![]() ![]() We left behind the deliberately vulgar lyric content and art imagery instead we entered a newer world of better songs, better execution. ![]() "Yummy!” was the first Hard-Ons LP to really, really let the song-craft come to the fore. And where you wanna go just depends on where you wanna be And you can go to any. "We saw a sign on the road back from touring QLD - “YUMMY FOOD” - on the highway. Youve got the touch, and the night has only just begun Im so alive, but I die a little when you go So stay for life, youve got my dedication baby take it on Cause I only wanna be with you, nobody else could ever do me better Cause I only wanna be with you, nobody else could ever move me deeper Cause I only wanna be with you Yeah I only wanna. and just like Humpty Dumpty youre gonna fall when the stereos pump me. ![]() I go up and down that road, I go anywhere you go. “”Yummy!”? Why did we call it “Yummy!” again? Haha, the album with a hippie cover and pop nuggets…” - Blackie And I love you like my kin, its whatever for you. At heart though, of course, they were still the boys from Punchbowl, and the album maintained their uniquely Australian outsider appeal. And while the new decade saw the band pushing to new extremes - they were becoming punkier, poppier and more metal all at the same time, becoming leaders in a range of different styles that would become hugely successful types of alternative music, from pop-punk, to hardcore, to thrash, as the decade progressed - “Yummy!” was their pop opus. Many a fan's favourite Hard-Ons album and the one that includes the evergreen “Where Did She Come From?”, 1990's “Yummy!” was also the band's most commercially successful, until the release last year of “I'm Sorry Sir, That Riff's Been Taken”. ![]()
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