was, "not one of my personal favourite records." Finally Hay, Kuepper and Ward left the group in early 1979.

Kuepper returned to Australia and followed a more avant-garde direction with Laughing Clowns, which would frequently feature brass. Hay briefly returned to Australia to join Sydney-based The Hitmen and then rejoined Bailey in London for a later version of The Saints. Ward became a member of English gothic punk band, The Damned. Bailey continued the group with Mark Birmingham on drums, Bruce Callaway on guitar, Barry Francis on guitar and Janine Hall on bass guitar.

Bailey later said, "I think there are a few good songs on that album. But it feels stilted in places, it sounds like a record made by a band falling apart, and sure enough soon after recording the album, the line-up of the band changed quite drastically." When critic Clinton Walker said he thought it was one of the best albums of the year, Bailey responded, "I listen to that record and some things work and some things don't," before acknowledging that his opinion might be tarnished by his memories of the recording session.

Reception

Clinton Walker said Prehistoric Sounds was, "an extraordinary record – one of the period's best bar none – a brooding, melancholic collision of electrically charged rock balladry and swooping, brassy arrangements. Broadly misunderstood, it meant nothing to no-one."

AllMusic's Andy Kellman described the album as "the textbook by which to make a great rock record where horns play as much of a role as guitar". In October 2010, the album was listed in the top 50 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums with their debut, (I'm) Stranded, at No. 20.

| rev1 = AllMusic | rev1score = | rev2 = The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | rev2score = | rev3 = Hi-Fi News & Record Review | rev3Score = A/B:1/1*

Track listing

All tracks composed by Ed Kuepper and Chris Bailey; except where indicated.

| title1 = Swing for the Crime | length4 = 4:22 | writer7 = Ed Kuepper | writer5 = Ed Kuepper | writer4 = Ed Kuepper | writer13 = Aretha Franklin, Carolyn Franklin, Curtis Ousley | writer9 = Otis Redding | length13 = 3:34 | length12 = 5:16 | length11 = 2:28 | length10 = 3:15 | length9 = 2:22 | length8 = 5:00 | length7 = 2:37 | length6 = 2:32 | length5 = 5:05 | length3 = 2:48 | length1 = 3:41 | length2 = 4:08 | title13 = Save Me | title12 = The Chameleon | title11 = Take This Heart of Mine | title10 = This Time | title9 = Security | title8 = The Prisoner | title7 = Everything's Fine | title6 = Crazy Googenheimer Blues | title5 = Church of Indifference | title4 = Brisbane (Security City) | title3 = Every Day's a Holiday, Every Night's a Party | title2 = All Times Through Paradise | total_length = 47:08 | writer11 = Chris Bailey

2007 Reissue

In 2007 Prehistoric Sounds was reissued with bonus tracks:

:14. "Looking for the Sun" [studio outtake from Prehistoric Sounds] :15. "Intermission" [live at Paddington Town Hall, Sydney 21 April 1977] :16. "This Perfect Day" [live at Paddington Town Hall, Sydney 21 April 1977] :17. "Run Down" [live at Paddington Town Hall, Sydney 21 April 1977] :18. "Erotic Neurotic" [live at Paddington Town Hall, Sydney 21 April 1977] :19. "Demolition Girl" [live at Paddington Town Hall, Sydney 21 April 1977] :20. "Nights in Venice" [live at Paddington Town Hall, Sydney 21 April 1977]

Produced by Ed Kuepper and Chris Bailey

All Tracks:copyright Saints Music\Mushroom Music

Personnel

;The Saints

  • Chris Bailey – vocals
  • Ed Kuepper – guitar
  • Ivor Hay – drums, percussion
  • Algy Ward – bass guitar with:
  • Martin Bruce – trumpet
  • Martin Drover – trumpet
  • Paul Nieman – trombone
  • Roger Cawkwell – tenor, alto, baritone & soprano saxophone, piano, brass arrangements ;Technical
  • Bill Price – engineer
  • Jerry Green – second engineer
  • Gary Ede, Peter Vernon – photography

References

References

  1. "TrouserPress.com :: Saints".
  2. Thompson, Dave. (24 May 2000). "Alternative Rock". Hal Leonard Corporation.
  3. McFarlane, [https://web.archive.org/web/20040809222017/http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=342 'The Saints'] entry. Archived from [http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=342 the original] on 9 October 2004. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
  4. "The Saints". Magnus Holmgren.
  5. (1993). "[[Kent Music Report". Australian Chart Book Ltd.
  6. (November 2005). "Laughing Clowns – ''Cruel but Fair''". timeoff.com.au.
  7. Donat Tahiraj. (2010). "Off The Record:25 Years of Music Street Press". University of Queensland Press.
  8. Nimmervoll, Ed. "The Saints". White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd.
  9. John Robb. (2012). "Punk Rock: An Oral History". PM Press.
  10. Clinton Walker. (1984). "The Next Thing". Kangaroo Press.
  11. Clinton Walker. (1996). "[[Stranded: The Secret History of Australian Independent Music 1977–1991]]". Pan MacMillan.
  12. (October 2010). "[[100 Best Australian Albums]]". Hardie Grant Books.
  13. Kellman, Andy. "''Prehistoric Sounds'' – The Saints". AllMusic.
  14. Larkin, Colin. (27 May 2011). "The Encyclopedia of Popular Music". Omnibus Press.
  15. (December 1989). "Review: The Saints – Prehistoric Sounds". Link House Magazines Ltd.

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