Posts Tagged ‘Australian’

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Australian band the Murlocs, The trio – harmonica player and vocalist Ambrose Smith, guitarist Callum Shortal and drummer Matt Blach had known each other since their school days. “Matt and I had played in a band together when we were at primary school – we called ourselves Blu Tac,” Smith recalls. “We played a bunch of weird covers, and we only had one gig, at an old people’s home, which was actually pretty good,” he laughs. some years later Smith, Shortal and Blach reconvened in the psychedelic-blues outfit The Murlocs. Smith, the son of Australian songwriter, performer and founding member of The Dingoes Broderick Smith, had grown up surrounded by music, particularly his father’s blues influences.  I used to brainwash myself with his blues stuff,” Smith says. While many of his contemporaries gravitated to guitar and drums, Smith’s interest was drawn to the harmonica. “I really wanted to play harp because I was really into that sound,” Smith says. Smith says his now sharp harmonica skills are “largely self-taught.” I gradually realised how to hold and bend a note, and one day I finally got it.”   Initially The Murlocs built on the rudimentary jam sessions between Smith and Shortal. “These days it’s a bit different,” Smith says. “I try and play rhythm guitar against Cal’s guitar.  They released their debut EP earlier this year with negligible fanfare, and a second EP made up songs left over from the band’s initial songwriting efforts has just been released. “When we did the first EP we put down the five tracks in just one afternoon, and we did those songs because we were comfortable with them,” Smith says. “The songs that are on the new EP we just wanted to get rid of them before we get sick of playing them.  One of the tracks on the new EP, “Bogan Grove”, has an obvious local reference point.  Smith, who was born in country Victoria before moving to the city, and then down to the surf coast says the idyllic beaches – The new EP was recorded at Smith’s grandmother’s 1950s house in the leafy suburb of Ivanhoe. “I’d been living there with my mum and my sister, and I wanted to record there before it was too late,” Smith says. “It’s a really nice house, and it hasn’t been renovated into some five story bullshit place.  We did the recording out in the spare room out the back where my twisted aunty was living for a while. It was a really cool setting – we thought it suited the vibe.”   After spending seven years living on the surf coast, Smith has now moved up to Melbourne permanently, though The Murlocs can still be found regularly playing alongside surf coast contemporaries The Frowning Clouds, The Living Eyes and King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. “I always wanted to play harp in a band, and Gizzard is a great fun rock band,” he says. “I’ve been balancing both – it’s been busy, but it works out.”   Earlier this year The Murlocs achieved arguably the band’s highest career moment so far when it was invited to play on the bill at the inaugural Dig It Up! festival. “That was really cool,” Smith says. “I think one of the guys in the Hoodoo Gurus chose us.  We’d already been looking at getting tickets to see bands like The Sonics who were on the bill, but then we didn’t have to.Not surprisingly, The Murlocs haven’t drawn up a five-year strategic plan towards success.

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Australian Band The Babe Rainbow, are supporting King Gizzard and the Wizzard Lizard The Babe Rainbow backed it up with an equally organic and environmentally inspired video clip – which seems to channel the style of multiple 60′s television comedies simultaneously, as if you were watching them on LSD. The psychedelic VHS trip was filmed in Murwillumbah, NSW and edited by the band, the enigmatic Dr. D Foothead and Malane – and depicts the members of the band run around the town and it’s green pastures and hills, before colours change and spirals fill the screen to really trip you out.

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A 4cd or 4LP Anthology with original with rare and archival recordings and extensive liner notes from Robert Forster, Domino Records are honoured to announce the upcoming Autumn 2014 release of an extraordinary anthology for one of the most beloved and influential Australian groups of all-time, The Go-Betweens.

G Stands For Go-Betweens Volume One extensively documents the band’s origins in an ambitious box containing four vinyl albums, four compact discs and an extensive 112-page book, featuring a trove of archival photos and extensive historical liner notes from founding member Robert Forster, along with additional pieces from guest essayists, fans and contemporaries. The box set captures the band’s output from 1978 through 1984 and includes the first vinyl re-pressings of their first three studio albums in over thirty years (Send Me A Lullaby, Before Hollywood & Spring HillFair), all re-mastered from the original analog tapes. G Stands For Go-Betweens also brings together their early classic and collectible singles together on a fourth vinyl LP entitled The First Five Singles, featuring new artwork from its creators. Additionally, the set comes with four compact discs of rare, hard-to-find and unreleased demos, recordings, radio sessions and a complete live concert radio broadcast from 1982. If that’s not enough, the set comes with a silkscreen of their first promotional poster for their debut single, “Lee Remick”, as well as a reproduction of their very first press release from their own Able Label.

