November Issue
Melbourne | Free
I T ’ S F E S T I VA L SEASON The ultimate breakdown of this summer’s festivals
Why you need to catch Miss Blanks
Don’t be a dickhead - the festival etiquette guide
82%
THE MUSIC
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THE MUSIC
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CONGRATUALATIONS TO GANG OF YOUTHS, AMY SHARK
EIGHT NOMINATIONS
INCLUDING APPLE MUSIC ALBUM OF THE YEAR FOR
GO FARTHER IN LIGHTNESS BEST ROCK ALBUM FOR
GO FARTHER IN LIGHTNESS BEST VIDEO FOR
THE DEEPEST SIGHS, THE FRANKEST SHADOWS BEST AUSTRALIAN LIVE ACT BEST GROUP AND CONGRATULATIONS ON WINNING PRODUCER OF THE YEAR ADRIAN BREAKSPEAR & GANG OF YOUTHS FOR
GO FARTHER IN LIGHTNESS
“‘GO FARTHER IN LIGHTNESS’ WILL PROVE FRONTMAN DAVE LE’AUPEPE AS ONE OF AUSTRALIA’S FOREMOST SONGWRITERS” – THE MUSIC
THE MUSIC
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& TASH SULTANA ON THEIR ARIA AWARD NOMINATIONS
SIX NOMINATIONS INCLUDING APPLE MUSIC ALBUM OF THE YEAR FOR
NIGHT THINKER BEST POP RELEASE FOR NIGHT THINKER APPLE MUSIC SONG OF THE YEAR FOR ADORE BEST VIDEO FOR DRIVE YOU MAD BEST FEMALE ARTIST BREAKTHROUGH ARTIST “FIVE MORE SONGS THAT MEET THE STANDARD SHE SET WITH EARWORM ‘ADORE’” – THE MUSIC
FOUR NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST INDEPENDENT RELEASE FOR
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BEST AUSTRALIAN LIVE ACT BREAKTHROUGH ARTIST “IT’S AN IMMENSELY IMPRESSIVE OUTING MADE EVEN MORE SO BY THE FACT THAT IT’S COMING FROM A SINGLE SOURCE” – THE MUSIC
THE MUSIC
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THE MUSIC
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THE MUSIC
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NOVEMBER
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THE MUSIC
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Credits Publisher Street Press Australia Pty Ltd Group Managing Editor Andrew Mast National Editor – Magazines Mark Neilsen Group Senior Editor/National Arts Editor Maxim Boon Editors Bryget Chrisfield, Daniel Cribb, Neil Griffiths, Mitch
Hopefully, it’s pretty obvious to you by now. But just in case it’s not: We’ve gone monthly.
Knox Assistant Editor/Social Media Co-Ordinator Jessica Dale Editorial Assistant Sam Wall Gig Guide Henry Gibson
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e were weekly but now we are not. If you too are sadly addicted to Media Watch (not everything worth watching on free-to-air has to involve Sophie Monk... yet), you’ll know it’s tough out there/in here for media. Google and Facebook are gobbling up all the advertising dollars and we have to get innovative to survive. A few years back we diversified into the digital landscape and now theMusic.com.au is the third most visited music website in the country (according to October Nielsen figures). We then introduced a daily newsletter that has fast become the most influential in the local music industry. Now we have taken the step to consolidate our print output into a monthly. Going monthly isn’t the only change we’ve made. We’ve taken the opportunity to try a few new things. We’ve got bigger pages, better quality stock and we’ve made space for the return of some longer-form journalism. And, some of your regular favourites have migrated to our digital platform. We’ve introduced a new arts section (guess what we’ve called it? yep… The Arts) and we’ve added Your Town, where we scour your local city and surrounding suburbs for the best of music and culture over the coming month. So here you have our first issue in its monthly format. A celebration of our favourite season. Festival season. The Music team has spent hours piecing together the must-attend festivals of the season as well as arguing over who we think the breakout artists of the festival season will be. Of course, our festival run-through wouldn’t be complete without an etiquette guide (seriously, just don’t be a dickhead) and survival tips. Please enjoy and hit us back on our socials to let us know what you’ve liked and what’s pissed you off. Be kind.
gigs@themusic.com.au Senior Contributors Steve Bell, Ross Clelland, Jeff Jenkins Contributors Nic Addenbrooke, Annelise Ball, Emily Blackburn, Melissa Borg, Anthony Carew, Uppy Chatterjee, Roshan Clerke, Shaun Colnan, Brendan Crabb, Cyclone, Guy Davis, Joe Dolan, Jack Doonar, Benny Doyle, Chris Familton, Guido Farnell, Liz Giuffre, Carley Hall, Tobias Handke, Mark Hebblewhite, Samantha Jonscher, Kate Kingsmill, Tim Kroenert, Matt MacMaster, Taylor Marshall, Rip Nicholson, MJ O’Neill, Carly Packer, Natasha Pinto, Michael Prebeg, Mick Radojkovic, Jake Sun, Rod Whitfield Senior Photographers Cole Bennetts, Kane Hibberd Photographers Rohan Anderson, Andrew Briscoe, Stephen Booth, Pete Dovgan, Jodie Downie, Simone Fisher, Lucinda Goodwin, Josh Groom, Clare Hawley, Bianca Holderness, Jay Hynes, Dave Kan, Yaseera Moosa, Hayden Nixon, Angela Padovan, Markus Ravik, Bobby Rein, Peter Sharp, Barry Shipplock, Terry Soo, John Stubbs, Bec Taylor Advertising Leigh Treweek, Antony Attridge, Brad Edwards, Brad Summers sales@themusic.com.au Art Dept Ben Nicol, Felicity Case-Mejia print@themusic.com.au Admin & Accounts Ajaz Durrani, Meg Burnham, Bella Bi accounts@themusic.com.au Distro distro@themusic.com.au Subscriptions store.themusic.com.au Contact Us Melbourne Head Office Ph: 03 9421 4499 459-461 Victoria Street Brunswick West Vic 3055 PO Box 231 Brunswick West Vic 3055 Sydney Ph: 02 9331 7077 111 Flinders St Surry Hills NSW 2010 Brisbane
Cover photo by Jayden Ostwald
Andrew Mast Group Managing Editor
Ph: 07 3252 9666 228 Wickham St Fortitude Valley Qld 4006 info@themusic.com.au www.themusic.com.au
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Our contributors
This month 20.
Editor’s Letter
24. Hydrofunk From opening a studio to touring with Run DMC, Hyrdofunk Records list some of their highlights of the past 20 years.
58.
A founder member of alternative rock trio Camp Cope, Kelly-Dawn is a bassist based in Melbourne. Alongside her bandmates, Sarah Thompson and Georgia McDonald, she has spearheaded the #ItTakesOne movement to improve safety at live music venues.
60.
Camp Cope’s Kelly-Dawn Hellmrich on the entrenched culture of discrimination in the music industry.
62. 64. 65.
Michael Hutchence
Neil Griffiths
Feistt
Little Dragon
The Arts
38. Miss Blanks We talk to the rising star of this year’s festival season.
Louis Theroux The filmmaker takes a look at the dark heart of America’s underclasses in his new documentary Heroin Town.
Gaten Matarazzo We speak to one of the bad ass kids from Stranger Things, which you speed-binged when it dropped.
Guest editorial
Best Of The Fests Here’s your ultimate guide to festival season, from events old and new, weekend camping to one-day affairs.
Kelly-Dawn Hellmrich
Fountaineer
30.
32.
56.
67.
Neil is the Sydney Digital Editor for theMusic.com.au, as well as co-host on ‘The Music Podcast With Dave & Neil’. With a background in TV and radio presenting, Neil has interviewed the likes of Will Ferrell, Steve Carell, blink-182 and Ice Cube and is currently writing a TV series with podcast cohost, Dave Burrowes.
Louise Paramor
70. Nicholas Buc The conductor and John Williams addict feels the force of Star Wars.
42. Got ya pills sorted? No, because we had a false start with pill-testing in Australia. We look into what went wrong.
44. 48. 50. 52. 54.
Taika Waititi
Jess Locke
ARIA Awards Form Guide
71. 72. 74. 76.
Anne-Marie Peard
Taylor Mac
Releases
Live, Film & TV
Your Town
ARIA Hall Of Fame – Daryl Braithwaite
Kllo
Jerome Borazio & ALONE
79. 80. 86.
Melbourne Music Week
The General Assembly
The End
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Anne-Marie has been a Melbourne-based independent arts writer and editor since 2006. Before that, she spent many years working in festivals and arts event management in Adelaide, Perth, Canberra and Melbourne. She’s an occasional theatre critic at The Age and writes for various arts publications as well as her blog Sometimes Melbourne.
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THE MUSIC
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Bec Sandridge
‘Ridgy-didge Sydney-based indie-pop maestro Bec Sandridge turned heads with powerful new single, I’ll Never Want A BF, last month and immediately confirmed a run of Aussie headline dates in support. You can also catch Sandridge at The Plot.
Nails it
Claws
Yes, we know it hit Stan in late October, but there seems to be a criminally low number of people getting around Claws. Stream the treacherous and darkly funny adventures of five Floridian manicurists now.
On my mind
Justice League
Friday On My Mind cast Pic: Tony Mott
It’s bittersweet news after the recent passing of music icon George Young, but the ABC’s much-anticipated two-part mini-series about revered Australian band The Easybeats, Friday On My Mind, hits screens 26 Nov.
Big league Justice League hits cinemas on 16 Nov. DC’s cinematic ventures have copped some flack in the past, but we’re very much looking forward to seeing Gal Gadot’s Wonder Woman steal literally all of the thunder.
Huntly
Diverse cities
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Championing gender diversity in the music industry, Sad Grrrls Festival will make its first Brisbane trip this month on top of its established Sydney/Melbourne stops. Moaning Lisa, Huntly, Rachel Maria Cox and more are on the bill.
Drake
World: oh hi
Breakout artist of the month:
After keeping us waiting since 2015, Canadian rap heavyweight and living meme Drake is back Down Under with the Boy Meets World tour. Catch him this month in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne.
Street Hassle
Street Hassle @ Howler. Pic: Joshua Braybrook
Lorde
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O Lorde Lorde blew minds at her intimate Sydney show back in July and it’s finally time for her full tour with her latest album Melodrama. Lorde’s five-date run includes a headline slot at Spilt Milk festival.
Lucianblomkamp
Blom ablomp
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If you’re yet to listen to Lucianblomkamp’s latest EP Sick Of What I Don’t Understand, Pt 1 get on it sharpish. Then buy a ticket to one of his national launch shows this month.
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ocal four-piece garage-pop band Street Hassle — they’re from Preston — are so fresh they don’t even have proper promo pics yet (but they’re onto it, don’t worry)! After Jess Owen (rhythm guitarist/ singer), Niamh Crosbie (lead guitar/singer) and Georgia Ehrlich (drums) finished playing with an old band, they wanted to keep making music together so brought in Emily Cartwright (bass) to round out what would become Street Hassle. “Our songs are inspired by a lot of ‘60s garage and pop as well as some country music from around the same era,” Cartright reveals. They’ve only been a thing for three or four months, but already Street Hassle have secured some enviable support slots. “Supporting RVG was such an honour,” Cartwright acknowledges of warming up Howler’s stage last month for these impressive fellow Prestonians, who seem to be popping up on every cool line-up at the moment (they’re playing Meredith, ferchrissakes!). During this gig, our reviewer pointed out the emerging four-piece included a cover of Madonna’s Beautiful Stranger and, fortunately, we also had one of our awesome photographers at this gig so can share a visual of Street Hassle. On Street Hassle’s Facebook page, their band interests are listed as “breaking your heart”, their genre, “mum rock”. There’s sadly no Street Hassle music available on the internet for your ears as yet, but Cartright says the foursome hope to release a 7” “by the start of next year”. But you don’t need to wait that long, ‘cause Street Hassle have a couple of shows coming up! Head down to the launch of One Year (a new joint at 220 Johnston Street, Collingwood that will be demolished in a year, hence the name) on 11 Nov and/or The Yarra Hotel on 16 Nov to check out the goodness that is Street Hassle.
An abridged history of Hydrofunk’s slam dunks It’s almost impossible to pick the highlights from indie hiphop label Hydrofunk Records’ illustrious 20-year run, so we asked co-founders DJ Katch and Zsolt Reggel to share a few of their personal favourites. Opening Hydrofunk HQ In 2011 we had the opportunity to open our own studio after the purchase of a Neve 75 series mixing console. This had always been a goal, and it enabled us to spend the time producing the albums and sounds we wanted without watching the clock in paid studios. It really allowed us to produce music to cater for the global market. Hydrofunk HQ is situated in the hills of Byron Shire, and is a unique space in an amazing natural setting, catering to artists from all around the world. Touring with Run DMC One of the highlight tours of the past 20 years was our Resin Dogs national tour with Run DMC in 2000. It was a privilege to be on tour with this USA rap crew and during that time we met a lot of new emerging talent on
Signing passionate new artists
Looking back on 20 years of hard work
One of the highlights of this anniversary year has been signing and working with Byron Bay-based five-piece conscious hiphop outfit Indigenoise. It has been an absolute pleasure working with these guys from the minute we met at the local Starseed music conference to getting in the studio and producing the upcoming album. These guys are so connected and gifted and passionate about upholding the values of the most successful and ancient civilisation on the planet, it’s an honour to be a part of the movement. Big things for these guys and we are excited about what is ahead.
Going through the last two decades of our back catalogue we are looking back at all the amazing artists and acts that we have had the privilege to work with, and to see some of those artists go on and do some really big things is a career highlight for us. So is the fact that the first Hydrofunk signing, Resin Dogs, and now the newest signing, Indigenoise, are able to tour together as part of the 20th anniversary shows — it’s very special.
the Australian music scene, who we went on to have great working relationships with. To date this holds a fond place in our memory banks and it was during this tour that we locked in the late Robert Reed from Trouble Funk to come on tour with us on the iconic Big Day Out festival. Going international 2017 has been an amazing year for us and one of the highlights has been opening our office in Japan. We have been on this mission for a long time and to finally have everything in place to make it happen has been amazing. We had our first release in July, which was a 7” collaboration between Japanese two-piece Uhnellys and Melbourne-based Tigermoth. The release was received well and all the shows on the national Japanese tour were amazing. Next release and tour early 2018.
Resin Dogs
Don’t you know it’s Christmas? Anyone who’s worked in retail will tell you nothing lasts as long as a Christmas album. Empires rise and fall in the time it takes to listen to the nth iteration of Silent Night — so you best pick the right one.
Cheap Trick put I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day on the same record as I Wish It Was Christmas Today and then they stuck them right next to each other. Track two and three, friend. Have at it. They’ve made Silent Night sound like Pink Floyd’s breakdown in The Wall and Please Come Home For Christmas is Oh Darling wrapped in tinsel. Beautiful, boldfaced madness.
You Make It Feel Like Christmas goes the classic pop Chrissy route — big, jolly drums, bigger, jollier horns, twee BVs and jaunty strings. It’s Gwen Stefani, though, so it blows the competition out of the water. 10/10 — would dance by the fireplace, with a loved one, in a garish sweater.
Most ‘seasons’ albums are fairly organic and Lindsey Stirling’s masterful violin is definitely the centrepiece of Warmer In The Winter. But it turns out adding electronic beats to Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy and Carol Of The Bells gives them an attractive (if slightly menacing) urgency. This is definitely what Kevin McAllister listens to to get pumped for torturing house invaders.
Dude York have gone the extra mile and written their own songs, so Halftime For The Holidays is more of an album about Christmas than a Christmas album. There are still a few obligatory classics of course (Silent Night, alright!) but lead single Break Up Holidays is pure, heavy-pop heartbreak that just happened to fall in December.
Christmas isn’t about all the bells and baubles, and your choice of carols can reflect that. The Dominican Sisters Of Mary, Mother Of The Eucharist have you covered with Jesu, Joy Of Man’s Desiring: Christmas With The Dominican Sisters Of Mary. No phat horns or guitar solos here, just crystalline choral tones with a bit of simple orchestral accompaniment. The way god intended.
