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Envy of Angels

Envy of Angels
Muttonbirdsenvy.jpg
Studio album by The Mutton Birds
Released November 1996 (New Zealand)
May 1997 (Australia)
June 1997 (UK)
Recorded Rockfield Studios, Monmouth, Wales
Genre Rock
Length 62:32
Label Virgin
Producer Hugh Jones
The Mutton Birds chronology
Nature
(1995)Nature1995
Envy of Angels
(1996)
Angle of Entry
(1997)Angle of Entry1997
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars
Sunday Herald Sun 3/5 stars
The Australian 4/5 stars
The Age 3/5 stars
Sydney Morning Herald 5/5 stars

Envy of Angels is the third album by the New Zealand rock band The Mutton Birds. It was released in 1996.

The album was recorded in Monmouth, Wales, during a year-long stay in the UK and produced by Hugh Jones, whose previous credits had included Echo & the Bunnymen, The Undertones, The Damned and Died Pretty. The songwriter and singer Don McGlashan said, "Hugh's first comments to us were that he really liked the way we arranged things and the way we sounded and he wanted to help us focus in on that rather than help us turn into anything else." He said the album's atmospheric minimalist touches had also emerged from their work with Jones. "I think that's partly just having someone give you the permission to not sweeten everything up, to not use lots of layers of instruments and not over-sell the ideas. That was a really valuable lesson to learn."

McGlashan said that much of the material on the album had been inspired by the move to Britain. "With this record, we'd just left home and your world shrinks a bit as you travel. Instead of being individuals each with a big network of friends back home in New Zealand, we were like four people in a van travelling around Europe. So all the songs came from that more confined world. There are a lot of songs which are less sociable than our previous records." He said moving to the UK was an entirely new experience for the band. "Being away from home and writing material in a foreign place allowed me to write about the memories of our homeland." Tracks such as "Envy of Angels" deals with McGlashan's homesickness. He said, "That song is dedicated to my dad, it's about driving around the suburb I grew up as a teenager, and hearing him talk about the landscape (he's a civil engineer), and me wanting to be somewhere else that had more of a sense of history at the time. It's a song about coming back and driving those same roads now and being able to see things through his eyes. I guess the phrasing of the album is about the way people in love with progress see the physical world as something the angels would love to be a part of."

The album was the last with the guitarist David Long, who left the band as the Mutton Birds continued working in the UK and Europe. Long was replaced by the London-based New Zealand expatriate Chris Sheenan. "David was the most homesick of all of us and the least in love with the associated paraphernalia of being in a band," McGlashan said.


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