Across the Pond: Super Furry Animals

Boom, let’s do this.  Today, we look at Welsh rockers Super Furry Animals.  Not a new band by any stretch of the imagination, but a band that has been kicking ass since the early 90s (fun-fact: the original lead singer is none other than Rhys Ifans and if you ever saw him as the kicker in the Keanu powerhouse football flick The Replacements, you know he’s wirey).  Through their nine official studio releases, the band continues to reinvent their sound and give the listener something new, and sometimes strange.  It all started with their first single “God! Show me Magic” a rock-a-long song that dares to ask the question “Wouldn’t it be nice to know what the TV doesn’t show, what the paper doesn’t say, and what the hamsters ate today?”  This song is off their debut: Fuzzy Logic.



A couple of years later SFA released an album titled Radiator, prior to the official release, they let us hear two singles, “Hermann Loves Pauline” and “The International Language of Screaming”.  Both are fun bouncy songs written with catchy guitar riffs and electronic fuzziness but I’d like to show you my favorite song from Radiator, “Demons”.  Overall I still think this is one of their best albums from start to finish.

But they weren’t done.  The next two albums came less than a year apart in Guerilla and Mwng, the later mostly sung in their native Welsh tongue.  I’ll focus on Guerilla, mostly because I can understand what they’re singing about and it simply kicks ass.  Guerrilla was deliberately conceived as a commercial-sounding 'pop' album; a "jukebox sort of album, where you listen to it and every song is different," according to singer Gruff Rhys.  It also has an over-the-top happiness to it, lyrically and musically.  If you want to start listening to SFA and need a push towards a good starting album, this is it.  Check out “Northern Lights” whose music video teaches us how they make stones for curling, weird.


Moving on we get to the release of Rings Around the World in 2001.  This album was much more epic (I hate that word) in musical scale, taking advantage of string sections and electronica samples and sounds throughout.  Along with the album the group also released a pretty cool DVD with visuals to each song.  I think this was the height of the group’s popularity in the US, people seemed to eat this album up.  I can’t find a bad song here so picking one to show you is a toughy.  Try on “Sidewalk Surfer Girl” for size.

Two years later we received Phantom Power, an album that pairs with Rings Around the World like milksteak and jellybeans.  Seems the SFA boys found something they liked sound-wise and decided to give it another go.  They also released a DVD with this one.  “Hello Sunshine” is an awesome opening track but my favorite song is buried at the end of the album, it’s called “Slow Life”.



You still with me? Good, only a few more to go. Love Kraft debued in 2005 and has my absolute favorite SFA song on it, “ZOOM!”  This album is also cool because Gruff sits back a bit and the other guys from the group take turns writing and singing songs.  We are now seven albums in and SFA is still going strong.  Listen to “ZOOM!” here, the whole thing, totally worth it.

Now we’re starting to get towards the present, in 2007, SFA released a very short album called Hey Venus!.  The band wanted the audience to listen to the album and imagine the band all playing together live in a room, which now that I read that and think about, they pulled off.  It’s just over a half hour long and follows the story of Venus, a heroine who deals with modern consumerism and accidentally feeds a baby an 8-ball of cocaine.  Lets listen to that one!

Lastly, if you’re still reading this, I present Dark Days/Light Years.  This album simply rocks.  It shows how far the guys of SFA have come while still holding onto their roots, something I commend after about 20 years of making music.  The songs are all loosely based off of jams the band had been working on through the years and the result is a fun and fast album.  “Helium Hearts” is my favorite track off this album.  As usual, thanks for reading, I’ll see you next week when I discuss another band from “Across the Pond”.



~Adam Smith

1 comments

  1. Why would you remove the previous comment? You should have left it and thanked the commenter for catching such an obvious error.

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