Christmas Christmas (Big Machine Records) is out now
You Make It Feel Like Christmas (Interscope Records) is out now
Warmer In The Winter (Concord) is out this month
Halftime For The Holidays (Inertia Music) is out this month
Jesu, Joy Of Man’s Desiring: Christmas With The Dominican Sisters Of Mary (Sony Music Australia) is out now
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Mixology the science of mixtapes
Stream dreams
this month’s best binge watching The Punisher Marvel fans were gifted an all too brief glimpse at the trigger happy bad-ass antihero in the last season of Daredevil, and now The Punisher has scopped his very own spin off. For those not in the know, following the murder of his family, former marine Frank Castle becomes a merciless vigilante on the hunt for the criminals responsible. From 17 Nov on Netflix
Mudbound This story of two struggling families working the same land on the Mississippi Delta during WWII has already been tipped for Oscar contention. Directed by Dee Rees, its super starry cast includes the likes of Carey Mulligan and Mary J Blige. From 17 Nov on Netflix
Sampa The Great Birds And The BEE9
Alias Grace In the past year, novellist Margaret Atwood has gone from relative obscurity to TV’s hottest adaptee. Following the barnstorming multi award-winning success of The Handmaid’s Tale, this latest venture is a 19th century period whodunit based on true events.
Big Dada Release date: 10 Nov
From 3 Nov on Netflix
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hile Sampa The Great (aka the great Sampa Tembo) supports Joey Badass around the UK and Europe this month alongside one of her producers Kwes Darko, she’s dropping a new mixtape to ensure we don’t miss her too much. Have you heard Bye River, the new track she’s shared from said Birds And The BEE9 mixtape, yet? It shimmers with windchime sounds, there’s chants and shaker percussion, and it’s an entirely different vibe from her previous, more rabble-rousing single Rhymes To The East (which was also lifted from this mixtape). Our advance listen places Birds And The BEE9 in fine company, calling to mind the work of that inspirational spoken-word artist from London: Kate Tempest. Tembo reflects on personal experiences where hurt lingers, but there’s an overarching nurturing and healing feel. Expect instrumentation as varied as brass and body percussion. Tembo’s delivery is at once conversational, strong, percussive and melodic. Sampa The Great has achieved so much with her music over the past two years and this mixtape promises a melding of styles such as gospel, neo-soul and hip hop. As well as Darko, Tembo works closely with Sensible J (REMI) and Alejandro ‘JJ’ Abapo (Silent Jay) to chase her musical vision. Already one of this country’s hip-hop beacons, Tembo is also one of the most important voices of this generation. She’s now ready to move mountains. Birds And The BEE9 is an important listening experience.
The Girlfriend Experience, season 2 Following the sexcapades between escorts and their clients, TGE’s second season features two stories running in tandem: one set in Washington DC during the 2018 midterm elections and the other following a former high-end escort in the Whiteness Protection Program. From 6 Nov on Stan
SMILF Stuck in a rut of the same old routine, 20-something single mom Bridgette is struggling. Wanting a career, a relationship and sex doesn’t always gel with the realities of being a young single mother. SMILF is a fresh take on motherhood, co-parenting and female sexuality. From 6 Nov on Stan
Mono
One of a kind Venerated Japanese instrumental-rock outfit Mono are no strangers to Australian shores, and local fans will have yet another chance to experience their transcendent live show when the band return to Australia this month.
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The music industry has an entrenched culture of discrimination and violence. It needs to change. As Hollywood continues to be rocked by historic cases of sexual abuse against women, similar stories are also emerging from elsewhere in the entertainment industries. Kelly-Dawn Hellmrich of Camp Cope is part of a vanguard of female artists challenging the status quo to make the Australian music scene a safer space.
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in this community who are so often labeled ‘the hardest working in the industry’, while women, people of colour and LGBQTIA+ people do the same job in the face of adversity. They do the same job and are ridiculed and harassed on the internet. They do the same job while not being listened to by stage crew, technicians and managers. They do the same job and get sexualised, harassed and catcalled. They do the same job and are told they are not hardworking or deserving, but lucky. For us, this makes it very personal and important to be proactive in creating a safe and empowering space at our shows. We create and take part in diverse line-ups and we take a zero-tolerance approach to sexual assault and violence. For this, we are often labeled ‘preachy’ or ‘difficult’. We have been labeled ‘bullies’ for pointing out gender disparity in line-ups and we’ve been faced with aggressive males in our own audiences simply for asking them to calm down and stop potentially harmful or dangerous behaviour. We are a band with no manager, booking agent, tour manager, album producer or major label. We have been called a hype-band, a buzz-band, a girl-band, a feminist band... but never a hardworking-band. The music industry is shifting slowly and more and more there are so many people speaking out against sexism, discrimination, assault and violence that has been ignored or considered ‘just the way it is’ for too long. In particular we are very fortunate to have such a unique festival culture here in Australia and there is no doubt that Australian festivals are in the spotlight for both positive and negative reasons, I feel like this gives us a huge opportunity to take action and make a global impact — setting a whole new precedent for festivals to tackle the issues and standup for the empowerment and safety of their artists, staff and attendees alike. This would mean reviewing and reflecting on the diversity of line-ups, making safety a priority and making meaningful change, and taking action after raising awareness. As a community we need to do better and being selfcritical is important in achieving a new era for music.
y band and I were sitting in the studio last week and the engineer for our record asked if we were nervous about the release of our second album. I cannot remember which one of us said it, but we definitely all agreed that we felt less pressure about the record than ever before because no matter what we do, people will find a reason as to why we did it wrong anyway. We laughed and joked about it, but at its core it was a statement that really hit home to our overall experience being non-male in the music industry. Before forming a band together, the three of us were always extremely active in music. We definitely fit that cliche you hear from musicians that ‘music is and always has been our life’. We’d all grown up playing music, attending shows, working in music shops, venues, labels. On paper, we definitely did read as your typical group of musos. But our image doesn’t really fit that mould. I think when you ask a person to picture a rock musician they picture a sweaty, shirtless — or maybe flannel-clad — long haired dude with a Fender guitar. We are sweaty and flannelclad, and we play Fenders. But we aren’t those men, and that’s the part that gets to people. Music being our passion isn’t the only thing we have in common. Another thing we share is that in this music world we have all been made to feel less important, less listened to and deserving of space because of our gender. This continues together as a band where we are constantly facing discrimination and sexism and then criticism when we are outspoken about it. There have been people asking us if we knew how to use our equipment or if we write our own songs; we’ve had people checking our passes backstage but not our male counterparts beside us; we’ve been placed lower on line-ups and paid less than allmale bands.I really believe if you asked any woman, person of colour or member of the LGBQTIA+ community who works in music, you’d get millions of stories in a similar vein. We are just not considered, respected or listened to in the same way as the white men who do the same thing as us. We have to work harder, speak louder, prove ourselves time and time again to be taken seriously. There are groups of male musicians and men in positions of power
“I think when you ask a person to picture a rock musician they picture a sweaty, shirtless — or maybe flannel-clad — long haired dude with a Fender guitar. We are sweaty and flannel-clad, and we play Fenders. But we aren’t those men, and that’s the part that gets to people.”
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GUEST EDITORIAL
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NOVEMBER
Best of the fests
The Music’s essential guide to the festival season.
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inter’s cold, wet grasp on the country’s throat has been broken! Toss your thermal underwear in the trash, cut the sleeves off your Ts and air out your sequinned onesies because summer is here and summer means festivals. Of course, that also means there are choices to be made. Unless the folks at Forbes keep track of your net worth, you’re not going to make every worthy event this season. Tragic but true. Every year it seems like the festival list gets bigger, the line-ups more star-studded and the FOMO more all-consuming. Like most of life’s problems, the solution is knowledge. Achieving the perfect summer season takes diligent research. You gotta weigh the pros and face the cons. Sharpen pencils. Make a graph. But the sun’s out, and there’s tins to be cracked — so maybe skip all that and just read our handy guide instead.
The classics
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amworth Country Music Festival have compartmentalised their ticketing for their 46th year, since there aren’t too many people capable of getting out to 2,800 events over ten days (it’s literally the largest festival in the southern hemisphere). Options include the free Toyota Park Concert series, The Toyota Golden Guitar Awards and more country music than you could possibly hoot and holler at. Apart from headline drawcards Troy Cassar-Daley, Lee Kernaghan, The McClymonts, Sara Storer, Adam Eckersley Band and John Williamson, there are also buzz acts like Hurricane Fall, Cruisin’ Deuces and Fanny Lumsden to check out. Plus, Toyota Star Maker regularly brings Australia’s best and brightest up-andcomers out of the woodwork. It’s almost been around as long as Tamworth Country Music Festival, Port Fairy Folk Festival is a BYO-chair festival (yep, there’s specific seated sections in the performance areas and punters even use bike locks to chain their chairs to fences overnight to save having to carry them back and forth). This festival takes over the entire coastal town for its 42nd year in 2018. You’ll see bands performing on flatbed trucks, in churches and halls, and there’s free entertainment on Fiddlers’ Green and the Railway Stage. There’s an Irish-themed Shebeen tent where separate ‘shopfronts’ such as Scruffy Duffys also serve snacks including Savoy crackers, cheese cubes and sliced cabana on a paper plate. And a lollie trolley circulates for all your sugar-rush needs. Here’s a taste of the sweet line-up: Steve Poltz, Mental As Anything, Jack Broadbent, Breabach, Black Sorrows and Tex, Don & Charlie. Newtown Festival is turning 39 and is sharing the love with their new “home is where the heart is” theme. They have a program packed with multi-sensory delights for a measly $5 donation, which goes to fund Newtown Neighbourhood Centre. This year’s band line-up, curated by Sarah Blasko,
They just keep getting better and better.
boasts a line-up with off-tap wow factor and this year is no exception. Lionel Richie, Robert Plant, Seal, The New Power Generation, Jackson Browne, Gomez, Chic feat Nile Rodgers and our very own Tash Sultana — we can’t even! Punters return to this festival, which takes place just north of Byron Bay at Tyagarah Tea Tree Farm over the Easter weekend, year after year and it’s fun for the whole family. Boomerang Festival, an “indigenous festival for all Australians”, is also held within Bluesfest. “This is one of the world class, great festivals of all time!” Bonnie Raitt is quoted as saying (on the festival’s website). From those lucky enough to have been in attendance, we hear Bluesfest’s a life-changing experience. A deadset highlight on the annual festival calendar with its celebrated “no dickheads” policy, Meredith Music Festival’s subscriber ballot always becomes a talking point as punters scramble to get their hands on a ticket. And with a festival site called Supernatural Amphitheatre it’s pretty bloody easy to see why. Held on the Nolan family farm, this will be the first Meredith Music Festival since Jack Nolan sadly passed in February this year. The festival turns 27 in 2017 and we can’t wait to prep our custom doof sticks and pack our trippy outfits. We’re also looking forward to pulling shapes to the likes of Todd Terje, ESG, Chk Chk Chk, Warpaint, Aldous Harding (probably more swaying in awe, actually), RVG and Amyl & The Sniffers. It’s also high time you start training for the Meredith Gift, which is a massive nudie-run race, but The Golden Jocks trophy actually belongs in our cabinet this year. Now a multi-state touring festival, Falls Festival is celebrating 25 years of creating life memories while celebrating New Year in 2017/2018. Our noodles smoke when we think about the organisation that goes into coordinating schedules and booking all of the bands’ flights and accommodation as they fly up and down the east coast to perform at all
includes Spit Syndicate, MEZKO, Jep & Dep and I Know Leopard. The grub includes all the local faves (212 Blu, Mary’s, Fleetwood Macchiato et al). The much-loved Dog Show is back, of course, as well as the Writers Tent and Eco Village. You can also trail La Toosh Tram & Stage’s roving cast of musicians, artists and circus performers or set up shop in Heaps Gay’s Karaoke Closet. Further up the east coast and held in Amamoor Creek State Forest, Gympie Music Muster sounds like a hoot and we’ve heard the punters go to a great deal of effort when setting up their campsites, with regulars aiming to set up in exactly the same spot year after year and sometimes even arriving weeks before the event in order to do so. Next year will be the 37th Gympie Music Muster and gone are the days of making do with showers that were actually jam tins with holes punched into them. It’s now a four-day country music festival and from all the pictures we’ve checked out you’d stand out like dog’s balls if you didn’t wear a hat. Once you go, you’re hooked we’ve been told. Another Queensland festival highlight, Woodford Folk Festival is heading into its 31st year and Woodfordia, the festival’s location, hosted Splendour In The Grass for two years so we can attest it is a magnificent site. Held over six days and six nights over New Year, Woodford Folk Festival boasts a crazy amount of performance spaces to choose from (35 in total) so you’ll be spoilt for choice. As well as a kickass musical lineup including The East Pointers, Kate MillerHeidke, Sampa The Great, Pow! Negro, John Butler and The Babe Rainbow, there are also heaps of circus/cabaret acts plus activities and workshops galore to keep the kids occupied. We checked out the sizzle reel and The Fire Event Closing Ceremony looks spectacular beyond belief! It’s Bluesfest’s 29th year in existence! This whopping five-day festival billed as “Australia’s Premier Music Festival” always
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four events. You know how some hangovers just won’t budge unless you plunge head first into the ocean? Well, the good news is that two Falls Festival sites (Marion Bay and Fremantle) are a short stroll from the beach while there are regular shuttle buses in and out of town, where there are beaches, from the other two locations (Lorne and Byron Bay). Flume and Glass Animals are exclusive to Falls Festival (no sideshows) so if you wanna catch those acts you’ll have to snap up tickets to Marion Bay or Fremantle, ‘cause Lorne and Byron Bay are already sold out. The multi-state bush doof that is Earthcore kicked off in 1993 in Victoria, which means the next event will mark its 24th edition. It’s pretty damn fun doing the Melbourne Shuffle in the dust and before too long you’ll be doing so barefoot with all the other soap dodgers. Pull shapes to John OO Fleming, The Freestylers, Plump DJs and Marc Romboy just to name a few. We heard solar-powered fairy lights line the campsite roads to illuminate your passage back to the tent, which is a result for weary feet. The doof stick competition is fierce and there’s also an award for Earthcorian Doofer Of The Year so pack your best raver get-up ‘cause the winner is decided based on whoever scores the most cheers. Maybe visit the Fluff Station first to give your look a zhoozh!?
Remember the essentials
Four things you need to take with you if you’re going to stay in the game. Grampians Music Festival
A good night’s sleep Whether you’re staying five nights or one, you’ll want to go ahead and purchase something that ensures a good night’s sleep. The Music’s not allowed to prescribe valium, but a sturdy little roll-out mattress or some extra fluffy pillows usually does the trick. Take Cuddles the bear, warm up some milk with a zippo and tin cup - do what you gotta do. Twisted backs and tired eyes do not a good audience members make.
Something to stand out Lost your mates? Not with a doof stick you haven’t. What’s a doof stick you ask? It’s a mighty tall, mighty colourful stick you carry around with you so that you are easily identifiable in a crowd. Added bonus, you get to look like a wizard and you can personalise it so people know what you’re about at a glance. You can also plant one of those bad boys at your camp as a beacon of light on your drunken stumble home.
A mum hat The ripe tomato look isn’t exactly the sexiest. Don’t ruin your long weekend with something so simply solved by a big, floppy hat. We all have one stuffed in the back of the cupboard somewhere, it’s time to crack it out. Maybe spice it up with a hot glue gun, some flowers, and a bit of glitter. Your mum will be proud and you will be eternally thankful.
An adventurous spirit Yes, yes, we know you’re here to see Gang Of Youths, just remember there’s always something fantastic yet to be discovered at these do’s. Go and catch some stuff that you wouldn’t normally see. Break away from the group and explore the vast range of artists that the festival has spent so much time meticulously curating. Who knows? Maybe your new favorite band is just a small saunter away.
New kids on the block Certified fresh.