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The first three albums, the first five singles, outtakes, demos, radio sessions and a live show…

In the 1980s, Australia’s Go-Betweens were the dark horse among all those sharp-edged, sweet-and-sour guitar bands with literary pretensions. For those who found the cult of Morrissey too messianic and Lloyd Cole too self-satisfied, here was a connoisseurs’ choice: a band who name-checked Jean Genet while blending Sixties pop nous, 80s indie elegance, the brittle intensity of post-punk and the wayward non-conformity of The Modern Lovers.

A vehicle for the songs and voices of Robert Forster and Grant McLennan, the Go-Betweens formed in December 1977 in Brisbane and ended their first act in 1989. Six years into a fruitful post-Millennial reunion, they finally ceased trading in 2006 following McLennan’s sudden death from a heart attack. Forster has been plotting this gargantuan eight-disc slab of cultural excavation since shortly after that unhappy event; the first of three planned anthologies, it’s a beautifully conceived exploration of the band’s origins and early evolution.

Included are the first three Go-Betweens albums, Send Me A Lullaby (1982), Before Hollywood (1983), and Spring Hill Fair (1984), as well as all ten sides of their first five 45s, collected here on a new stand-alone LP titled The First Five Singles. Running parallel to these four vinyl albums are four CDs, arranged chronologically, consisting of outtakes, hard-to-find and unreleased demos, radio sessions and a complete (and excellent) live concert, recorded at the Mosman Hotel, Sydney, on April 23rd, 1982. There are over 100 tracks in all.

Meeting as fellow arts students at the University of Queensland, Forster and McLennan named their band after L.P. Hartley’s 1953 novel, and throughout its lifespan the group’s music was characterised by a darting intellectual curiosity. Debut single “Lee Remick” is a faux-naif piece of fan mail directed at the actress (“She was in The Omen / with Gregory Peck / She got killed / what the heck”), but its dumbness is studied and self-aware; on the B-side, “Karen”, a song clearly in thrall to Patti Smith’s “Gloria”, they’re already name-checking Brecht, Joyce and Chandler.

By 1980, and third single “I Need Two Heads”, the music had started to catch up with the words. Released on Postcard Records following trips to London and Glasgow, the song is an assured blend of The Cure and The Gang Of Four, giving the Go-Betweens their first Top 10 indie hit in the UK. Orange Juice drummer Steven Daly guested on the track, but by the time they started recording Send Me A Lullaby Lindy Morrison had joined on drums. As a settled three piece, the Go-Betweens’ house sound began to emerge: brittle and sharp, with lots of air between Forster’s guitar, McLennan’s bass and Morrison’s idiosyncratic rhythm. “Careless” has the compulsive twitch of early Orange Juice, and the urgent jangle of “Hold Your Horses” has shades of REM’s Chronic Town, but any sweetness is balanced by a sour twist. The vivid psycho-sexual drama of “Eight Pictures” creeps and crawls, the waspish digs at some thespian love-rival (“Same publicity shots for six years”) barely lightening the mood, while “It Could Be Anyone” recalls the neurotic funk of Talking Heads.

Released the following year, Before Hollywood marks a leap forward in both composition and execution, excising any lingering hints of ramshackle amateurishness. Robert Vickers joined as bassist, McLennan moved to guitar, and piano became a more prominent texture, notably on the lovely “Dusty In Here”. The album includes the masterful “Cattle And Cane”, a taut, minimal, bittersweet reflection on McLennan’s Cairns childhood, written on Nick Cave’s guitar. A slightly reconfigured version of the song features on the fourth CD of rarities.

On Spring Hill Fair, the Go-Betweens’ sound shuffles towards something lusher, more pop-savvy. A serrated edge remains on “Five Words” and the lowering “River Of Money”, but by now the band were lining up against the great song stylists of the mid-80s. Washed with synthesisers, “Bachelor Kisses” is animated by the same restrained romanticism as Prefab Sprout’s “When Love Breaks Down” (if anything, the demo is even more swoonsome), while “Part Company” – from its quivering emotional urgency down to its intricate, concentric weave of bass, vocal and fluid guitar lines – is a kissing cousin to The Smiths’ “Reel Around The Fountain”.

Parts of Spring Hill Fair point towards the glossier, more measured elegance of the Go-Betweens next phase, bookended by 1986’s Liberty Belle And The Black Diamond Express and 1988’s 16 Lovers Lane. But that’s another story, for another anthology. For now, Volume One of G Stands For Go-Betweens is a giddy treat, marking the spot where the headlong rush of new beginnings meets the steadying hand of accomplishment.

This is a seven-piece psychedelic rock band from Melbourne, Australia. I llearned about them through fellow Aussie, Courtney Barnett, when she played the Musician in Leicester I asked about other Australian bands I should seek out . They were a pretty hyped band during CMJ, where they played 16 shows in 13 days . The good news is that they lived up to the hype. They put on a really frenetic and dynamic show that is exhilarating to watch so catch them at the Bodega Social on Wednesday 26th November. The have two drum kits, three guitars, a bass, harmonica, maracas, tambourine and even a flute. Lets hope they can fit all that onto that small stage Amazingly, the band manages to layer all these sounds into a band that definitely rocks it.

