Posts Tagged ‘Melbourne’

Cable Ties is a name that’s been echoing around the dimply-lit pubs and clubs of Melbourne for a little while now, a raucous three-person shout that’s pricked the ears of all who’ve heard it in the band’s short lifespan.

It’s exciting to see that, despite having only kicked things off in 2015, they’ve just found a home with local legends Poison City Records as they gear up to release their debut LP. It’s the perfect place for them too, seeing them nestled alongside bands like Luca Brasi, Clowns, Screamfeeder, The Nation Blue, PCR’s formidable stable of noisy, noisy bands.

Having said that, Cable Ties are more than just a heap of noise ,they’re one of the new crop of bands pushing for recognition for female and non-gender-conforming acts . Having helped in carving out an enclave of acceptance in the Melbourne scene, they’re ideal candidates to expand that further . Their debut album will be out in May via, Poison City Records, but right now you can give their brand new track a spin below.

Shades of Souixie/Joy Division/Magazine/All that was good in the 80’s…with a fresh twist. And I think I can hear some Au Pairs in there somewhere to,

Taken from forthcoming debut album on Poison City Records.

Oh Pep

Olivia Hally and Pepita Emmerichs are the “Oh” and the “Pep!” in this Melbourne band. They write mostly upbeat music filled with questions about desire and life’s priorities and considerations. Their pop sensibilities offer more twists and turns than the usual “verse/chorus” formula, but there are still big, catchy hooks. It’s just that those hooks seem to happen after you’ve taken a journey through a story, so the hook sinks much deeper and offers a kind of emotional relief.

Hally and Emmerichs have been making music since secondary school; they’re now both 24. The band’s use of fiddle, mandolin and harmonies are refreshingly original.

Stadium Cake is Oh Pep!’s debut album, recorded in Nova Scotia. Each of the duo’s previous three EPs is a progression into ever more complex songwriting and intricate playing. They’re funny at times, and they can be thoughtful and thought-provoking, sometimes in the same song. Stadium Cake expands on Hally and Emmerichs‘ talents, to the point where it surprised me how detailed and intricate they are as both players and listeners. I’ve come to find new favorites, though “Doctor Doctor” and “The Race” were the standouts. Put this on repeat, and by the time you stop, phrases like, “I know what I want and it’s not what I need” may be part of your own personal soundtrack.

Crazy Feels is taken from Oh Pep!’s debut album “Stadium Cake”

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Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever
Melbourne quintet Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever shows that there’s a distinct difference between American surf rock and the Aussie breed. There’s an utter lack of slackerdom in their polished riffs and vocals from this band, which also sounds like it took influence from Morrissey and Rachel Aggs of Brit-punk outfit Shopping. This determination, emphasized on the the eponymous single from their upcoming “The French Press” EP hints that they may be the next big thing to come out of Melbourne’s rich scene

Catchy melodies and cool grooves, and an individual style that mixes plenty of influences – Melbourne’s The Baudelaires impress with their debut. An alt-rock/psych/pop sound that deserves wide attention.

Musk Hill is the debut full-length from Melbourne’s The Baudelaires. Stomping through the dreamy, substance-induced house-party haze of their previous EP Be a Baudelaire! (2014), the new album delves into the crunchin’ boogie of psych-garage territory. Recorded over 3 days on a property of the same name on the Mornington Peninsula, Musk Hill was mixed by Baudelaire’s own Grischa Zahren and mastered by Melbourne music legend Mikey Young.

Having toured South Australia, Queensland and New South Wales on several occasions, been invited to play such festivals as Chopped Rod and Custom, Happy Wanderer, Rolling Stone Live Lodge and shared the stage with the like of Cosmic Psychos, Cash Savage and the Last Drinks, King Salami and the Cumberland 3 (UK), Peep Tempel and more, The Baudelaires are eager for their album’s release.

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Their name is a bit of a mouthful, but don’t let that deter you from this earful of bliss. This Melbourne band just announced their new EP The French Press will drop in March, and here’s the title track.