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he spin-off of Austin City Limits, brought Down Under by the team behind Splendour In The Grass and Falls Festival, Sydney City Limits was on everybody’s lips even before they announced their hefty first bill. ACL has been putting together mint line-ups for 15 years, and it’s no surprise its Aussie counterpart has inherited its Rolodex. Justice, Beck, Vance Joy, Phoenix, Tash Sultana, Grace Jones and Gang Of Youths have all been announced already with more acts in the mail. Plus, the food’s being curated by the folks at Mary’s Newtown and The Unicorn. You beauty. Just a couple hours out south the city limits sits Berry, the idyllic coastal town that’s played host to Fairgrounds the last couple of years. They’ve snagged another bevy of local and international talent, from The Shins and Future Islands to DD Dumbo and Client Liaison, but one of their biggest draws might actually be the amazing tucker and mega family-friendly vibe. The Paperbark Camp pop-up restaurant stands out even in the current festival lean towards good eats, they have an onsite pool and Little Fairgrounds provides plenty of amusement for the munchkins — they’ve even got Tim Rogers, Holly Throsby and children’s author Kat Patrick doing story time. Right over the border, you can strap your doof boots on. The team behind Brunswick’s Rubix Warehouse are setting up shop on the same sustainable 221-acre farm made famous by Boogie and New Year’s Evie, aka Melbourne’s biggest licensed outdoor venue. It’s Friends Of Ours first year out the gate but you wouldn’t know it from the ambitious line-up. There are three days of bass heavy party starters lined up including Aussies Roni Size, Dub FX and Spoonbill and a bunch of the UK’s best — Eva Lazarus, DLR and Dub Princess. Even better, there’s a shuttle bus to and from, because there’s nothing worse than sitting on the side of the road waiting to sober up after a ripping weekend a Friends don’t let Friends drive home cooked. The word boutique gets thrown about a lot these days but second-year event Grampians Music Festival have gone the extra mile and curated their line-up to perfectly match their location. They’re dedicated to
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Pitch Music & Arts Festival
sourcing and promoting the new and exciting talent growing right in their own picturesque backyard, and the event will be the festival or headline debut for many of the artists on the bill — this year headed up by Didirri, Fountaineer and Crepes. They follow the same creed with their produce as well; Gramp-goers can get into local gin from Patient Wolf, wine from Blue Pyrenees and Pricky Moses Beer and Cider and food from local producers. Peel Street Festival has a similar local flare, bringing together all the best Collingwood has to offer in a celebration of the local community and culture. It’s brand spanking new and absolutely free and we couldn’t possibly be more stoked. Centred on The Grace Darling and Peel Street, there’ll be food, community stalls, a record fair, a children’s park and more amazing local acts than you could shake a Lamb On Brunswick kebab at. Archie Roach and Cash Savage & The Last Drinks are heading the lists, which also feature Terry, Girl Zone, Golden Helmet, Pillow Pro — just heaps of good stuff — and there’ll be a discussion on Safe Spaces too. Leaping fully formed from the brains behind Beyond The Valley, last year’s debut Pitch Music was genuinely gobsmacking in
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the length and depth of its electronic offering. They haven’t succumbed to the second year jitters either. Taking over Mafeking for another four days of “contemporary electronic music steeped in visual arts and landscape” is veritable who’s who of the genre; Germany’s Motor City Drum Ensemble, aka house pioneer Danilo Plessow, and Booka Shade, Manchester drawcard Floating Points, Melbourne faves GL. Basically, if you like your doofs in the bush and soundtracked by some of the world’s best you should hurry up and grab a ticket. Vanfest only just squeeze into the ‘new event’ category since this will be the fourth year they’ve given us more than enough reason to trek it out to Forbes. Then again it’s been a whole new ballgame every year, the first time around it was a fairly humble pub event and last year the father and son organisers Matt and Grant Clifton dumped 150 tonnes of sand on the site to replicate Bondi Beach. The duo have outdone themselves again with the largest line-up to date — Dune Rats, Tash Sultana, Amy Shark, PLGRMS and more — as well as market stalls, pop-up beach bars, interactive installations and carnival rides. If you’re feeling flush you can even score your own Jacuzzi.
Art attacks Culture, it’ll grow on you. combines performance art, dance and live music from dancer Yumi Umiumare, art collective Club Ate and Haiku Hands. The opening night also features the first of three Mapping Melbourne performances from Japanese rapper Kojoe and celebrated jazz pianist/beatmaker Aaron Chouli — who’ve newly joined forces as Kaiju Hip Hop Jazz Project. Francophiles of South Australian rejoice, as well as painting Melbourne and Sydney blue, white and red this year So Frenchy So Chic In The Park is also headed to Adelaide. There’s beaucoup French culture, food and beverages, as well as family-friendly activities — kids 12 and under even enter free. The line-up is no bagatelle either; organisers have gathered a fine crop of French entertainment for the shindig, including Nigerian-born rapper Fefe, funk/ jazz/soul purveyor General Elektriks, the eclectic sounds of Francois & The Atlas Mountains, avant-garde luminary Juniore and three-piece outfit LEJ. Reaching even further afield WOMADelaide has another colossal global offering in 2018. In the idyllic surrounds of Botanic Park, some of the world’s best musicians come together in one of Australia’s greatest cultural events. The UK’s Architects of Air
are returning with their new inflated luminarium, Arboria, a collision of bounce houses, geometric patterns and installation art. Pay witness to the first of its kind collaboration between Cuban and Jamaican musicians Havana Meets Kingston, as well as Grammy-winning Taureg outfit Tinariwen. On the home front Yolgnu singer-songwriter Yirrmal is also on the line-up with The Miliyawutj, and modern jazz luminary Kamasi Washington is headed over from the States. If you prefer your cultural delights sourced from closer to home, Twilights At Taronga have collected a celebrated lineup of some of Australia’s greatest musical exports. First on the bill are The Jezabels, making their Twilights debut. The same week Dan Sultan returns to Taronga, this time with the absolutely killer combination of breakout act The Teskey Brothers. The series has also paired with Electric Lady, whose festival blew our minds back in July, to bring Montaigne, Tired Lion and Sloan Peterson together for one massive night. If beats are more your speed they also have a partnership with Future Classic, who are presenting Mount Kimbie, Kucka and Christopher Port. There’s something new coming out of the natural amphitheatre every week, so pick your poison. So Frenchy So Chic
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he Pleasure Garden is the thinking folk’s rave. Yes, they’ve stacked the line-up with fest faves — Opiuo, Montaigne, Remi and Fat Freddy’s bloody Drop for starters — but they’ve got an immersive creative arts scene that’ll make your grey matter dance as well. Taking inspiration from their time working on some of the biggest festivals in Europe, co-founders Geordie Barker and Goose McGrath have brought mind-blowing custom stages, large-scale installation artworks, and even carnival rides to the table. You’ll have to head along to see exactly what surprises they’ll spring in 2018, but anyone who remembers last year’s lightup ladybugs and glowing lotus loveseats will tell you it’s worth finding out. Just a couple hours out of Sydney’s hustle and bustle Lost Paradise is all about looking to the inner spirit. To paraphrase, if music is the heartbeat of Lost Paradise, the serenity is its soul. There are yoga masterclasses with master yogis, as well as tantric, shamanic and dance healing workshops. Outrageous Entertainment will perform their world-class acrobatics, fire, stilt, UV and LED light magic and Switcheroo Circus will teach you a few tricks of the trade. Make interactive and collaborative art with Ico & Fwendz and Kraken, or become a work of
art with The Glitteratti. They haven’t forgotten the music of course; NAO, Little Dragon, DMA’S and Cigarettes After Sex are all on the almost 50-act bill. Further south, MONA FOMA has spread to 11 days, including the two-day debut of Mini-Mofo in Launceston, and rare pairings and collaborations abound as per usual. Canadian art-rock royalty Godspeed You! Black Emperor will score The Holy Body Dance Tattoo’s office-grind opus Monumental. Tannery, the Tasmanian leather and taiko orchestra, will make beautiful music with a leather horn section and imported Japanese drums in a double bill with Gotye and the Ondioline Orchestra’s concert for late electronic pop pioneer Jean-Jacques Perrey. In maybe the most intriguing event, Camae Ayewa and Rasheedah Phillips will run DIY time travel workshops — manipulating the continuum with Afrofuturism and science fiction, memory, imagination, music and language. Multicultural Arts Victoria is presenting the fifth year of Mapping Melbourne, a 17-day series of multi-disciplinary events celebrating independent Asian artists and our unique Australasian culture. You can get into most events without stopping at an ATM, including the launch party, which
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you’re a hip hop head (Allday, L-Fresh The Lion, Thundamentals), giver of devil salutes (Violent Soho, Against! Me, The Darkness) or just wanna get your dance on (Tash Sultana, Northeast Party House, George Maple, Pnau). Thankfully punters are largely over wearing cow onesies these days. We could never get sick of the Red Frogs stand for free sugar fixes to help ya last the distance, either. Want a bird’s eye view of the famous Sydney Harbour Bridge NYE fireworks? Then Harbour Party NYE’s for you, ‘cause Luna Park in Sydney makes the perfect vantage point for your midnight pash punctuated by shooting sparks. With a lineup featuring the likes of Pnau, Tkay Maidza and Hook N Sling plus more, bangers are a certainty. This location is easily accessible via public transport, which is a bonus, and quality grub — including vegan and gluten-free options — is available in abundance. Some swanky VIP packages that include canapes, a carvery and bevos until 2am are definitely worth looking into (although you may wanna limit your alcoholic beverages if you’re gonna go on the Luna Park rides, just sayin’). Held in the glorious surrounds of Werribee Mansion just a short drive from Melbourne (get a shuttle if you’re gonna drink though, obviously), Let Them Eat Cake is a boutique electronic music festival that’s held on New Year’s Day so you’ll avoid all the ‘challenges’ that heading out on New Year’s Eve presents. Ame, Jackmaster, Jon Hopkins, Kllo, Stephan Bodzin and Tourist are all down to play on the day and a fine array of food stalls promises to dust out the cobwebs if you did happen to accidentally have a massive New Year’s Eve and need something to wash down with your endless litres of much-needed coconut water. Another New Year’s Day party favourite, Sydney’s Field Day has collated a cracking lineup that includes Flume, Schoolboy Q, Vince Staples and Princess Nokia. Who doesn’t love cutting shapes in the great outdoors, specifically the lush grass of The Domain, when it’s (hopefully) sunny? Heck, take those shoes off for a boogie, if you dare. There’s free water available onsite for your hydration needs and you can pick up some free earplugs from the First Aid Tent so you don’t damage your precious hearing. Field Day have partnered up with save-a-mate as well, so make sure you dig deep and donate to help ensure young people are educated on drug and alcohol harm minimisation techniques. A one-day festival that celebrates all things progressive such as psychedelic, art rock, metal and everything in between, Progfest has expanded and will visit Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne in January. How good is it when lovers of a particular musical genre assemble in the one place to geek out about their favourite bands and swap fan stories? This lovingly assembled line-up includes
Allday at Groovin The Moo. Pic: Lucinda Goodwin
St Jerome’s Laneway Festival. Pic: Lucinda Goodwin
Short and sweet If you can’t do without a shower and hair/beard straightener for more than a day.
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ave you seen the impressive lineups A Day On The Green assemble these days? We can’t get enough of them. Stevie Nicks with Pretenders and Ali Barter is coming up, as is KC & The Sunshine Band, Village People, Sister Sledge and Marcia Hines! The fact that these events are held on wineries might be another reason why they’re so popular (you can buy wine by the bottle — hic!). Check out the concert and dining packages, which come with the added convenience of private loos, and be sure to pre-book your return coach. Every year, our jaws drop when Laneway’s line-up drops and this year is no exception: Bonobo, Aldous Harding, Dream Wife, Father John Misty, Wolf Alice — we’re not worthy! This festival somehow nails a mix of your favourite established artists as well as about-to-blow-up emerging artists and it’s really tricky to plan out your day given the quality on show. Laneway is also definitely one for the hipsters, so plan your outfit well in advance and make sure it’s weird and wacky (or perhaps even select a theme to make your entire group standout in the crowd). There’s always topnotch food available (we’ve pigged out on Gelato Messina, designer icy poles, Mr Miyagi tacos and frosé in previous years!). And the innercity locations mean it’s not a head-fuck to get there. Good times guaranteed. Ever since we first attended Groovin The Moo in Bendigo, we’ve returned year after year. The regional locations are a bit of a hike to get to for the for city dwellers among us, but there ain’t nothing wrong with a road trip (book your Airbnb/ accommodation heaps early and make a weekend of it). There’s always a sick mix of acts, whether
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Leprous (Norway), Voyager, Alithia and Orsome Welles to name just a few and we’ve only ever heard incredible things about Progfest so hope to see ya there next time! For those with only a little scrilla to spill, you can catch a third of Mullum Music Festival’s festivities for a fraction of the price with a day pass. It might be easier picking your favourite child than which day to attend considering the chokkas lineup, but the option’s there. Plenty of artists on the line-up are playing multiple days, but if you head along on Friday you’ll catch All Our Exes Live In Texas, The Teskey Brothers, Sex On Toast and Stella Donnelly. Conversely, get in on Saturday’s action to experience Jon Cleary, Lindi Ortega, Harry James Angus and Too Many Zooz. Mullum Music Festival’s Street Parade happens on Sunday, together with performances by Aine Tyrrell, Caiti Baker, Irish Mythen and OKA. There are actually no wrong choices.
Party In The Paddock
A Day on The Green. Pic: Lucinda Goodwin
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In tents events Nothing but happy campers here.
Party In The Paddock
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bly in the mix, but your guess is as good as ours as to who the mystery reunions involve. Either way, anyone who got blown away by West Thebarton back when they were still a Brothel Party knows the Hills have never had a dud crop. Schoolboy Q, The Presets, Matt Corby, Stormzy, Mura Masa — Beyond The Valley’s booking game is strong this year. Despite only starting in 2014, the fest has already developed a reputation for its purpose-built stages, insane lighting, unique art installations and sculptures, communal hubs, boutique bars, and gourmet food trucks. Also, for just being a good time. You get a campsite in the ticket price but if you really want to get lit you can opt up for Electric City, or go full glamp at Lux Camp — we’re talking memory foam mattresses, Egyptian cotton, premium toilet and shower facilities. The last word out of the BTV camp was that they were even trying to get approval for a pool bar. Although originally pure psytrance, Subtronic has grown to include ambient, reggae, acoustic, techno, house, bass, hip hop and electro-punk — which they spread over five stages and 72 hours. That’s three days floating in the Karuah River, exploring shiatsu, acroyoga, sacred geometry, daily meditation and dancing — there’s a whole lot of dancing. This year the line-up includes local legends such as AB Original and Sampa The Great and international stalwarts like UK producer Andrew Weatherall and American techno minimalist Daniel Bell. Butterfly wings aren’t strictly mandatory or anything but you’ll have a better time if you get on board with the vibe and go with the flow. For southern trance fans, jampack your van with glitter paint, good vibes and outrageous costumes (maybe a couple capes?) and get yourself to Rainbow Serpent. For more than 20 years now the epic five-day psytrance extravaganza has brought world class producers, DJs and bands together with psychedelic art, sculpture, genuinely mind-bending light installations and stimulating speakers and workshops. Every year the event is awash with colour and invention — cars decorated as spaceships, people wrapped in fairy lights, stages decked-out like much friendlier thunderdomes. If you don’t feel like digging around in the shed for your swag you can also book out a luxury bell tent or teepee in Sleepy Hollow.
f you’ve been looking for an excuse to hitch your tent on the Apple Isle, Party In The Paddock’s the time to do it. Even if you’ve never been you’d probably recognise the poster — it’s the one with the naked bloke stretching on a hay bale. PITP turns six in February and they’ve had to stretch out to three days to accommodate their growing flock of faithful and the burgeoning line-up — Gang Of Youths, Grouplove, Meg Mac, Ball Park Music, et al. The Aunty Donna boys are on board to headline Fresh Comedy and PITP’s cultural hub Vibestown will be full of glitter, skating, comedy, art and yoga as is tradition. Up in north Tassie A Festival Called PANAMA takes place on a secluded 50-acre property/small-batch cider brewery in the Lone Star Valley. Surrounded by lush forest and taking full advantage of the local brewers, vineyards and distillers, there aren’t many places better suited to a three-night camping fest. Genuine soul legend Lee Fields is bringing The Expressions down this year to celebrate the event’s fifth birthday, along with Brooklyn indie darlings Grizzly Bear, Grammy-winning bass guitar genius Thundercat and one-woman house party Alice Ivy. It’s also your first chance to see Melbourne producer Ghosting’s Reimagining Miyazaki live. There are only 1500 tickets available, which keeps things intimate but means you need to get on it sharpish. Held on the same South Gippsland farm as the legendary The Hills Are Alive festival, we’ve actually checked out NYE On The Hill’s site and can confirm that it’s absolutely picturesque with views for days. What better way to usher in the new year than at this two-night, three-day festival celebrating with friends, and friends of friends, while taking a few pics to make everyone jealous when you eventually post ‘em on Insta? And these bookers certainly have their fingers on the pulse. With Gold Class, Gretta Ray, The Teskey Brothers, Didirri and Angie McMahon locked in to entertain you, your ears will be stoked you made the trek. Speaking of The Hills Are Alive South Gippy’s primo farm party hits the big oneoh in March. The Farmer’s still holding The Hills Are Alive’s tenth line-up close to his chest, but he has hinted that among the 30 bands, comedians and performers on the bill a few old favourites are making their way back to the hills (Remi x Sampa pls) as well as the usual round-up of new acts that’ll knock your socks off. It’s also been suggested that “two since-broken-up acts” are possi-
Don’t be a d*ckhead
Four things to avoid so know one takes you outta
Sneak booze Festivals are expensive, and not always BYO. We’ve all been tempted at one point or another to strap a sneaky flask to our leg, hide a slab in the boot or fill a water bottle with gin. This can only end in tears. Don’t watch your money get tipped down the drain by a grumpy volunteer, go to the bar and spend your cash supporting the festival. No one wants a lukewarm beer or a badly mixed bottle of cocktail anyway.
