You Can Ride My Bike: The Best of the Icecream Hands
You Can Ride My Bike is a compilation album by Australian rock band Icecream Hands. It was released in 2004.[1] The album was released as both a single disc—with all but one of the tracks taken from the band's first four albums—and a double disc containing b-sides and outtakes.[2]
You Can Ride My Bike: The Best of the Icecream Hands | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Compilation album by | ||||
Released | December 2004 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Label | Rubber Records | |||
Icecream Hands chronology | ||||
|
Track listing
Disc one
(All songs by Charles Jenkins except where noted)
- "The Way She Drives" — 1:55
- "The Ocean Floor" — 4:35
- "Home" — 3:18
- "Supermarket Scene" — 2:45
- "Winter's Tune" — 3:21
- "Paper Bird" — 3:10
- "Olive" — 2:39
- "Here We Go 'Round Now" — 3:57
- "Dodgy" (Charles Jenkins, Douglas Lee Robertson) — 2:44
- "Spirit Level Windowsill" — 2:27
- "Nipple" — 3:40
- "Yellow and Blue" (Robertson) — 2:32
- "Gasworks Park" — 5:18
- "Picture Disc From the Benelux" (Derek G. Smiley, Douglas Lee Robertson, Charles Jenkins) — 3:17
- "The Obvious Boy" — 3:26
- "Rain Hail Shine" — 3:44
- "Broken UFO" — 3:06
- "Beautiful Fields" — 3:15
- "Head Down" (Marcus Goodwin) — 3:33
- "Why'd You Have to Leave Me This Way?" — 3:27
- "When the Show is Over" (Robertson) — 4:06
- "Music by the Metre" — 4:05
Disc two
(All songs by Charles Jenkins)
- "Sanity Can" — 1:51
- "Riverside" — 2:49
- "Sobersides" — 3:03
- "Struggle Town" — 2:20
- "Bend" — 2:06
- "Early Morning Frost" — 4:24
- "Miller" — 2:40
- "Visiting Girl" — 3:18
- "Ed's General Store" — 2:56
- "It's Always Going to Get You" — 4:20
- "You Should Know By Now" — 3:20
- "I Bet It's Warm Up There" — 3:15
- "Three Minute Song" — 3:35
- "Letterbox" — 2:55
- "The Ballad of Human Nature" — 2:15
- "Can You Slide" — 3:00
- "Forest Hill" — 2:12
- "When The Bullshit Comes" — 2:45
- "Look At You Now" — 3:57
- "Sometimes" — 3:22
- "My Lights Are Green" — 3:31
Personnel
- Marcus Goodwin — guitar
- Charles Jenkins — guitar, vocals
- Douglas Lee Robertson — bass, vocals
- Derek G. Smiley — drums, vocals
References
- Daniel Ziffer, "Icecream melts hearts," The Age, 7 December 2004.
- The Herald Sun, 18 November 2004.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.