Describing their musical formula as “tough pop/soft punk,” Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever churn out bright, energetic rock & roll with lively guitar lines, pop hooks, and dry wit. Hailing from Melbourne, Australia, the band was formed in 2013 by guitarist and singer Fran Keaney. Over the course of a long summer, Keaney and his friends Tom Russo (guitar and vocals) and Joe Russo (bass) spent weeks bashing songs into shape over pizza. Fran and the Russos decided to form a band to play their brand of punky jangle pop, and brought aboard third guitarist Joe White and drummer Marcel Tussie. Inspired by classic pop bands like Orange Juice and the Go-Betweens, the group adopted the name Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever in honor of their sunny approach. (The name is sometimes shortened to Rolling Blackouts C.F.) After releasing a handful of digital singles, the band made their official recorded debut with the single “Clean Slate” in 2015, which won plenty of praise from the music press. In early 2016, Ivy League Records dropped RBCF’s first EP, Talk Tight, which earned them more positive press and some Australian radio airplay

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Melbourne outfit Run Rabbit Run and the first track unveiled from their upcoming debut EP, Bloodline. Run Rabbit Run are a brew of country’s revelry, folk’s raw honesty, and the intensity of rock. Armed with an impressive assortment of instruments, and a knack for vast dynamic and stylistic shifts, the five-piece folk-rockers are undeniably attention grabbing as they leap effortlessly from banjo-laden country, to mood-altering and atmospheric rock.

Having shifted away from the purer folk leanings of their previous work, the five-piece are now embarking down a slightly darker path, with ‘We Don’t Know’ proving somewhat menacing despite the reassuring presence of a signature bluegrass banjo.

To celebrate the release and signal their intent for the rest of the year, Run Rabbit Run will be heading out on tour throughout Feb and March,

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Run Rabbit Run are:
Casey Martin – Acoustic Guitar/Vocals/Lapsteel/Mandolin
Michael Roberts – Electric Guitar/Vocals/Banjo/Lapsteel
Michael Palmer – Drums/Backing Vocals
Jess Patterson – Keys/Backing Vocals
Marcus Jennings – Bass Guitar/Backing Vocals

 

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The hush-hush Secret World Premier showcase of Courtney Barnett’s hot debut “Sometimes I Sit And Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit”. Courtney Barnett’s fellow stablemate on Milk Records, Fraser A Gorman and his band warm up tonight’s stage. Looking every bit like a young electric Bob Dylan, Fraser belts out a short but entertaining set, previewing tracks from his as yet unreleased debut album ‘Slow Gun’

The main event, however, is of course Courtney Barnett. Tonight she and band are a threesome, with the added Drones’ guitarist Dan Luscombe (who guested on the album sessions) in the audience but notably absent on stage. No worries here though. Barnett does an admirable job of exerting her presence on her two left-handed guitars: a lovely white Jaguar and her trusty black Telecaster.
From the outset, Courtney’s charm is obvious. For my money, the potent combination of her stage persona and delivery puts her somewhere between a self-assured young Chrissie Hynde and the witty lyricism of Elvis Costello. Every track is generously peppered with little everyday observations – every detail is deftly distilled.

Courtney Barnett

Witness the first track of the evening ‘Elevator Operator’.
She rattles through the album in track order, stopping only briefly to remark, ‘ this is fun …but it’s weird…I’m not gonna lie…I’m nervous and excited at the same time…” and then later, “Dad says he likes ‘Pedestrian at Best’ but reckons it’s a bit too ‘yelly’.
She then breaks into what is to be my favourite song of the evening, “Dead Fox” featuring a brilliant lyric inspired by the visibility signs on Lindsay Fox trucks, with the catchy chorus “If you can’t see me, I can’t see you”.
Another memorable track of the evening is “Depreston”, a song already released and currently trending on social media. It’s essentially the story of Courtney house-hunting and seeing some potential in a deceased estate. The catchy hook: “If you’ve got a spare half a million, you could knock it down and start re-building” still had us singing it on the way back to the station to catch the last train home.
Tonight’s showcase aptly demonstrates that Courtney is well into her own journey. Ever questing, ever exploring. In fact on the track ‘Small Poppies’ she sings almost auto-biographically: “I don’t know quite who I am, oh but man I am trying. I make mistakes until I get it right.”

BrailleFaceBecause

Another breakout artist , Jordan White arguably delivered one of 2016’s best local albums with his Braille Face debut, Kōya.

His year got off to an encouraging start when he was named a the first signing to Spirit Level, the revived indie label launched by Double J’s Tim Shiel and Wally ‘Gotye’ De Backer, the latter of whom he spent time with , recording a bunch of material “most likely” destined to land on his second album.

Upon his return, he knocked over a slew of well-received live outings — including his sublime showing at Bigsound  and ended the year riding high, hopefully safe in the knowledge that he’d created something really special along the way. We genuinely cannot wait to see what comes next.

It comes as no small surprise that an album is now coming our way from Braille Face (AKA Jordan White), but what will continue to make us all wonder, is how on earth he managed to narrow his Rolodex of songs down to just one album of 12 songs.

‘Because’ is the third taster we have for what to expect from Kōya. It’s very different to ‘Glow’ and ‘Backwards/Medicated’, but the consistency between all the tracks is Braille Face’s voice. It’s emotional, captivating, and somehow both smooth and raspy. This track is certainly something slower, it has a distinct raw edge where the other tracks have been filled with sound, and yet this track is still full in its own way.

