After the breakup of
Split Enz in 1984,
Neil Finn and drummer
Paul Hester decided to form a new band. Bass player
Nick Seymour approached Finn during the after party for the Melbourne show of the Split Enz farewell tour and asked if he could try out for the new band. Former Swingers and soon-to-be
Midnight Oil bass player
Bones Hillman was also a candidate, but it was Seymour's playing on the demo for "That's What I Call Love" that earned him the spot. The group, then named
The Mullanes, also included
the Reels guitarist
Craig Hooper, who left the band before they signed with
Capitol Records. Capitol rejected the name "The Mullanes", as well as alternatives such as "Largest Living Things". The name "Crowded House" was adopted after the trio flew to
Los Angeles to record the album and were provided with a very cramped apartment to live in. The album's rhythm tracks were recorded by Larry Hirsh at Capitol Recording Studios, Los Angeles. The remaining recording sessions for the album were at
Sunset Sound studios, where the group first collaborated with engineer
Tchad Blake who also worked on the next two Crowded House albums. The album was mixed by Michael Frondelli at Studio 55. Seymour and Hester do not appear on "Now We're Getting Somewhere", which was recorded early in the sessions with drummer
Jim Keltner and bass player
Jerry Scheff. The original New Zealand and Australia release of the album featured ten tracks; however, when the album was being prepared for export it was decided to include Crowded House's version of the Split Enz song "
I Walk Away". At the same time the track listing was re-ordered and the song "Can't Carry On" was dropped from the album. After the release of the band's second album,
Temple of Low Men, EMI re-released
Crowded House internationally, using the original Australian/New Zealand track listing but with "I Walk Away" included too. This is now considered the "standard" track listing of for the album. A
DualDisc version of this album was made available in 2005. The DVD side features a DVD-A version of the album with lyrics, a discography and the music videos for "Don't Dream It's Over" and "Something So Strong". Original copies of the CD in Australia and New Zealand were made in Japan, but after the
Disctronics B plant at
Braeside was opened in March 1987, the album began to be manufactured there. ==Track listing==