Get too sauced Don’t get totally shitfaced at 11am. You’ll end up scaring some kid just like your drunk uncle Steve scared you by dancing to The Bee Gees at family Christmas in ‘95. It’s safe to say by the time the sun goes down the family crowd will be off to bed and you can get good and rowdy. Endless G&Ts always taste better under sparkling moon light anyway, have a little patience. It also means you might actually remember a few of the bands the next day. Alcohol is expensive. Memories are priceless.
Be a porta-pooper The toilet line is sacred, don’t cut it. And if you need to check emails or play a few levels of Candy Crush go back to your tent. Please don’t be one of those jerks who doesn’t take care of business efficiently. When you’re three bottles of water deep after a massive boogie sesh there is nothing worse than waiting two hours for the loo. Lastly, be a mate. Aim straight.
Poop the party
Hills Are Alive. Pic: Lauren Murphy
Beyond The Valley.
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Festivals should be a place for a diverse range of people to enjoy themselves. That’s part of the appeal. It’s like a little community where everyone gets to simultaneously experience fantastic arts, music, and culture. Please don’t be the person making everyone feel uncomfortable in the name of ‘fun’. Just be aware people have different needs and abilities. Respect it, bro.
Thems the breaks
“Without me being vulnerable and soft, I wouldn’t be able to be strong and vocal”
Miss Blanks isn’t the only act about to steal the public’s hearts. Here’s a few to look out for in the coming months.
Baker Boy He won the 2017 Unearthed NIMA prize, blew us away at BIGSOUND, signed to the Select Music roster ealier this month and once he’s wrapped up the festival season Baker Boy is looking set to conquer Oz. He’s “the proud black Yolngu boy with the killer flow” and he’s going to flood your speakers in 2018.
Stella Donnelly Speaking of BIGSOUND breakouts Stella Donnelly was was one of the biggest buzz acts to come out of the conference. She’s quickly become one this year’s most popular fest drawcards — with spots at WAMFest, Mullum Music Festival, The Plot, Queenscliff Music Festival, Fairgrounds Festival and even UK’s The Great Escape festival.
The Teskey Brothers The Teskey Brothers couldn’t have asked for a better reaction to their self-produced, independently released debut Half Mile Harvest. Their headline tour sold gangbusters and now the cats out of the bag there’s going to be a lot of curious punters front and centre at their Falls, Bluesfest and Zoo Twilights showcases.
Press Club Falls, Fairgrounds, NYE On The Hill, Festival Of The Sun, Melbourne Music Week — the name Press Club has been around for about ten minutes and it’s already pooping up everywhere. They’ve quickly become a Melbourne fave and guaranteed that love is about to spread.
Miss Blanks is creating her own space within Aussie hip hop. She tells Cyclone that while music plays a “healing” role in her life, it’s difficult “to constantly be ‘on’ for people”.
ily. Coming from a single-parent household, this idea of survival dawned on me early on.” Initially, Vandermuelen chose a path other than music. She worked in fashion PR and brand management for such luxury labels as Chanel. Vandermuelen lived in places as far afield as New York, Paris and Dubai. But, at the pinnacle, she walked away. “I was just, like, this is done. I did what I wanted to do, made the money that I wanted to make — I need to move on. It was just time. And it was just a toxic industry.” Vandermuelen started pursuing music seriously in 2016, her inaugural gig that September. Having circulated various tracks, she premiered officially this year with her nowsignature ode to “a fat ass”, Clap Clap. In July, the rapper announced her signing to Sydney producer Moonbase’s Trench Records. Meanwhile, Vandermuelen has emerged as an influential LGBTIQ activist. She appeared on billboards as part of Spotify’s marriage equality campaign. Then, ironically given her former vocation, the fashionista was recently profiled in the glossy magazine Elle. “I now realise that the music industry has got noth-
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risbane’s Miss Blanks (aka Sian Vandermuelen) has the Australian hip hop scene shook. The rapper, sonic auteur and style icon has established herself as a cultural phenom in just over a year. Vandermuelen’s booty music pays tribute to black queens like Adina Howard, Lil’ Kim and Khia. But, as an Australian trans woman of colour, she’s wearing her own jewelled crown. Vandermuelen extols diversity, agency and liberation. Now, on the back of the triple j banger Skinny Bitches, Vandermuelen is airing her first EP — DOAT (Diary Of A Thotaholic). And she’s conquering the summer festivals. The femme MC will blaze The Plot before joining Laneway — here rocking her biggest crowds. Music has played an intimate, if “abstract”, role in Vandermuelen’s life. “I think a lot of my experiences with music have been a way of healing, and not so much healing from negative experiences or negative exchanges or interactions,” she says. “It’s a way of me refocusing, rebuilding and healing — in both the negative and also positive and constructive and critical ways.” Regardless, from the outset, the Brisbanite has been driven to achieve. “Being a perfectionist in all of this kinda thing came out of just me being a child going into my teenage years and quitting school and realising I had to get work early on because I had to support myself, but also support my fam-
music — whether it’s my stage performances, the visual representation, my online presence — everything that is Miss Blanks, it’s all-encompassing. I think, in that same breath, I am very generous. I’m a very generous partner, lover, friend, family person, performer — I give a lot of myself, specifically my body. The aestheticising and tokenising — it’s not tokenising, but it can be sometimes applied to me... The aestheticising of what is this strong, powerful-yet-sassy and sexy, sinful, confronting Miss Blanks — that’s really taxing mentally and emotionally to give that to people all the time, and to constantly be ‘on’ for people.” Following Laneway, Vandermuelen means to take time out “to decompress”. (Post-interview, she’s treating herself to a milkshake.) Many assume that Miss Blanks is to Vandermuelen what Sasha Fierce is to Beyonce — an alter ego. Not so. Vandermuelen accepts that it can be “an honest mistake or an honest curiosity” to ask. However, it likewise arises because, as a personality, she’s considered “strong and vocal”. “A lot of the discussion around Sasha Fierce is: strong, fierce, sexy, unapologetic, raw — all of those kinda things are labelled against these big personas. Same thing with me and Miss Blanks. But people love the idea of that being the be all and end all, like there’s no depth; you’re typecast as always this one thing. For example, you can’t be sexy and smart, you can’t be strong but vulnerable, you can’t be hard but soft...” Yet Vandermuelen’s “juxtapositions”, so evident on DOAT, are key. “Without me being vulnerable and soft, I wouldn’t be able to be strong and vocal.”
“The aestheticising of what is this strong, powerful-yet-sassy and sexy, sinful, confronting Miss Blanks — that’s really taxing mentally and emotionally to give that to people all the time.”
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ing on the fashion industry,” she laughs. “It’s so easy to navigate.” On DOAT, Vandermuelen reveals different facets of herself as a narrator, from the playful and pussylicious to the introspective and unguarded. And, as co-producer, she blends trap, trop house and witch house. The hard-hitting Haters, as savage as Vandermuelen’s online clapbacks, recalls Yo-Yo — South Central gangsta rap boss. (“Oh my God — I love Yo-Yo!” she enthuses.) Creatively, Vandermuelen trusts her instincts, but this has proven crucial, too, to her “self-care” in an otherwise exploitative entertainment domain. “I realised with my
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DOAT (Diary Of A Thotaholic) (Trench Records) is out 17 Nov. Miss Blanks tours from 17 Nov.
Australia’s #1 music news site *Nielson audit October 2017
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Ready reckoner Here’s The Music’s list of upcoming festivals that have announced their dates from November on.
NSW Bello Winter Music Festival 12 – 15 Jul Bellingen Blue Mountains Music Festival 16 – 18 Mar Katoomba Bluesfest 29 Mar – 2 Apr Tyagarah Tea Tree Farm
Mullum Music Festival 16 – 19 Nov Mullumbimby Narara Music Festival 5 May Kariong National Folk Festival 29 Mar – 2 Apr Canberra
Tamworth Country Music Festival 19 – 28 Jan Tamworth The Plot 18 Nov Parramatta This That 4 Nov Newcastle
Golden Plains 10 – 12 Mar Meredith
St Kilda Festival 11 Feb St Kilda
FOMO 6 Jan Riverstage
Grampians Music Festival 2 – 4 Feb Halls Gap
Sugar Mountain 20 Jan Melbourne Arts Precinct
Gympie Music Muster 23 – 26 Aug Amamoor Creek
Let Them Eat Cake 1 Jan Werribee Park
The Hills Are Alive 23 – 25 Mar South Gippsland
St Jerome’s Laneway Festival 10 Feb Bowen Hills
Country Rocks Festival 3 Mar Bella Vista
Newtown Festival 12 Nov Newtown
Thrashville 20 Jan Lower Belford
Meredith Music Festival 8 – 10 Dec Meredith
The Pleasure Garden 9 Dec St Kilda
Fairgrounds Festival 8 – 9 Dec Berry
Peak Festival 8 – 11 Jun Perisher Resort
Vanfest 1 & 2 Dec Forbes
NYE On The Hill 30 Dec – 1 Jan Kernot
Unify: A Heavy Music Gathering 12 – 14 Jan Gippsland
Falls Festival 31 Dec – 2 Jan North Byron Parklands
Secret Garden 23 – 24 Feb Brownlow Hill
VIC
Pitch Music & Arts 9 – 12 Mar Mafeking
Festival Of The Sun 7 – 9 Dec Port Macquarie Field Day 1 Jan The Domain FOMO 13 Jan Parramatta Grow Your Own 22 Dec Tuncurry Lost Paradise 28 – 31 Dec Glenworth Valley Mountain Sounds Festival 16 & 17 Feb Kariong
St. Jerome’s Laneway Festival 4 Feb Rozelle Strawberry Fields 17 – 19 Nov Tocumwal Subsonic Music Festival 1 – 3 Dec Barrington Tops
Friends Of Ours Festival 3 - 5 Nov Tallarook
Port Fairy Folk Festival 9 – 12 Mar Port Fairy
Babylon Festival 23 – 25 Feb Carapooee West
Queenscliff Music Festival 24 – 26 Nov Queenscliff
Bruthen Blues & Arts Festival February 16 – 18, 2018 Bruthen
Rainbow Serpent Festival 26 – 29 Jan Lexton
Sydney Blues & Roots Festival 1 – 3 Dec Windsor
Beyond The Valley 28 Jan – 1 Dec Lardner
Sydney City Limits 24 Feb Centennial Pak
Earthcore 23 – 27 Nov Elmore
Sydney Festival 6 – 28 Jan Sydney
Falls Festival 28 – 31 Dec Lorne
THE MUSIC
Riverboats Music Festival 16 – 18 Feb Echuca-Moama St Jerome’s Laneway Festival 3 Feb Footscray
QLD Airlie Beach Festival Of Music 10 – 12 Nov Airlie Beach Bleach* Festival 29 – 15 Apr Gold Coast Blues On Broadbeach Music Festival 17 – 20 May Broadbeach Broadbeach Country Music Festival 27 – 29 Jul Broadbeach CMC Rocks 15 – 18 Mar Ipswich Earth Frequency 16 – 19 Feb Peak Crossing
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Woodford Folk Festival 27 Dec – 1 Jan Woodford
TAS A Festival Called Panama 9 – 11 Mar Lone Star Valley Dark MOFO 15 – 24 Jun Tasmania Falls Festival 29 – 31 Dec Marion Bay MOFO 12 – 22 Jan Tasmania Party In The Paddock 8 – 11 Feb White Hills
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Spilling the beans on pill testing
“I
’m gonna overdose on purpose so they blame no pill testing.” Those are the words of a young man on the Spilt Milk Festival Facebook page just ten minutes after it was announced a pill testing trial would not be taking place at their November event. In the past six weeks, the topic of pill testing has once again been thrust into the spotlight, with ACT Minister for Health and Wellbeing Meegan Fitzharris announcing on 22 September that a pill testing service would be available at Canberran festival. “In a progressive move the ACT Government announced it will allow Safety Testing and Advisory Service at Festivals and Events (STA-Safe) to conduct pill testing as a key harm minimisation strategy at Spilt Milk on 25 November,” shared Kicks Entertainment, the promoters behind the event. “Kicks strongly supports harm minimisation initiatives with proven results such as medically supervised pill testing. This measure has a demonstrated history of success internationally and Kicks applauds the ACT Government for allowing this measure to be introduced at Spilt Milk.” What followed just weeks later would be somewhat of a blindside; the trial was abruptly pulled through an announcement from Kicks Entertainment director Ryan Phillips on triple j’s Hack program. Phillips credited the cancellation to STA-Safe, saying they had not provided the documentation needed for the trial to go ahead. “It comes down to STA-Safe. They need more time to provide documentation, insurance, legal framework to operate on federal land,” he told the program on 12 October. Many were caught off guard by the announcement, none more so than Dr David Caldicott. Dr Caldicott is an emergency room doctor, a senior lecturer and professor at some of Canberra’s best universities. He’s also been conducting pill testing at music
The recent announcement and subsequent cancellation of a pill testing trial at Canberra’s Spilt Milk Festival has reignited the debate. Jessica Dale takes a look at the issue.
events since the early 2000s and has fast become the spokesperson for STA-Safe. Dr Caldicott and STA-Safe were quick to refute Phillips’ claims, sharing with Hack that as far as he knew, all necessary documentation had been provided. In the time since, Spilt Milk are yet to share further comment beside a statement posted to their Facebook page which begins with “It is a tough day when something you have advocated for so strongly can’t quite make it over the line.” It’s apparent that Dr Caldicott is disappointed. Yes, for the two years of work and effort that went into getting the trial underway, but almost entirely for the fact that the testing option had been promised to festivalgoers and then taken away.