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The track is full of soft piano, and a pretty neat sound that is reminiscent of a piano accordion. It leaves plenty of room for you to be transported into the cold hard world the lyrics are describing, and yet, the piano alone would fill you with beautiful thoughts of a warm spring day.

Taken from Braille Face’s debut album Kōya, to be released August 31st via Spirit Level/Inertia.

Written and performed by Braille Face.
Piano by Luke Howard.

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Hunting. Lurking. Resting. Waking. Animal is a four-legged beast depicting “four stages of the animal” in evolution “from dark to light”. Not Art may have been an ironic title for Tom Iansek and Joanna Syme’s AMP-winning album of 2013, but the disclaimer is inconceivable this year.

The follow-up is an unwieldy monster, as any representation of human duality must be when rendered in episodes of electronic sound and splinters of opaque poetry. The Melbourne duo’s suggestion that any of the four sides are equally valid entry points only confuses the one fact you can take to the bank: Animal plays nicer as she goes along.

The first four songs are primal acts. From the visceral thwack and grunt of “Oxygen” to the carnality of “Savior Add Vice”, drums are high and synths dry, though the horny groove of “Organism” is a feelgood highlight of the sprawl.

Muscles and tones soften in the romantic deconstruction of “The Endless Story”, and by the time we reach the piano splashes and languid falsetto of “Breathe Underwater”, it’s like we’re in a different relationship entirely.

There’s still phase four, and a soulful denouement in the classical strings and piano of “Lamina”. If there’s a remaining glimmer of anxiety, it’s ’cause we know that Lurking and Hunting are only a random record-flip away.

Hunting – Oxygen, Organism, Double Darkness, Savior Add Vice
Lurking – Lone Bird, The Endless Story, Flutism, Up and Up and Up
Resting – Breathe Underwater, The Opposite of Us, Heaven on Earth
Waking – Over Matter, Lamina

The album has been quartered into separate bundles of tracks, which we are calling the 4 Stages of the Animal. These stages are “Hunting”, “Lurking”, “Resting” and “Waking”. Being a double vinyl each of these stages will have its own vinyl side. The vinyl will not be marked with a chronological order. This way each side will be its own self-contained unit and can be listened to as so if preferred. We intend this to emphasize a lack of a fixed starting point, as the album can start at whatever side of vinyl is placed down first. Additionally there will be a unique colour-scheme to guide the musical and thematic flow if desired.
The 12″ LP artwork and layout is designed to reflect the ideas behind the music. It may provoke an immediate reaction of disdain or even disgust. There is not meant to be a ‘right way up’ – it is designed to disorient as well as reinforce the idea of no fixed starting point, and thus a continuity.

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All songs written and performed by Tom Iansek and Jo Syme.

Big Scary are a very impressive duo who are getting better with each release. This *should* be “big”.

First Listen: The Peep Tempel 'Joy'

Melbourne trio The Peep Tempel are set to release their third album “Joy”, the follow-up to 2014′s Tales,

Joy reignites the band’s distinct drawl, growling and fist-waved plainspoken complaint spun through colloquial larrikinism and picture-book pub-punk storytelling. Yet, with longer studio sessions booked, the band also enjoyed what they describe as a “definite indulgence”, leading to left-field experiments ranging from organs to car engines.

Thematically, it’s equally varied. Snapshots of everyday life butt heads with more straight-shot, politically-ignited rhetoric, as with fiery first single “Rayguns”. At the other end of Joy’s wide-spread spectrum, minimalism lounge-bar ballad “Go Slow” compliments the sparse backdrop with throaty, targeted taunts, taking a far more personal slant to the band’s usual tact.

Joy officially came out October 14th via Wing Sing Records, and available to buy through Bandcamp in full .

Peep Tempel vocalist/guitarist Blake Scott has also been kind enough to compile a track-by-track breakdown of the album, covering the tales and themes behind each song.

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“Kalgoorlie”
“‘Kalgoorlie’ was the last song we recorded for Joy. We were all very relaxed, and just cut loose. It was our farewell to the studio and the environment that we had created over the previous 10 days. There was an incredible Elka X-705 synth/organ in the studio. We all jumped on it for this one. One of us would mash the keys while the others pulled the stops and pressed buttons. It was a nice way to finish the session. This track was originally an instrumental, though we decided to run a vocal, and rehashed some old lyrics. It comes across as a nasty one, though lyrically, it’s tongue in cheek. Basically, a bunch of clichés about Kalgoorlie and life as a hard drinking miner.”