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Five skinny kids with roots firmly placed in their own blown-out, distorted brand of soulful RnB.
Formed in early 2011 by harp player Ambrose Kenny-Smith, The Murlocs have already played alongside Thee Oh Sees, Graveyard Train and Dave Graney. Their up-tempo snare cracks and noisy doom guitar – accompanied by Ambrose’s vocal screech – has been described as a mesmerising demented dance party.
It’s the Australian invasion these days, and The Murlocs are a welcome addition. Favorite track: Paranoid Joy.
Mad take on the blues. Very unique sound.

 

 

 

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The Trouble With Templeton with their latest single ‘Field Sign’. This Australian band have warm and listenable Folk/Rock tones into emotional songs, With lyrics that dictate reality and a stealthy acoustic riffs, The Trouble With Templeton release their admirable qualities, With lead vocalist, Thomas Calder enunciating lines like “I pop a couple good tabs of aspirin, try to shake this feeling I got”, his raw, organic and expansive refrains smother ‘Field Sign’ with a wholesome vibe that is simply very contagious.

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King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizzard:  these Australians probably played the most shows during CMJ in New York. The band played every venue and every day they could, there was the ‘Gizzard’s knocking people’s socks off, sometimes through sheer momentum and frenetic energy. With  three guitarists, two drummers, two singers and the occasional flute (some of these duties overlapped), they were a psych-garage semi with no brakes down a steep incline. Was there more than one song or just one really long insane one? I can’t remember but it’s an awesome blur.The band are playing the Bodega Social on Wednesday 26th November catch them now before they return to Oz.

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Dune Rats are a three-piece from Brisbane, Australia.

Their debut EP ‘Sexy Beach’ received praise both nationally and internationally, capturing the minds and hearts of music bloggers around the world. With constant touring Dune Rats reputation for a raucous and energetic live show gained them a spot on the Big Day Out Festival and national tours in Australia with bands such as The Drums, Best Coast, The Vines, Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graphitti, and Cults.

Dune Rats singles “Fuck It” and “Red Light Green Light” followed up the boys previous airplay success and both have had high rotation on Triple J and plenty of love on YouTube. Crowd-bending shows at SXSW, Splendour In The Grass, Spin Off Festival, Circo and the much lauded EP ‘Smile’ have kept the boys busy running around but they are already in and out of various studios and rehearsal rooms writing and recording for their first album, due to drop early 2014.

 

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Immigrant Union are a psychedelic folk band from Melbourne Australia featuring Brent DeBoer from The Dandy Warhols. Like Spiritualized being baptised in a river of Creedence Clearwater.

Immigrant Union’s started with a few drinks. And… maybe a few dozen more drinks. The story got a little more interesting when the duo started turning simple chords and melodies into completed songs. And then polished recordings of those songs.
In the summer of 2004 when Brent DeBoer of The Dandy Warhols was killing some time in Australia and had a chance meeting with Melbourne’s Bob Harrow. They acquired the talented vocalist and keyboard player, Peter Lubulwa, and the band quickly planted its roots in alt-country-folk, bound by a communal love for classic rock and roll.
Countless shows later, Immigrant Union have now supported Noel Gallagher, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Dead Meadow and toured their own headline shows, the band have naturally progressed into the next chapter of their story: realising their second album, and keeping their eyes fixed on the international touring circuit ahead.
Immigrant Union’s upcoming album is a shift from previous recordings – moving away from the country end of the sound spectrum, they approached their second record with a desire to produce a more layered, trippier sound,  the band went literally to the farthest reaches of the earth: to Brent’s hometown in Portland, Oregon and to Altona on the outskirts of Melbourne, Australia.
With singles coming out in the US from June, Immigrant Union will be releasing ‘Anyway’ in September 2014 followed by appearances at The Americana Music Festival in Nashville in September and a national tour of the USA in October.

 

 

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Sweet sound from Melbourne Australian Jangle pop band “The TWERPS” album is available now, the band have just signed to Merge Records,

Melbourne’s Twerps have released “Back To You” b/w “Always Waiting” on limited edition 7-inch vinyl as well as digitally. The single quickly follows the August-released Underlay EP and precedes their second full-length Range Anxiety, due in January.

“Back to You” has a vibrant and lighthearted way of addressing the relationship between insecurity and desire. Singer Martin Frawley contemplates being tied down, letting the listener decide what exactly he’s tethered to. The Johann Rashid-directed music video captures Twerps and their radiant local surroundings with a romantic sensibility

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