dead claw of Nancy Reagan in that space. The reality is, and my argument has always been, the reason that so many drugs are illegal is because they’re dangerous for your health and health takes supremacy. Health is what is the most important thing and so we should be not telling young people that they’re naughty or that they’re evil or that they’re wrong to use drugs, just that they could get really hurt.” There is one main factor that Dr Caldicott believes to be behind the cancellation of the trial — a meeting between Spilt Milk and the National Capital Authority. Within the ACT there are plots of land and attractions that are governed and run under federal control rather than local jurisdiction. It’s here that the NCA steps in, caring for
“Obviously if it works, it works. If it doesn’t, then you can try the next thing but we fail by not trying to change the status quo.” “I think that the issue really, and I think part of the problem with the people who disagree with us, is that they actually don’t understand an entire generation. People don’t consume drugs not caring if they get hurt. The very fact that they’re testing their drugs means that they very much care if they’re going to get hurt or not, and we find the model of taking a doctor who knows an awful lot about illicit drugs and sitting someone down and saying, ‘Look, buddy, this is what we think is going on and we really think you’re better off not taking this particular drug’ [does work],” Dr Caldicott explains. “There is still, in Australia, very much a prohibition bent towards drugs. For whatever reason, we’re still hanging onto the cold,
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landmarks like Canberra’s ANZAC Parade, Federation Mall, Lake Burley Griffin and Commonwealth Park; the venue in which Spilt Milk is set to take place. “I think on the week of the 10th of October, there was a big meeting, I think on Wednesday the 11th between the promoter and the National Capital Authority and at that meeting, we’ve been led to believe that the National Capital Authority advised the promoter that they would not get a licence to conduct Spilt Milk with an application of pill testing,” says Dr Caldicott. “We had provided all of the documentation that was required, not just for the ACT government to persuade them but also the Australian Federal Police, so the documenta-
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tion that we had provided to everybody was extensive. The promoter was involved in all of the planning phases and therefore had access to all of the documentation, and then on the Thursday announced on radio, without consulting with us, that he didn’t have all the documentation he needed, so we didn’t know anything about it.” When approached by The Music for comment, Kicks Entertainment referred only to the statement on the Spilt Milk Facebook page. The National Capital Authority were also contacted but failed to respond. While it still remains unclear who exactly pulled the plug on the testing, there are several additional points to consider. The National Capital Authority chairman Terry Weber told the ABC when the cancellation was announced “that it was his understanding Mr Phillips decided not to go ahead with pill testing at the festival” and “the authority played no part in the decision to shelve the pill testing trial.” There are also comments from the ACT Shadow Minister for Health, Vicki Dunne, at the ACT Legislative Assembly in August. “Pill testing will need Commonwealth government approval, and I doubt that they will give it. Ms Fitzharris can feel free to blame the Commonwealth whilst being silently thankful that she did not have to deliver on pill testing.” Regardless of how the conclusion was reached, there’s one theme that remains consistent: people, particularly at festivals, will still continue their use of illicit drugs. One person who knows better than most about this environment is Richie McNeill, director of Hardware Corporation. McNeill is a co-founder of Stereosonic and has been a key figure in the Australian dance music scene throughout his 25-year plus career. “With pill testing, I am for it definitely, however it’s a delicate process and I think if it was to happen, as I’ve said in the past, it needs the support of the venues, the secu-
Caps Off
There’s roughly 20 countries around the world supporting pill testing. Here’s who’s nailing it:
rity, the police, the first aid, the ambulance, the state,” McNeill explains. “It needs to be a collective way forward like the discussion to give it a trial. Obviously if it works, it works. It doesn’t, then you can try the next thing but we fail by not trying to change the status quo.” While he is in support of pill testing, McNeill also suggests alternate strategies closer to the model exhibited in Amsterdam, where photos of drugs that have tested negatively are displayed at festivals. “If it comes in, then I would strongly support all people having their pills tested whether their mate got theirs tested or not,” says McNeill. “I think that’s one of the problems in the past. There’s been a test and it’s been okay and people have posted things on Bluelight or these kind of websites saying these pills are bad or these ones are ok, but these ones are ok in this particular batch. But there’s five other batches out there made in different countries or whatever else. And I think that’s the problem, is the information and how it’s used. It just needs to be ‘this pill is bad’ and no mention of if this one’s ok and no publishing about it.” While it’s a debate that will surely continue for a long time from both sides of the fence, Dr Caldicott’s final point is probably a good summation of the youth vote on the issue, referring to the politicians he believes blocked the trial at this point. “This is a brilliant way of completely distancing yourself from an entire demographic of parents and young people, because it looks ridiculous and it looks foolish and it ooks aged.”
The Netherlands The Drug Information and Monitoring System (DIMS) has been running since 1992. Testing has been approved at a national level and information found during tests is used for scientific purposes in addition to harm minimisation.
Portugal In 2001, Portugal made a call to decriminalise illicit drugs for personal use. Funding is now put into their healthcare system and in 2015 the country reported only three deaths by overdoses per million compared to an EU average of 17.3.
Switzerland While the country hasn’t legalised use, there has been local and police support for pill-testing at events since 1995.
pon Driinnkk Res Dr R pon Re ponsib sibbly. sibly. sib ly
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Taika Waititi on the set of Thor: Ragnarok with Chris Hemsworth
How do you tackle a lost god with a hangover? Thor: Ragnarok is not only the latest Marvel blockbuster, but its also Taika Waititi’s Hollywood feature debut. He tells Neil Griffiths how he treated the daunting endeavour like another indie project.
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he successes of the filmmaker’s earlier works such as Boy and Hunt For The Wilderpeople (the top two grossing films in New Zealand), as well as horror-comedy What We Do In The Shadows (co-written and directed with friend and collaborator, Jemaine Clement) and Academy Award-nominated short film, Two Cars, One Night, were enough for Hollywood to come knocking. In Sydney this month to talk about his biggest project to date, Waititi, relaxed as ever, explains how he contained the nerves while filming Thor: Ragnarok. “I think if you look at the story, this is basically an independent film with crazier costumes,” he says. “It’s just about a guy who goes out, gets drunk and gets lost and is trying to get home... kinda shrink it down to that idea. Then all the relationships [Thor’s] got — he’s trying to get on with his brother, he comes from this dysfunctional family and his mate is this bipolar guy who gets really angry all the time... that for me is a story that I can imprint my Taika-kinda style on. “All the rest of it, the explosions and spaceships and all that stuff, that’s not the important stuff. The important stuff is the emotion and the relationships and his emotional journey through the film. That’s the only way I could approach it.” The 42-year-old admits though that the process of directing a Hollywood film compared to an indie is vast. “You’ve gotta watch out what you ask for,” he laughs. “I suggested making a spaceship as a joke and then [the studio] made it! All those elements, you’re only limited by
and they just wanted to move in a completely new direction and just to shake things up. “And also just, for Chris [Hemsworth] especially, he wanted to do something that just felt new for him.” As he does in most films, Waititi throws himself in the thick of it all. In Thor: Ragnarok, his character, Korg, requires the director to spend a lot of time on set in a motion capture suit; not the most comfortable of tasks when you have to order the likes of Sir Anthony Hopkins (or “Hoppo”) and Cate Blanchett around. “It’s really hard to be taken seriously as a director and order people around when you’re wearing speckly pyjamas and covered in ping pong balls,” he smiles. “But I’ve had that on all my films where I look like an idiot and try to direct people. In What We Do In The Shadows dressed like a 17th century dandy trying to be taking seriously as you’re hanging off a wire with a frilly shirt, going, ‘Hey guys, can we hurry up ‘cause I can’t feel my legs.’ “But it’s so much fun for me to do a role like that, with a little bit of myself and my style of humour.” Given the positive response to Thor: Ragnarok, talk is already underway for Waititi to helm the fourth Thor film and he wouldn’t hesitate to return. “Yeah for sure,” he says. “If you look at the story, this is basically an independent film with crazier costumes.”
your imagination with these kind of films and that’s an amazing thing. “My films are most definitely limited by budget and time so anything I can imagine, you know, ‘I want a big spaceship and a hurricane’ and they say, ‘Well, maybe you could just get one of your characters to describe that instead of us actually spending money on it.’”
“I think if you look at the story, this is basically an independent film with crazier costumes.” Thor: Ragnarok has already received acclaim from critics and fans, specifically due to the edgier and, simply put, funnier direction it takes the franchise. Don’t be mistaken, though it’s is a Disney project, this is Waititi’s film. “I think when we made a really hardhitting drama and people couldn’t stop laughing, we just changed the description to comedy,” Waititi jokes. “Right from the beginning [the studio] got me in to pitch on the film. They said that they wanted to make a departure from Thor one and two, which had little bits of humour in them, but they were definitely a lot more serious in tone
THE MUSIC
Thor: Ragnarok is now screening
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What we two in the shadows
Waititi as Viago in What We Do in the Shadows
Given that Taika Waititi is now a fully fledged Hollywood director, you’d be forgiven for thinking plans for a spinoff of his critically-acclaimed 2014 film, What We Do In The Shadows are scrapped. However, the New Zealand filmmaker told The Music work on the project is already underway. Waititi confirmed what actor Rhys Darby told The Music last year; that the spin-off will be based on the wolfpack. “That is the plan,” Waititi said. “We are still story-lining that and writing it, but [co-writer, co-director and actor Jemaine Clement] and I are notoriously lazy. “It took us a long time to write What We Do In The Shadows. We may as well not even written it though, because we didn’t show the script to anyone. “We do have plans to do it, it is in the works, it’s just when.”
UPCOMING TOURS BY MJR PRESENTS
TICKETS & INFORMATION AT www.mjrpresents.com THE MUSIC
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NOVEMBER
Meet the brew crew
Good news, craft beer lovers! Brewers Feast is back in town with an incredible line-up of summer suds and boutique eats to tickle Melbourne’s taste buds.
H
osted in the gardens of Abbotsford Convent, there are more than 80 beers to swig at Brewers Feast from a line-up of top breweries including Stockade Brew Co, Prickly Moses, Stone & Wood, Pirate Life and Mornington Peninsular Brewery. There will also be some new discoveries on offer, including hometown heroes the Henry St Brewhouse and Brewers Feast newcomers, CoConspirators Brewing Co. What’s more, this year’s survey of Australia’s best craft brews includes over 12 festival exclusives, supported by Bintani, created especially for Brewers Feast. And it’s not just hop-heads who have plenty to be excited about. Non-beer drinkers can knock back a Harcourt Cider, a glass of wine from the Otway Estate or test out a l’il something from a range of alcoholic ice teas. For the first time, the festival will be introducing an innovative new pairing experience, fusing beer appreciation and music. Punters will be able to enjoy a carefully selected pot while taking in the sweet sounds of triple j artists including Shiva & The Hazards, Neighbourhood Youth, Ben Whiting, Mango Retreat, The Winter Gypsy, Cracker La Touf, AZTX, Blue Howl, Eastbound Buzz, Jimmy Harwood and Seventh Winter. Foodies also have heaps more to be pumped about. In addition to the range of delicious eats on offer from Twisted Mac, Melbourne Arancini, Soul Kitchen and Donut Panic, true gastronomes should take advantage of The Last Supper. This six-course degustation menu, hosted in the Abbotsford Convent’s Mural Room, features a worldclass fine dining experience and, of course, a specially paired beer selection to go with it.
Brewers Feast runs from 1 - 3 Dec at Abbotsford Convent
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ADVERTORIAL
CIDER Apple- Dry- Pear
Locke & Loaded Universe is the second album for Melbourne’s Jess Locke. She tells Jessica Dale why it was important to get this collection of songs down in one place.
“It’s like a bit of a team so that’s certainly new compared to how I’ve been doing things before.”
Check The Guide on theMusic.com.au for more details.
“M
elbourne based sad pop” — that’s the description Jess Locke uses to describe herself and her music on her Instagram account. It’s an interesting introduction for someone who, when chatting, is actually quite upbeat. In 2017, Locke has toured extensively (both in her own band and as a touring member with fellow Melburnians The Smith Street Band), she announced her signing to Pool House Records and released her latest album, Universe, which at the time of writing was happily sitting in a Top 20 spot on the AIR Independent Music Charts. “It’s nice to finally get it out and [it’s] real, you didn’t just imagine it. It’s been really nice, some nice feedback and it’s been great to just be able to finally share it,” explains Locke. When asked if it’s somewhat of a relief, she agrees. “A bit of a relief, definitely. Although there’s still a lot of work to do but definitely, it’s a lot of it coming to realisation so that’s nice but it’s also exciting, I guess, now we can actually [know] people are hearing and getting responses and stuff so that’s exciting as well. “I guess this album is sort of a collection of songs that were written over quite a long period of time. So it’s not so much about one thing or like it going in a particular direction in terms of songwriting but I think I started playing with my current band just after I released my last record and I think that sort of feels like this record is the sum of playing with them for the last two years and kind of ties all the songs together. Some of the songs are quite old, some of them are newer but yeah, it’s kind of just like tying it all together.” The older songs Locke refers to are pieces that have been sitting in her back catalogue for the past few years, some of which she chose to re-record to better fit the album. “I think I kind of gave it something different. Yeah, there’s one song — the first one on the album — I recorded it at least six years ago or something. It was way more lo-fi, folky kind of vibe and we sort of just started playing it with the band and I dunno, I think it just felt like kind of a new song so I just decided to re-do it. “I guess I’ve always had a bit of a backlog of songs and you know, not really having recorded them properly and just feeling like I haven’t really done them justice so I was trying to put them down to move on. I guess I’ve never really sat down and wrote an album from scratch with a blank slate. It’s just always been like ‘oh yeah, I’ve got that song. I really want to get that down’. It’s always just kind of bringing it all together and trying to do something with them so I can free my mind of them and move on.” She laughs when asked if there’s still a few songs hanging around that could be used for the next album. “Ohh, yeah,” exaggerates Locke. “I think there’s always songs I’d like to do something with but I actually would just like to sit down and try writing from a different perspective and sit down and a write an album as a project in itself rather than just sort of a collection of songs. There’s definitely always songs that I still want to do something with so I just have to find a place for them.” This album has also presented Locke with a new home in Pool House Records — a new Australian label run by her friends and sometimes bandmates The Smith Street Band. “It’s been great — pretty much very similar to how we’ve done things in the past; having lots of control over the recording and doing it in a house, we did it at the local pub as well, but obviously being with Pool House there’s a lot more people involved, so there’s been a lot of support and constantly talking with people. It’s like a bit of a team so that’s certainly new compared to how I’ve been doing things before. It’s sort of the same but different.” This month sees Locke and her band heading off around the country in celebration of Universe, something she’s looking forward to. “I think it’s the biggest tour we’ve ever done... and we’re going to some small places that we don’t usually visit or haven’t played at all in some cases, like Perth and Wollongong, so that’s great. I think it’ll be great. It’s nice to put on our own shows and we’ve picked a bunch of bands that we love to play with us as well, so hopefully people can just expect to have a nice time and see a bunch of different music.”
Universe (Pool House Records) is out now. Jess Locke tours from 3 Nov.
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And the award goes to... Height of ARIA Award
The ARIA Award... There’s probably not a local award that Australian musicians aspire to more. So, what really is behind that big hunk o’ metal that we’re all so crazy about?
30cm
Number to be handed out in 2017
Most given out in one year
32
35 (2000)
Number handed out since 1990
Most won
752
Silverchair (21)
Made of
Most nominated
Solid stainless steel
John Farnham (56)
Designed by
Number of awards left stabbed in a wall
Mark Denning
One (Tex Perkins in 1994)
Number stolen (and returned)
In use since
One (that we know of...)
1990
Weight of ARIA Award
Number of awards at the bottom of Sydney Harbour
2.5kg
One (The Killjoys in 1991)
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Flume took home eight of the 11 ARIA Awards he was up for last year, so who will hog the winner’s podium in 2017? Will it be Gang Of Youths, who lead the charge with eight ARIA Award noms? Or is it Paul Kelly’s turn this year? He’s up for seven gongs and has already collected two. Here’s our picks for this year’s awards.
Who will win big at the ARIAs?
Gang Of Youths
Apple Music Album Of The Year AB Original, Amy Shark, Gang Of Youths, Illy, Paul Kelly The Music predicts: Paul Kelly The last time a debut album took out the Album Of The Year category was in 2011 (Boy & Bear’s Moonfire), but we totally get that AB Original’s Reclaim Australia is an exceptional artistic statement. Hold up, Amy Shark’s Night Thinker is actually a six-track EP, isn’t it? Illy usually kills the Urban category, which he won in 2013 for Bring It Back. So we reckon Gang Of Youths are probably the closest contender here for their Go Farther In Lightness set. However, Paul Kelly scored his first-ever number one on the ARIA Albums Chart with Life Is Fine, which made everyone scratch their heads in bewilderment because Kelly’s released a colossal 23 albums over his illustrious 36-year career. Therefore, we collectively reckon Kelly’s gonna take this one home.