“Totality”
“An impromptu wedding set on a dinghy. “Totality” is an absurdist rom com. It is paranoid and whimsical, though for this moment in time our lovers are on the path to completion. The author is urgent and determined. Not letting the holes in the bottom of the boat discourage, he sets out to sea with his lover Ange and his ex-roommate and celebrant, William. As with many a romance, tragedy lurks. If they are bound for the deep blue, they go there in union. Not so cool for old William, who’ll spend his demise as the uncomfortable third wheel.

The general theme of the track was inspired by the Yorgos Lanthimos film, The Lobster. The central character was inspired by a note left on a public notice board in Coronet Bay, under the ads for old couches and refrigerators, ‘two girls who sat on mattresses with cats, I have lost my scanner and need it to be returned.’”

“We You Forgot”
“Has a bit of the ‘Burke and Wills’ about it this one. Not directly related, but with all the blowflies and dysentery. Our man is an old English explorer, under the spell of congenital psychopathy. Thrusting his heroic jawline westward, he sets out across the land with his grandiose notions of discovery. It’s not long before the expedition takes a turn and everybody dies. Old mate is absolutely aghast when it’s his turn.

We really hurt some amps for this one. We had them cranked with as much low end as we could wind-in. We were doing it in rehearsal and they sounded like they would blow. Once we got them in the isolation booth and cranked them, they did. Was an expensive and inconvenient riff. But it was all in the name of a-path-y. Nice to return the favour, even if it is in one of our silly little stories.”

“Rayguns”
“One of the great drumming performances. Those sizzling hats!! Stunning Stevie Carter, gunning for the greater good. Thoughtful, precise and magnificently brutal. The bedrock for the most enjoyable Peep Tempel song yet. (In my opinion.)”

“Constable”
“The earliest incarnation of this song sounded like the end of our career. Originally titled ‘Ageing Gracefully.’ It was as though the Chilli Peppers had infiltrated our collective psyche. Steve was playing a ‘dad funk’ beat. Stew had found a bass hook with a terrifyingly disproportionate skill to substance ratio, and reinforced its existence at the end of every bar. I felt I had no choice but to rap over it. All our friends loved it. Which was the worst possible result. We discussed disbanding, and spent the following months drinking heavily at rehearsal instead of actually practising. It was during this period that we wrote the rest of the album. For some reason we gave “Constable” another go. After some uncomfortably curt discussions about the importance of a team first philosophy, we ditched the individualistic instrumentation, added a corrupt police officer, an old diesel engine, some galahs and an organ. Desert dreaming.”

“Don’t Race”
“Fast. ‘From Bruce Rock to Beijing’ is one of the more enjoyable lines on the album. (Bruce Rock is a small farming community in Western Australia’s Wheatbelt) This one is an angry little thing. Nothing ground breaking, a solid three star effort and a ripping cardio workout, There is an unfortunate ‘Cat’s in the Cradle’ type bit in the breakdown. But all in all, solid.”

“Neuroplasticity”
“Stewart Rayner ladies and gentlemen, the ace of bass. Disco music is important. As is one’s capacity for change. The fact that Stew was wearing a Dead Moon tee when he wrote this bass riff highlights the ever-increasing possibility that we humans can redirect neural pathways. The studies into the plasticity of the human brain are absolutely fascinating. Reparation of trauma (physical or emotional), the bolstering of the brain’s core capabilities, the reversal of the aging of the brain! Rewire that Neurological Positioning System people. Destination? Joy.”

“Alexander”
“It wouldn’t be a Peep Tempel record without an epic wank. It’s a repetitive riff with some nothing lyrics about someone wanting to talk to a guy called Alexander. It’s got some really cool gang backups and an epic ending. Spectacular.”

“Go Slow”
“I was fishing in Phnom Penh and went into a bait shop to get some burley. The clerk was dressed in drag. We got chatting about fishing and music. We headed up the main street together. My new friend started playing the Shepparton Airplane album on his ghetto blaster. It was remarkable. I began to weep. Just then my dear friend Tony pulled up in a Ford Cortina. He announced excitedly that the mixes were ready. I jumped in and was enveloped by the most amazing music I’d ever heard. It was all synths, massive walls of synth. It had this amazing bass line chugging through it that just tore me apart. I woke up and recorded a version as close to what I could remember. I took it to the day’s rehearsal and somehow we ended up with this. It’s not what I dreamed. But what is?”

“Brains”
“This one is a heavy swill — an oily and claustrophobic acknowledgement of sadness. Musically, it swims in itself. We got this one drunk for days, and then we gave it a megaphone. We had two alternate drop-down parts and decided we’d just go with both and turn it into an epic. It’s the misery that just keeps on giving.”