Crave (Cyclefly album)

Crave
Studio album by Cyclefly
Released April 8, 2002 (2002-04-08)
(see Release history)
Recorded 2000 at
Parkage Studios
(East Sussex, England)
2001 at
Totally Wired
(Dublin, Ireland)
Genre Alternative rock
Label Radioactive Records
MCA Records
Producer Bill Appleberry/Tobias Miller
Colin Richardson
Cyclefly chronology
Generation Sap
(1999)
Crave
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Music Reviewer10.0/10[2]

Crave is the second album from the band Cyclefly, released on 8 April 2002. The album, originally called Tales from the Fish Bowl, had a vote by fans to decide the album art.[3]

Track listing

  1. "No Stress" - 3:46
  2. "Karma Killer" (with Chester Bennington) - 2:48
  3. "Selophane Fixtures" - 3:13
  4. "Crave" - 3:09
  5. "Drive" - 3:48
  6. "Crowns" - 4:17
  7. "Lost Opinion" - 3:35
  8. "King For A Day" - 4:12
  9. "Fallen Wishes" - 3:26
  10. "Bulletproof" - 3:07
  11. "Tales From The Fishbowl" - 4:53
Bonus tracks
  1. "Weary" - 4:05
  2. "Accidental Ornaments" - 3:01

Outtakes

Personnel

Cyclefly
  • Declan O'Shea - vocals, arrangement
  • Ciaran O'Shea - guitar, arrangement
  • NoNo Presta - guitar, arrangement
  • Christian Montagne - bass, arrangement
  • Jean-Michel Cavallo - drums, arrangement


Additional musicians
  • Chester Bennington - vocals (track 2)
  • Sasha Puttnam - strings, organ (track 11), arrangement (tracks 2, 7)

Technical personnel
  • Robert Flynt - photography
  • Sasha Jankovic - engineer
  • Alan Sanderson - engineer
  • Ian Blanch - engineer
  • Jeff Rothschild - engineer
  • Ciaran O'Shea - programming
  • David Bianco - mixing
  • Bill Appleberry - producer (tracks 1, 4, 5), engineer
  • Colin Richardson - producer
  • Tobias Miller - producer (tracks 1, 4, 5), engineer

Release history

Region Date
United Kingdom April 8, 2002
United States April 9, 2002

References

  1. Crave at AllMusic
  2. Music Reviewer
  3. "Internet Archive Wayback Machine". Web.archive.org. 2001-04-11. Archived from the original on April 11, 2001. Retrieved 2012-02-10.

External links


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