Best Female Artist Amy Shark, Jessica Mauboy, Julia Jacklin, Meg Mac, Sia The Music predicts: Amy Shark A former winner in this category, Jessica Mauboy (who collected her trophy in 2013 for To The End Of The Earth) is this time nominated for a soundtrack, which is a compilation of covers (The Secret Daughter: Songs From The Original TV Series). Mauboy has received ARIA nominations in various categories for seven years on the trot now so has gotta be pretty stoked about that. Two-time Best Female Artist winner Sia — This Is Acting (2016) and 1000 Forms Of Fear (2014) — is nominated for a single in 2017 (The Greatest feat Kendrick Lamar), so we reckon this is such a strong list of contenders that the accolade will surely be directed elsewhere. Out of the ridiculously strong pool of contenders that remain — Meg Mac, Julia Jacklin and Amy Shark — the latter two have probably achieved more international success at this point. It’s a tough category to call, but our hot tip is Amy Shark for Night Thinker.
Tash Sultana
Paul Kelly
Best Male Artist
whose Murder Of The Universe album debuted on eight Billboard charts, topping the poll on the Heatseekers Albums chart). But AB Original actually started a national conversation with their 26 January single (feat Dan Sultan) so we’d put our money (if we had any) on Briggs and Trials for Best Group.
DD Dumbo, Dan Sultan, lly, Paul Kelly, Vance Joy The Music predicts: Paul Kelly Most of the blokes nominated in this category have already collected one of these gongs. Paul Kelly has two in the trophy cabinet; Dan Sultan and Vance Joy each have one. Joy is nominated on the strength of a single (Lay It On Me) anyway, so we feel he can wait in line until he releases another album. Illy and DD Dumbo both released stunning albums this year (Two Degrees and Utopia Defeated respectively), but something tells us it’s Kelly’s year to scoop the pool — he better start dusting and making room for a slew of new trophy additions on those shelves.
Best Independent Release national and national touring schedule plus a much-lauded US TV debut on Late Night With Seth Meyers (nailed it!), Sultana has well and truly broken through, actually, she’s completely smashed it! Do you think a few more accolades might make Sultana rethink that hiatus she’s threatening? Sure hope so.
Best Group Breakthrough Artist
AB Original, Gang Of Youths, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Peking Duk
AB Original, Amy Shark, Dean Lewis, Tash Sultana, Tkay Maidza
The Music predicts: AB Original The Music predicts: Tash Sultana Remarkably, none of the 2017 Best Group nominees have already been victorious in this category. And it’s a pretty pukka list, it has to be said! In terms of killer years, 2017 has been particularly noteworthy for King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Gang Of Youths in terms of continuing to nurture and build strong overseas followings (particularly King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard,
We’re pretty delighted to note that there are more female previous winners in this category than males, so we’ll just have to see whether this trend continues in 2017. From this magnificent list of contenders, The Music staff unanimously reckon Tash Sultana will take home the Breakthrough Artist gong in 2017 for Notion. With her relentless inter-
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AB Original, Dan Sultan, Sia, Tash Sultana, Vance Joy The Music predicts: AB Original Sia’s We Are Born was awarded Best Independent Release in 2010, but she’s up for a single release this year (The Greatest feat Kendrick Lamar). So has an artist ever taken home the Best Independent Release trophy on the strength of a single? 1200 Techniques did for Karma (What Goes Around Comes Around) in 2002, as did S2S (2000) for Sister and TISM for I’m Interested In Apathy (1989). Ok, so it has happened, but team The Music still agree this one belongs to the mighty AB Original for Reclaim Australia in 2017.
The ARIA Awards happen on 28 Nov
To read the full list of predictions head to theMusic.com.au
Double-Ups
Daryl Braithwaite: 2017 ARIA Hall Of Fame Inductee
that people have for that song is incredible. It does something for people every night we play it.” Braithwaite didn’t write The Horses, but he made it his own. The song was written by Rickie Lee Jones and Steely Dan’s Walter Becker and was the opening track on Rickie’s 1989 album, Flying Cowboys. “I love the fact that I heard the song by chance,” Braithwaite says. “We were right at the end of recording Rise and I put on that album and heard The Horses. I rang [producer] Simon Hussey straight away and said, ‘We should do this song’. I knew that dynamically we could make it sound like As The Days Go By.” Of course, Braithwaite is no one hit wonder. He had an incredible run of hits with Sherbet, with 19 Top 40 singles from 1971 to 1978. As a solo artist, Braithwaite has had 15 Top 40 hits, starting in 1974 with his chart-topping cover of You’re My World. Braithwaite continues to record. He released the album Forever The Tourist in 2013, and a new compilation, Days Go By, to be released on 24 Nov, will feature four new recordings, including covers of Motor’s Too Fast (with good mate James Reyne, who Braithwaite says should also be in the Hall Of Fame for his solo work), Peter Gabriel’s In Your Eyes (Braithwaite is a huge Gabriel fan; the Edge album included a cover of I Don’t
Howzat! It’s Daryl
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un fact: Daryl Braithwaite is the only Australian artist to have had number one singles and albums with a band and solo. Sherbet’s Greatest Hits 1970-75 topped the charts in 1975. Fourteen years later, Braithwaite was back at number one with his solo album Edge. He’s also had four number one singles: two with Sherbet (Summer Love and Howzat) and two solo (You’re My World and The Horses). And now Braithwaite is being inducted into the ARIA Hall Of Fame for the second time. “I feel really honoured,” he says. “I was 20 when I joined Sherbet. I was just in it for the fun and excitement, and here I am 47 years later. Many good things have gone my way.” Sherbet had more Top 40 hits in the ‘70s than any other Australian act. Back then, a civil war was raging. Our version of The Beatles and The Rolling Stones was Sherbet versus Skyhooks. During the Countdown years, Braithwaite’s grandmother lived down the road from Countdown host Molly Meldrum’s house. She would take him scones and tell him to play Sherbet more often. “She’d also give me a mouthful if she thought I was favouring Skyhooks,” Meldrum recalls. The irony was the two bands were actually great friends, particularly Braithwaite and ‘Hooks singer Graeme “Shirley” Strachan, who were both surfers and tradesmen before finding fame (Braithwaite was a fitter and turner, Strachan was a carpenter). Braithwaite’s dad wasn’t happy when he quit his trade. Braithwaite enjoyed working on submarines at the Cockatoo Island naval dockyard in Sydney, but his bosses weren’t always happy when he skipped work to go surfing. Braithwaite says his real apprenticeship was with Sherbet.
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aryl Braithwaite says his lucky number is 11 — he and his twin, Glenn, were born on 11 Jan. “If I ever play roulette, I bet on 11, and if it’s the horses, I always look at what’s number 11.” Daryl is now the 11th artist to be twice inducted into the ARIA Hall Of Fame. The others are: Harry Vanda & George Young (as Vanda & Young and The Easybeats), Ross Wilson (solo and Daddy Cool), Glenn Shorrock (solo and Little River Band), Jimmy Barnes (Cold Chisel and solo), Rick Grossman (Divinyls and Hoodoo Gurus), Gary Young (Daddy Cool and Jo Jo Zep & The Falcons), and Neil Finn, Tim Finn and Paul Hester (Split Enz and Crowded House).
Braithwaite, 68, is no stranger to awards — he was King Of Pop three years in a row (1975, 1976 and 1977) and Sherbet were inducted into the ARIA Hall Of Fame in 1990 (two years before Skyhooks) as Braithwaite was preparing to release another smash hit solo album, Rise, featuring The Horses, which became his signature song. The Horses is now part of Australian culture. Country artist Lachlan Bryan recently took New Orleans band The Roamin’ Jasmine to Tamworth for a gig. The perplexed Americans were greeted by a bunch of blokes at the bar who asked, “Can youse guys play that Daryl Braithwaite song The Horses?” Braithwaite can’t explain why his version is so loved, especially by young audiences. “I can’t work out why, but the affection
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Remember), Chicago’s If You Leave Me Now (which kept Sherbet’s Howzat out of top spot on the UK charts; the new version showcases Braithwaite’s flawless falsetto), and Brian McKnight and Diana King’s When We Were Kings (which was suggested by Braithwaite’s producer, Bryon Jones), plus Braithwaite’s version of Up On The Roof, which was on the recent Carole King tribute album (“one of the best things I’ve done for decades — everything sat perfectly”). Jeff Jenkins
Daryl Braithwaite will be inducted into the ARIA Hall Of Fame at the ARIA Awards on 28 Nov.
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eff Jenkins writes the Australian music column Howzat! for The Music, a journey started two decades ago when the publication started and was called Inpress. Here he shares his connection with Daryl Braithwaite: Howzat! has a special fondness for Daryl Braithwaite. Indeed, the column is named after Sherbet’s biggest hit. Daryl was also the first major interview I did — I was starting out, and he was making a comeback, releasing the Edge album in 1988. We spoke about fame and family. Daryl talked about his mum, Laura (“She was always concerned that I was going to end up as a no-hoper, but she’s heard the new stuff and now she’s really proud”) and his twin brother Glenn (“I really admire him — he’s had to take a lot with his brother being in a pop group”). Daryl also revealed he had some intensive singing lessons before recording Edge. “One of the most important things I learned is the psychology of singing, recognising where your voice comes from and giving a song an interpretation from the heart, not just paying it lip service.” Then, and now, Daryl is a lovely bloke. I’m not sure I’ve met a star more laid back, and I’ve often wondered whether his easygoing nature prevented him from conquering the world. Not that he seems too perturbed. Talk to him for any length of time and it’s obvious he’s more interested in catching the next wave than religiously reading the charts. But his love of music is undeniable and he has a remarkable body of work. He is a deserving double Hall Of Famer.
MUSIC & ART FOR YOUR MIND & SOUL
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23/10/17 4:36 pm
Jumping in the deep end and writing on the fly
Chloe Kaul, frontwoman of avant-pop duo Kllo, tells Cyclone that she and Simon Lam have been working it all out on the fly in Backwater hotels.
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elbourne avant-pop duo Kllo — formed by cousins Chloe Kaul and Simon Lam — have done everything out of sync. They’ve even toured internationally before dropping a debut album. But, with anticipation high for Backwater, it’s paying off. Kllo have been solidly rehearsing an expansive new live show. Yet, right now, Kaul is tucking into some late-morning brekky cereal — a “healthy” one. “It’s apparently gluten-free and fruit-free, et cetera, et cetera,” Kllo’s frontwoman says cheerily. Kaul and Lam were pursuing music independently when, encouraged by Lam’s mum, they united. Lam, a sound engineering student (and onetime jazz drummer), was producing experimental beats, while Kaul developed as a singer-songwriter. Kllo would “merge” UK garage, ‘90s R&B and wonky pop on 2014’s Cusp EP (issued via Dot Dash Recordings). The single Make Me Wonder was picked up by the UK’s Radio 1 and Kllo became a streaming sensation. Soon, this Antipodean AlunaGeorge was gigging globally (they joined 2016’s Splendour In The Grass). Ahead of 2016’s follow-up EP Well Worn, Kllo secured deals with cred labels like the [PIAS]-affiliated Different Recordings, Ghostly International and Australia’s Good Manners. That Ghostly reached out is most astonishing — Sam Valenti IV’s fabled imprint long associated with Detroit techno, despite latterly sponsoring the Grammy-nominated Tycho. “I’m not sure exactly how it started,” Kaul says. “We were playing a show at Primavera [Sound] in Spain and I remember my manager was just emailing them at the time.”
“The very first music [we] ever put out was the very first music we ever made together. So we haven’t really had much time to do trial and error.” Kllo prepped the crystalline Backwater, led by the single Virtue, on the road. “We wrote most of it in hotels, on hotel floors, bedrooms — the whole lot.” In fact, the album parallels their adapting to international #tourlyfe — hence the FOMO-inspired title, Backwater. “It’s always exciting, just a little bit daunting leaving your life at home and putting it on hold and going overseas and living a whole other life,” Kaul says. The Kllo members share common influences — Kaul namechecking the likes of LuckyMe’s Jacques Greene, Caribou and Little Dragon. The epic Last Yearn betrays their love of James Blake. Pointedly, the pair also write in tandem — Kllo a joint learning experience. “The very first music [we] ever put out was the very first music we ever made together. So we haven’t really had much time to do trial and error — [we’re] sort of just working along and finding our sound along the way. I think now, eventually, we’ve started to understand what works best for us and matured our sound over time, and become more comfortable with those certain elements.” Live, both play synths and operate MIDI controllers, with Kaul looping her vocals. “We do as much as we can on stage with just the two of us.” Ironically, back in their Melbourne hometown, Kllo has just been nominated for Best Electronic Act at The Age Music Victoria Awards. “It’s just such a hard place to crack!” Kaul quips. Kllo will hit Europe prior to December’s Australian dates. This time they’ve allowed themselves an indulgence — a tour manager. Kaul laughs, “Trying to get train tickets in different languages with no idea at five in the morning is just too hard.”
Backwater (Good Manners/Caroline) is out now. KLLO tours from 8 Dec.
Check The Guide on theMusic.com.au for more details.
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BOROONDARA ARTS PRESENTS
WEEKEND of Beautiful Music
the
10 - 12 November 2017
HOLLY THROSBY / GEORGIA FIELDS / 3MBS THE TALENT / AND SO MUCH MORE!
Indulge your musical wanderlust and immerse yourself in The Weekend of Beautiful Music.
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America’s cavalier use of pharmaceuticals persists, the nation’s drug problem continues to deepen. Despite his tried and true skill at maintaining arms-length objectivity, what Theroux found in Huntington was nonetheless confronting. “Clearly, the stories stay with you, and you do find yourself thinking about them. There are times when because of the vulnerabilities of the contributors you sort of have to take off your documentary hat and put on one of more of a caretaker,” he reveals. “To be honest with you, some of the most troubling material we ended up not using. What you see on screen is just the tip of the iceberg — and it’s the scenes we abandon that you end up thinking about the most. Sometimes we have to say, ‘Look, we can’t use this story. It is just too complicated, and the dynamic of the people involved, and our role in their interactions is just too complex. We need to step out of this one.’ When you’re involved with people whose lives are so chaotic and so filled with angst, who are facing extremely distressing choices, you really have to try not to take too much of that home with you. That was particularly difficult with this film.” It’s an intriguing thought that Theroux should so sensitively self-edit while filming in a country that seems hooked on a shamelessly sensationalist and often exploitative news media. But perhaps this isn’t all that surprising; the question of boundaries — and the consequences of crossing them — is an idee fixe found throughout Theroux’s canon of documentaries. “I think there’s a very clear sense, to my mind at least, of the areas in which it’s clearly not appropriate to film. That doesn’t mean you should avoid certain situations — in a sense, you have to judge things as you find them. But I feel as though, if you’re dealing with an adult who’s in their right mind, and it feels like an
“What you see on screen is just the tip of the iceberg” Master documentarian, Louis Theroux, is leaving the whimsical quirks of his past films behind, to explore the dark heart of America’s underclasses. He tells Maxim Boon why making Heroin Town was one of the greatest challenges of his career.
