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Double Allergic
Double Allergic.jpg
Studio album by Powderfinger
Released 2 September 1996 (Australia)
Recorded 1995-1996
Studio Q Studio, Sydney
Sunshine Studio, Brisbane
Genre Alternative rock
Length 55:33
Label Polydor Records
Producer Tim Whitten & Powderfinger
Powderfinger chronology
Mr Kneebone
(1995)Mr Kneebone1995
Double Allergic
(1996)
Internationalist
(1998)Internationalist1998
Singles from Double Allergic
  1. "Pick You Up"
    Released: 13 April 1996
  2. "D.A.F."
    Released: 5 August 1996
  3. "Living Type"
    Released: 11 November 1996
  4. "Take Me In"
    Released: 12 May 1997
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars link
Juice (positive) link

Double Allergic is the second studio album by Australian alternative rock band Powderfinger. Released in Australia on 2 September 1996 Polydor, the album was produced by Tim Whitten and widely considered Powderfinger's mainstream breakthrough.

Four singles were released from the album: "Pick You Up", "D.A.F.", "Living Type" and "Take Me In". "Pick You Up" was the most successful single from the album, and Powderfinger's first moderate success, reaching #23 on the ARIA charts. "D.A.F." also charted as a moderate success; it reached #39 on the Australian music charts. Both "Living Type" and "Take Me In" did not chart officially, but "Living Type" was voted into the Triple J Hottest 100 in 1996.

Critics were generally favorable in their reviews of Double Allergic. It was praised by Allmusic reviewer Jonathan Lewis as "a cohesive and mature effort". It has also been certified platinum three times, with over 200,000 copies sold. Double Allergic was also nominated for five ARIA awards, with singles from the album nominated for an additional four, however, it won none of the awards it was nominated for.

Double Allergic contained material that had been written by Powderfinger in 1995 and 1996. Prior to its release, guitarist Darren Middleton described it as "by far the best thing we've done", an analogy that would be often made when comparing the album to its predecessor, Parables for Wooden Ears. Middleton praised the album because the band knew how they wanted the record to sound before they began to record; he also described it as "the most concise continuation of who we are down on record".


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