Red Sails in the Sunset by Midnight Oil

Album cover for Red Sails in the Sunset - Midnight Oil
1. When the Generals Talk
3:34
2. Best of Both Worlds
4:05
3. Sleep
5:09
4. Minutes to Midnight
3:08
5. Jimmy Sharman's Boxers
7:25
6. Bakerman
0:55
7. Who Can Stand in the Way
4:35
8. Kosciusko
4:40
9. Helps Me Helps You
3:50
10. Harrisburg
3:50
11. Bells and Horns in the Back of Beyond
3:28
12. Shipyards of New Zealand
5:53

Red Sails in the Sunset is a rock album by Australian group Midnight Oil which was released in October 1984 under the Columbia Records label. It was recorded and produced in Tokyo, Japan and is significant for becoming their first No. 1 album in Australia – it also entered the United States Billboard 200. The cover image, by Japanese artist Tsunehisa Kimura, depicts Sydney Harbour after a hypothetical nuclear strike.

Midnight Oil never let commercial success dictate their creative moves. After earning their first Top 10 single in 1983 with “Power and the Passion”, the band returned with the decidedly less conventional <i>Red Sails In the Sunset</i>. Recorded in Japan and produced by Nick Launay (who had also worked on 1982’s <i>10,9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1</i>), the album expresses concern over environmental issues (“Harrisburg”, about the Three Mile Island nuclear meltdown) and critiques consolidations of power in business and leadership (“When the Generals Talk”). Musically, the most straightforward (and affecting) moment is the strident rocker “Kosciusko”. Otherwise, <i>Red Sails In the Sunset</i> gets its message across via synth-sculpted experiments (“Sleep”), loopy orchestral instrumentals (“Bakerman”), piercing folk-rock (“Minutes to Midnight”) and quirky rockabilly (the didgeridoo-aided “Helps Me Helps You”). As it turns out, following their muse, no matter how far out it took them, only made Midnight Oil more successful—<i>Red Sails In the Sunset</i> became the band’s first No. 1 album in Australia.