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here’s a moment in Heroin Town, the latest documentary by British filmmaker Louis Theroux, where the veteran broadcaster is invited to smell an uncooked lump of the highly addictive drug. He initially hesitates; “This is weird,” he mutters warily. Slowly, he lowers his head close to the small, greyish pebble and takes in the scent, noting its sharp, vinegary odour — a sign that it’s of a particularly high grade, he’s told. It’s an encounter, like many he experienced while making Heroin Town, that has left Theroux conflicted. “I’d never take heroin, obviously. But there is some curiosity; there’s a part of you that wants to understand that rush,” he admits. “I’ve wondered, if maybe some of it had touched my nose, just accidentally, if I’d have felt anything? Would I have an idea of how it actually feels?” Anyone familiar with Theroux’s work might find this lingering introspection surprising; as a documentarian, he has coined a uniquely unflappable trademark style of storytelling. Over the years, as showcased in his more than 60 films, he’s applied this oh so placid demeanour to charming a motley crew of unsavoury characters, from paedophiles to prostitutes, Christian fundamentalists to neo-Nazis. Through it all, it’s his coolas-a-cucumber manner that has proven to be
important story, that’s usually an indication that it’s ok,” Theroux explains. “There are other limiting factors of course, that are less for ethical reasons and more about storytelling and dramatic power. I really try to tell stories that I feel people will want to watch and engage with. The fact they’re important stories is obviously a factor, but I don’t think you can presume your audience will stick with it if it’s not also interesting or intriguing.” It may well be that Theroux’s choices in the cutting room reveal a kind of reflexive self-preservation. As I chat to the seasoned interviewer, he repeatedly pivots the dynamic, deflecting my questions with his own, effortlessly waltzing the conversation into affable chit-chat. It’s apparent that Theroux’s onscreen persona, with its quintessential Britishness expertly geared to corralling his subjects while putting them at ease, is second nature. It isn’t hard to see why America has embraced him, as Theroux puts it, “As a vaguely exotic relative who isn’t at all threatening.” And yet, he’s also a pragmatist, happy to drop any artistic pretensions to talk about the nuts and bolts of his process, rather than anything too emotionally intimate. It seems Theroux is thoroughly insulated against the personal toll his chosen profession could potentially take. Which is just as well. He has spent his career immersed in communities with wildly unconventional lifestyles, most notably in his hugely popular break-out masterpieces, Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends, which saw him cosy up to survivalists, porn stars, UFO believers and semi-pro wrestlers (as well as a few less cutesy milieus). But it’s been almost two decades since those joyrides through America’s fringes, and by comparison, the Dark States series has seen Theroux go toe to toe with a far grittier reality. I wonder if this shift draws any parallels with the ascendancy of the alt-right in America’s political mainstream? Just for a moment, Theroux allows himself to be uncharacteristically candid. “Honestly, no. I think it’s more a reflection of my own ageing process. I’m more mature and more confident that what I’m doing has value. The programs I’ve made in my career have changed over time, but they’ve always had a dark dimension to them, they’ve always been about people on the edge. I think what happened is that I became more competent in my storytelling, and at a certain point, I was faced with the decision that I could either make shows that were whimsical and funny, or I could take a different route. So, given the choice between making funny shows that didn’t have any power, or making shows that explored really impactful stories, but weren’t about creating humour? Well, it was a no-brainer.”
“I’d never take heroin, obviously. But there is some curiosity; there’s a part of you that wants to understand that rush.”
his most useful asset, allowing him to be both objective observer and welcomed infiltrator. With such a seemingly impenetrable armour of professional detachment, Theroux has followed stories where other documentary makers fear to tread. However, perhaps because his early career seemed to channel a more whimsical tone, finding humour in the counterpoint between his dry, emotional discipline and the psychological eccentricities of his subjects, his latest films feel like a watershed. In a new series for the BBC, Dark States, Theroux is uncovering the bleakest corners of American society. These harrowing stories are not found in the USA’s great, moneyed metropolises, but rather in its many regional backwaters. Heroin Town brought Theroux to the small West Virginian city of Huntingdon. Across its population of just 49,000, one in four adults are addicted to the drug, resulting in a fatal overdose rate 13 times the national average. The most shocking statistic concerns the city’s youngest residents: one in every ten babies born in Huntington comes into the world dependent on opiates. While this small corner of America may seem particularly blighted, it is a place that reflects a growing crisis in the States. The clear majority of addicts turn to heroin after becoming hooked on prescription medications, and as
Dark States: Heroin Town plays selected cinemas nationally from 17 Nov. The entire Dark States series will screen on BBC Knowledge from 5 Dec.
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Love it or hate it, home is where the heart is
There’s been a lot of ink spilt on the great cities — but not so much on regional Victoria. Fountaineer have set out to change that with their Bendigo-inspired album, Greater City, Greater Love. Frontman Tony White shares the hometown spirit with Rod Whitfield.
“It’s a love/hate thing and you push and pull against it, but it’s there.”
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n artist’s upbringing, background and surroundings have a profound effect on their creative output, and the influence of living in a small country town like Bendigo has been so all-pervasive on Tony White and the others members of Fountaineer that they wrote, recorded and released what is more or less a concept album about the town, growing up there and their shared and individual experiences there. “We started a few years ago, my brother and I just got together,” White recounts the band’s history, speaking from the town’s library. “We finally got a band together, we’d been talking about it for years. We hadn’t played together since we’d left high school, and it all started from there. “The Bendigo thing just happened naturally,” he explains. “There’s always a lot going on around town, and that’s what we started writing about, and the album centred around that. We’re just a very Bendigofocused band.” That where you live seeps into your psyche and then, in turn, comes out in your creativity is more or less unavoidable for certain artists, and this band chose to simply embrace it. “I think where you live and
where you grew up is pretty much a family member in a lot of ways,” he says. “It’s a love/ hate thing and you push and pull against it, but it’s there. It’s nothing something you can change, unless you move. You have to learn to deal with it and appreciate the good things, and do your bit to try and make the place better.” And living in a small regional town, by its very nature, has its own effect. “Everything in a small town is finite. There are boundaries, there are limits. You’re not going to find new people, not like in a city where there’s always different bars and different people to meet. Whoever’s here and whatever’s here is what you have to work with. Everyone knows everyone, and that sucks a lot of the time!” he laughs. The album, entitled Greater City, Greater Love, whose creation was so heavily influenced by its surroundings, has been out since August, and the band are heading off on their very first full-blown tour during November and December. White is looking forward to playing to people outside of their own regular crowd. “Maybe people will turn up that we don’t know, usually in the past it’s pretty much family and friends to be honest,” he
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laughs, “there may be a few punters who’ve just listened to and enjoyed the record, you never know.” The album has somewhat of an electronic and new wave type of sound and feel to it, and while their live set will be dominated by tracks from the album, punters rocking up to the shows can expect a very different vibe to what they experience listening to the record. “We just put it all out there,” he describes, “it’ll be mostly songs from the record, maybe a few that aren’t on the record. It’s pretty raw, almost like a garage band just giving their all, we’re not overly technical. It’s probably got a lot more intensity than what you get on the record.” The album has received some pretty significant airplay on triple j, and has also garnered almost wall to wall praise from reviewers and punters. White feels that moments like that make working in such an unforgiving industry so much more worthwhile, especially when it comes to gaining acceptance in their hometown. “All the ups and downs, as you know the old music industry can be quite fickle,” he says, “but stuff like that makes us pretty proud. “The biggest thing for me is that it makes
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people in Bendigo take us seriously. No one’s really taken us seriously so far, apart from ourselves, so it’s good to have that sort of thing to hang your hat on.” As far as the future of the band is concerned, White is quite casual and relaxed about their prospects, preferring to live his busy life in Bendigo, take it all in his stride and allow things to come naturally. “We’ve started work on album number two at the moment,” he reveals, “we’ve got a lot of demos sitting ‘round. I’d hope this record comes out quicker than the last one. But real life gets in the way, we’re probably more concerned about jobs and real things than what’s going to happen with the band. The music will take care of itself, we can’t really worry about it too much.”
Greater City, Greater Love (1825 Records/ Warner) is out now. Fountaineer tours from 9 Nov. Check The Guide on theMusic.com.au for more details.
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Growing up in the Upside Down
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t’s 1983, and I’m 11 years old. I’ve stayed up past bedtime to sneak downstairs. Quietly, I switch on the TV and wait for the show to start... This was my immediate impression of the Netflix megahit Stranger Things upon watching its first season last year. The eight-episode science fiction/coming of age/horror/smalltown mystery mash-up certainly wasn’t the first piece of pop culture to hinge on nostalgia for the heyday of the 1980s — indeed, you could say it owes a debt to JJ Abrams’ uneven but heartfelt 2011 movie Super 8, which covered similar territory. But the show, created by relative newcomers Matt and Ross Duffer, pulled off a truly nifty balancing act. Paying homage to the creative icons of the era (most notably Stephen King, Steven Spielberg and John Carpenter, although film buffs could undoubtedly find nods to others), Stranger Things summoned enough ‘80s archetypes to inspire acid flashbacks for viewers who were actually there back in the day and generate envy in those who weren’t. Those nostalgic qualities, however, were wrapped all the while in a compelling story of friendship and family ties as the best defence against the things that threaten you, whether they’re schoolyard bullies or a malevolent beastie from another dimension. Stranger Things didn’t really have star power to draw upon — its biggest name was Winona Ryder, entering an overdue comeback phase in her career — and it wasn’t hyped to such a degree that watching it felt like an obligation. Instead, it became the best kind of success story, the one that gains popularity and momentum through positive word of mouth from people who had perhaps decided to catch a single episode and found themselves cancelling their plans in order to binge the entire season. It quickly seemed Stranger Things was everywhere. The young cast members playing the group of friends at the heart of the story became red-carpet regulars, with UK actor Millie Bobby Brown — a standout as the mysterious, super-powered girl known only as ‘Eleven’ — emerging as the most hyped of this clutch of breakout stars, signing with leading modelling agency IMG at the tender age of 12. Intense fandom spanned every facet of the show, from the origins of its synth-heavy score to the font used in its glowing red title logo. The fate of a supporting character, who ran afoul of the show’s big, bad monster, spiralled into a viral phenomenon. Shrines were built, murals were dawbed, and a hashtag — #JusticeForBarb — continues to pinball around the Twittersphere. And, of course, with that came the almost instant demand for more, more, more. The Duffer Brothers, as they’re billed in the credits of Stranger Things, admit that the show could lend itself to an anthology format, telling a different spooky story with a different setting and cast of characters under the Stranger Things banner each new season. And they say they briefly considered
From a spooky, kooky homage to the ‘80s by two unknown showrunners to the world’s most talked about show, all in a single season; Stranger Things has come a long way since its debut season. One of the hit show’s young stars, Gaten Matarazzo, joins Guy Davis on a trip back to Hawkins.
that approach. But when you’ve found a way to appeal to audiences, there’s a tendency to want to stick with it. “It’s so hard to strike a chord with audiences that, when it happens, everyone is coming to you immediately to do it again and again,” said Matt Duffer in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter. “They don’t want to leave it alone. In our case, as soon as we started developing with Netflix, it was always supposed to be a multi-season arc.” While the new season may initially seem like more of the same — and that’s not necessarily a bad thing, given how much the Duffers got right the first time around — it does move things forward (and in a few other cool directions) in interesting and absorbing ways. One such way is acknowledging that the Stranger Things kids are indeed growing up. Admittedly it’s only been a year since we last caught up with them but the difference in the show’s young cast is noticeable, and some parts of the story reflect that. “Even if I had the choice to freeze them in time, I wouldn’t,” said Matt Duffer in his Hollywood Reporter interview. “We don’t want to be repeating ourselves. This show is going to naturally evolve and feel different year to year, and that to me is a good thing. I like that we’re able to watch them grow.” The character of Dustin, played by Gaten Matarazzo, who’s been acting since making his Broadway debut at the age of nine, illustrates this. A fan favourite in the first season for his irreverent one-liners and distinctive appea ra nce (his front teeth were absent due to a disorder called cleidocranial dysplasia), Dustin in the new episodes has a gleaming set of gnashers he shows off at every opportunity. His voice also seems to have dropped an octave or two, and his interest in video games is seemingly matched by his interest in Max (Sadie Sink), the redheaded new girl in town. Matarazzo downplays the notion of an “obvious crush”, though, hinting that Dustin’s interest in Max is motivated more by bringing her into his fold of friends as they battle new threats this time around. “I’ve always felt Dustin is the glue of the group, and after everything that has happened and what everyone is going through, especially with what Will [played by Noah Schapp] is going through, I feel like he’s trying to keep the gang as intact as possible,” he said. “It’s difficult, though, and I think he looks at Max as a way to help. She’s this cool new character that adds a really great dynamic to the show in that way.” And so we have Stranger Things 2 — there’s a big red numeral right there in the opening credits — which picks up one year on from the first season, with the characters recovering and in some cases struggling to move on from the amazing events 12 months earlier. Will Byers disappearing into the dark dimension known as the Upside Down was the crux of the mystery last time.
“I’ve always felt Dustin is the glue of the group... he’s trying to keep the gang as intact as possible”
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Having been rescued by a rag-tag group of heroes, including his best friends Dustin, Mike (Finn Wolfhard) and Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin), his distraught but driven mother Joyce (Ryder) and grouchy, hard-drinking sheriff Hopper (David Harbour), Will is seemingly back on solid ground in the town of Hawkins, Indiana. And yet, he’s still haunted by memories of the Upside Down, and what lurks within it. The thing is, maybe it’s not memories haunting him. Maybe whatever lurks within the Upside Down is making its way into our world. The Duffers have reached deep into their bag of tricks once again with Stranger Things 2, not only mining the popculture goldmine of the 1980s for new riches (shoutouts to Ghostbusters, Gremlins and Aliens are plentiful and pleasingly integrated into the piece) but developing the existing characters in some smart, empathetic ways (Schapp’s performance as Will is just terrific). And whatever self-conscious restraint may have influenced the storytelling during show’s debut season has vanished in this return to Hawkins. The stakes are higher, the scale more epic, and in all likelihood, the reaction from fans may well surpass the levels of near-hysterical enthusiasm for Stranger Things’ first instalments.
Stranger Things 2 is now streaming on Netflix.
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Rooms for the memory
Through the pages of Bryget Chrisfield’s teenage diaries, we revisit Rocking The Royals, the Dogs In Space set and beyond to pay tribute to Michael Hutchence in the month that marks 20 years since his tragic demise. Rocking The Royals (4 Nov, 1985) While Princess Diana and Prince Charles were in Melbourne for Victoria’s 150th anniversary celebrations, a concert was put on in their honour to showcase Australia’s finest musical talent at the time. INXS headlined, but Models, Kids In The Kitchen, I’m Talking and comedian Richard Stubbs also performed on the night. For those who weren’t fortunate enough to snag $52 tickets to experience the concert from inside Melbourne Concert Hall (now Hamer Hall), giant screens were set up around the nearby St Kilda Road underpass and $2.50 tickets could be purchased to watch the show from Alexandra Avenue. It’s estimated that 15,000 punters rocked out in the underpass. So which option would a posse of skint, music-obsessed teens go for, do you think? An impressive line-up such as this presented endless autograph/photograph hunting opportunities so a decision was made to hang around the stage door in lieu of actually watching the show. Anticipating soundchecks, we conducted a reconnaissance around Melbourne Concert Hall and took our places among a handful of other fans that had already assembled near the stage door with similar intentions. It bucketed down on the night, but this didn’t dampen our spirits as we prepared to meet and greet Australian rock royalty. Molly Meldrum was there, of course. He put the line-up together and, upon deciding the vibe inside Melbourne Concert Hall
INXS] but he was in the car before I could say anything, Sean [Kelly, Models] ran away as usual so I went and talked to Craig [Harnath, Kids In The Kitchen].” While casually chatting with INXS’s limo driver, we half-jokingly asked where the band was staying. “The Regent,” he replied casually. What? Is he for real? We froze and then slowly backed away before he could realise his mistake. Given that we’d told our parents we were staying at each other’s houses to dodge curfews, this information suddenly gave our night purpose. We wandered up to The Regent (now Sofitel) and perched on a nearby bench. The concierge said we were welcome to hang out in the lobby and wait for INXS so long as we didn’t fall asleep. We were still talking to him when Beers pulled up in a taxi. While readying ourselves to approach the INXS bass player, we spied I’m Talking vocalist/INXS backing vocalist Zan Abeyratne getting out of the taxi. She ran around and pashed Beers so we decided to give them some privacy. At 4.10am, Hutchence also returned to the hotel in a taxi with girl in tow, but we decided we couldn’t let this opportunity slip away given that he was the lead singer. Imagine how jealous all our friends at school would be? We were rewarded handsomely for our intrusion with autographs, individual photos and the opportunity to soak up Michael’s bucketloads of charisma. The late INXS singer certainly had the ability to make whoever he was talking to feel like the most beautiful, interesting person on the planet. His eye contact was penetrating and he asked us what our favourite bands were, how school was going and what we wanted to be when we grew up — with genuine interest. Hutchence also cheekily shared that he found Lady Diana sexy and said he’d whispered his hotel room number in her ear when INXS were presented to The Royals earlier. It definitely helped that we weren’t already diehard INXS fans when we made Michael’s acquaintance, because we weren’t overly gushy. Although we were starstruck Hutch’s presence after watching him in action
needed an injection of teen spirit, he opened the stage door and ushered us all through the labyrinthine corridors into the luxe auditorium. We bolted down the aisles, dripping all the way, to ensure we soaked up the majesty of INXS from as close to the stage as possible. The whole Rocking The Royals concert is up on YouTube and still holds up as an outstanding document of the band’s world-class show. INXS’s well-documented relentless touring schedule made them untouchable live. Burn For You’s haunting, minimal synth intro (INXS’s Rocking The Royals opener) still thrills and takes this scribe right back to that very moment. Diary excerpt: “We all got really excited and thoroughly enjoyed the performance INXS gave which was of an excellent, professional standard.” Even though INXS weren’t our favourite band on the Rocking The Royals line-up at the time, one look at Michael Hutchence writhing around up there just out of reach and we were immediately converted. Only a handful of lead singers in history boast Hutchencelevel charisma; you simply couldn’t drag your eyes away from him. Michael somehow made every single member of the audience feel as if he was performing just for them while also staring directly down the barrels of the cameras (drawing in the underpass partiers) and prowling/cavorting across the entire width of the stage. After the band’s 11-song set and now with sweat further drenching our rain-soaked bodies, we were ushered back out the stage door. We elbowed each other excitedly while stifling our “ERMAGERD” reactions and trying to act cool. Of course we waited to meet the bands again on their way out — more golden photo and autograph opportunities. And eventually all members of all four Rocking The Royals bands emerged from the stage door. Diary excerpt: “The collaboration of all the absolutely gorgeous guys from the four bands exited the stage door. I honestly couldn’t decide where to look or who to talk to. I thought Garry [Gary Beers,
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that night, we somehow managed to hold it together and hoped this wouldn’t be the last we saw of him. It could definitely be said that we were now obsessed with the INXS singer. Dogs In Space (10 Mar — 26 Apr, 1986) As soon as it was announced that Hutchence had been cast as Sam in the Richard Lowenstein-directed film Dogs In Space, we just had to find out the film’s locations and make our presence known. We somehow got wind that filming would take place in Richmond so spent a couple of days randomly wandering the suburb’s streets in search of a sign. Then once we discovered the name of the production company, Central Park Films Pty Ltd, we decided to look it up in the phone book and mission it over there. A couple of forms of public transport as well as a few pitstops at shops to check out the Melways later and we found ourselves at the front door of Central Park Films Pty Ltd. We knocked quietly and waited. No answer. Rather than walk away, we thought we’d try the door just in case it was open. It was! We gently pushed it ajar and peered inside, where display boards were placed around the room with various photographs and addresses of Dogs In Space’s locations. We crept inside and clocked a picture of a house with its address written clearly underneath: 18 Berry Street, Richmond. Bingo! The first time we wandered up Berry Street, we saw some suspicious activity that looked like it could be a film crew setting up in an otherwise quiet street and so set ourselves up in a park down the road to observe, hoping for a Hutch sighting. We were prepared to wait. After rocking up a couple of times to no avail, we finally caught sight of Michael but were initially distraught about his transformation for the role, which saw his trademark cascading locks chopped off haphazardly and dyed all colours of the rainbow. To read the full story head to theMusic.com.au
“One of the best Australian electronic albums in some time”
THE KITE STRING TANGLE
The Music
ARIA Nominated Best Dance Album
Includes Selfish, The Prize feat. Bridgette Amofah
& This Thing We Got Out Now THE MUSIC
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Raw material: spinning ‘pleasure’ from pain Singer-songwriter Feist has had her work cut out for her over the years, touring with many different acts across multiple continents. She discloses to Anthony Carew how the darkest time in her life inspired her latest, Pleasure.
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t’s an aspirational thing to name a dark time a word like Pleasure, to release it to the world as the brother of that experience,” says Leslie Feist. The 41year-old Canadian has just issued her fifth Feist album, indeed called Pleasure. The album is dark, beautiful, heartbreaking, strange, playful, thoughtfully recorded and often shockingly raw, built around live recordings of Feist and Mocky, who together produced the LP with engineer Renaud Letang. “We were trying to make a live album, with the bulk of songs me alone,” Feist explains. “It was only later that we felt we could stand to overdub some things. And those things all felt natural, and like an extension of the songs. I didn’t want anything on there to sound like production. I wanted it sound like the cast of characters telling the story. In a play, there’s the scene, and there’s the people that are required to tell that particular story and bring it to life. And, I look at production like that. It can’t be in the way, or self-conscious, or supersede the voice in the narrative; it has to serve the story.” These decisions, Feist said, were made to reflect the songs and the feelings that went into them. “It was raw material; it was a bit rough-around-the-edges, the state-of-mind the songs were addressing,” she forwards. “Any romanticised, sweeping strings, that kind of comfort-you-in-its-arms production that makes you wistful, I knew that was just off the table. We couldn’t have any of that. The bombastic horn section, that was off the table, too. Because it’s so certain of itself, horns are declaring something that they know for sure. But, this album is about the state in between, not knowing one thing from the next, what is up what is down, this state of liminal in-between-ness. We knew that it needed to be pretty bony, and that lends itself to space, emptiness, room-tones, raw natural sounds.” Pleasure arrives six years after Feist’s prior LP, 2011’s Metals. That album was, Feist now thinks, a reaction against the repetition of touring; a life that she’d thrown herself into at 16, playing with her first band, a Calgary punk outfit called Placebo. By the time she was in her mid-20s, she’d toured around North America numerous times, but never travelled personally. Her first trips to Europe and Australia came when she was performing with Peaches and Gonzales (as sockpuppet-wielding sexpot Bitch Lap Lap). She spent eight solid years on the road around her twin breakout LPs, 2004’s Let It Die, which won acclaim and an audience, and
2007’s The Reminder, which was Grammy nominated and won iPod ad placements. “I had toured both those records around the world for years, and sung that bank of songs so much that I was determined to not write anything remotely close to them again,” Feist admits. “[It was] the sheer physicality of it. My hands and my body knew what the experience of those songs was, so I was interested in veering in a completely different direction.” After touring Metals, she wanted something else: a break. Feist took two solid years off touring because she no longer wanted to think of the road as where she belonged (“it’s different every day, so it can be quite discombobulating - and not healthy - when you try to make that shifting place your home”). She travelled personally, visiting Egypt and going to Malawi with an antiAIDS charity. But, mostly, she was intent on taking a sabbatical. And that meant, with her 40th birthday coming in the middle of a time of contemplation, lots of existential wrangling; thoughts which formed the basis for Pleasure’s unsureness, and darkness. “You know those nights where you just can’t go to sleep, and you’re staring at the wall, and there’s a thousand thoughts flooding your mind, and they’re all just noise? That was going on for a long time for me, for a couple of years. I didn’t really know what was what. It was like life hadn’t added up. Like you stand stock-still and you don’t know which direction to take your next step in,” Feist offers. “Like, are you engaged in your own decision-making, or are you just getting tugged around by the patterns that you formed from decisions that you made without thinking in the past? Have those mindless decisions added up to the way your life is now? It’s all really existential for sure. And, while it was happening, I couldn’t articulate it; I didn’t know what the hell was happening. And I felt ashamed of that. I compounded the problem by feeling that this shouldn’t be happening and keeping quiet about it. Which only prolonged it even more. I think this is a common problem that people have, but it’s just a little bit distasteful to admit it, to broadcast it. And certainly to make an album about it.”
“It was like life hadn’t added up. Like you stand stock-still and you don’t know which direction to take your next step in.”
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Feist tours from 28 Nov. Check The Guide on theMusic.com.au for more details.
Achieving longevity while still waiting for that “big break”
Drummer Erik Bodin tells Anthony Carew that aside from their 2015 Grammy nomination for Best Dance/Electronic Album in 2015, Little Dragon are “still waiting for [their] big break”.
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n their new single, Peace Of Mind, Swedish electropop outfit Little Dragon have collaborated with iconic R&B vocalist Faith Evans. The song was written during the making of Little Dragon’s fifth LP, 2017’s Season High, but, as much as they liked it, the band didn’t know how to finish it. So, eventually, they sent the song to producer Raphael Saadiq, who polished its rough edges. When a place for a guest vocal was held, the band brainstormed who they wanted on there. “It felt a bit unrealistic to think of Faith Evans, but then we thought, ‘Why not ask?’” recounts Little Dragon drummer Erik Bodin. “Then all of a sudden it was reality, and then it was done.”
“Yeah, maybe that whole Grammy nomination, that was it. It’s all downhill from there!”
Check The Guide on theMusic.com.au for more details.
When Little Dragon began, Bodin admits they “were trying to do the neo-soul thing”. Bodin was born into a family of jazz musicians (his grandfather a trumpeter and bandleader, his uncles drummers and pianists), and grew up playing in jazz, rock and even reggae bands; often with future Little Dragon keyboardist Hakan Wirenstrand. They went to the same Gothenburg high school as vocalist Yukimi Nagano and they started the band as teenagers in 1996. They didn’t do much ‘til they got a computer in 2000 and their first single, Test, didn’t even come out ‘til 2007. And only then released it because a friend pestered them to put it out on his label. “We were very shy,” Bodin admits. “We weren’t confident enough, or mature enough, to push the music ourselves. It was a blessing that a record label wanted to release it.” But, from their first release, Little Dragon instantly found fans via MySpace (“I’m sure our Top 8 was all my other weird side-projects,” Bodin laughs) and they’ve slowly grown with each LP. But, with their fourth LP, Nabuma Rubberband, the band were “really trying to aim high”, out to deliver a genuine crossover set. In hindsight, Bodin isn’t sure about how they fared. “I really love a lot of that album, but I think it’s a little bit impersonal, not so generous with our own ideas.” So, for Season High, the band “wanted to go back to that selfmade, homemade, hand-made kind of thing”. Continuing to shift and change, Bodin says, is a way of keeping the band interesting, for both members and listeners. Even after 20 years together, five albums in, the quartet is still committed to working together. “We always talked like that: trying to stay in the business for a long time. We’ve succeeded in that. But we’re still waiting for our big break.” Wait, what about getting a Grammy nomination (for Best Dance/Electronic Album) in 2015? “Yeah, maybe that whole Grammy nomination, that was it. It’s all downhill from there!” Bodin laughs. Another definitive moment, he says, was playing Prospect Park in New York City. “There was 5,000 people there and we were hearing that lots of people were trying to jump the fence. Even though there were so many people, we felt really close to them all. What matters to us is the crowd. Even if you’re only playing for 200 people, if they love what you do, if you’re locked into this thing together, that’s what counts. Maybe that’s not the definition of having a big break, but that’s what keeps you motivated.”
Little Dragon tours from 28 Dec.
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Louise Paramor Palace of the Republic
Kitchen gizmos or modern art? The brilliantly baffling sculptures of Louise Paramor are as intriguing as they are colourful. Making playful connections to the utilitarian, these vibrant plastic forms, featured in a major new installation for the NGV, seem to hint at some enigmatic function, while simultaneously existing as art in the abstract, purely for its own sake. Alongside this survey of Paramor’s distinctive plastic sculptures spanning more than a decade of her creative practice, will be a collection of monumental
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paper works, employing a unique honeycomb structural technique first pioneered by Paramor in the late ‘90s. These three-metre tall, newly commissioned pieces echo Paramor’s extensive experience creating work of colossal scale.
From 17 Nov at NGV Australia, Federation Square
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National Gallery of Victoria Salon Gallery Rehang The NGV’s Salon has re-opened after one of the most ambitious rehangs in the collection’s history. Visitors can enjoy these timeless masterpieces thanks to some thoroughly modern curation. Now open at NGV International
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ACMI Comedy Writing Masterclass International comedian and successful screenwriter, Tim Ferguson, will be hosting a two-day course on the secrets behind funny writing. Learn how to make the most of scripts, jokes and stand-up routines,
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11 – 12 Nov, ACMI, Federation Square
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Melbourne Theatre Company The Father Florian Zeller’s savagely honest story of dementia focuses on a series of mysteries surrounding the eighty-year-old Andre, played by Aussie theatre icon John Bell, and his suspicious daughter.
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2 – 16 Nov, Arts Centre Melbourne
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Poppy Seed Theatre Festival Championing bold, boundary-busting storytelling from artists at every stage of their development, this year’s crop of world premieres tackles the challenges of autism, the sexuality of Shakespeare, 21st-century fables, and Japanese game shows. 8 Nov – 9 Dec, Multiple Venues
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Malthouse Theatre The Testament of Mary Set years after the crucifixion, the extraordinary Pamela Rabe plays the role of a mother who refuses to accept the dogma built around her son’s horrifying execution, in Colm Toibin’s spellbinding monolouge about faith, truth and motherhood. 3 – 26 Nov, Malthouse Theatre
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Cirque Du Soleil Toruk The fiercely creative artists of Canadian circus super-troupe, Cirque Du Soleil, are bringing the best parts of James Cameron’s Avatar to the stage in the form of Toruk. Expect jaw-dropping acrobatics with added blue extra-terrestrials, 2 – 12 Nov, Rod Laver Arena
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#romancingtheskull
Sam JINKS Divide (self portrait) 2011 mixed media, 86 x 60 cm, Collection: National Portrait Gallery, Canberra Purchased 2015, © Sam Jinks THE MUSIC
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Feeling the force of a film music icon Conductor Nicholas Buc got hooked at an early age on the music of John Williams. As he prepares to lead the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Williams’ score for Star Wars: The Force Awakens, he shares his love for the revered film composer’s music with Maxim Boon.
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onductor Nicholas Buc vividly remembers the first time he heard the music of film composer John Williams. “I was an avid skier growing up, and when I was about 10-years-old, I remember finding this cassette at a ski lodge,” he recalls. “It was an untitled tape, that just had ‘Film Music’ written on it in pen. I was already a bit interested in film music at the time — just very loosely — and I thought, ‘Why not, I’ll give it a go.’ So, I put it in my little Walkman to listen to on the journey back to Mel-
bourne. As it happens, it was the entire score to The Empire Strikes Back. By the end of that five-hour drive home from Mt Hotham, I was completely hooked.” And Buc isn’t alone in his addiction to Williams. Over a career that has spanned more than half a century, the celebrated, multi-award-winning composer has earned a global stature, not to mention millions of fans. Having penned some of the most — if not, the most — iconic film music of all time, his back-catalogue includes the scores for
Jaws, all four of the Indiana Jones films, Jurassic Park, Harry Potter, Schindler’s List and ET. While he has worked with an impressive number of major Hollywood auteurs, his greatest collaborations have been with two directors in particular; Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, the latter being the creator of the juggernaut space opera super-franchise, Star Wars. Unlike other multi-movie sagas, which Williams has scored in part, the composer has been responsible for every fanfare, death march, cantina banger and Ewok Nub Yub victory song heard in all seven films released thus far in the main Star Wars canon (the Star Wars spin-off, Rouge One, was scored by Michael Giacchino). His most recent addition to the Star Wars oeuvre, the score for first non-Lucas directed episode, The Force Awakens, is arguably the most important of his Star Wars scores since Return of the Jedi in 1983. Not only does The Force Awakens introduce a number of crucial musical themes, including motifs for new protagonists like fledgling Jedi Rey and villainous heavy-breather Kylo Ren, it also acts as a galvanising bridge for the new instalment, as the franchise has
changed hands between Lucasfilm and its new custodians, Disney. But while Williams is inextricably aligned with the world of movie music, his is a creative practice as rigorous and accomplished as any of the great classical composers. As such, he occupies a unique duality, as a creative figure that is as much a stalwart of pop culture as he is a bastion of tradition. “Williams is a truly masterful musician, but his music is able to channel something of the great Romantic and early twentieth-century composers in a way that doesn’t alienate an audience that might only be very casual appreciators of classical music,” Buc explains. “Beneath that accessibility is some seriously impressive technique. He’s an incredible orchestrator. He’s able to craft earworm melodies and weave them into the fabric of the music in all kinds of ingenious ways. There’s an incredible amount of colour and variety and inventiveness that really makes it a joy to listen to. And it’s also a joy to play. Musicians love playing Williams, because it’s so well conceived; it sits well, it’s idiomatic. It’s just bloody well-written music. And you don’t always find that in film scores.”
Aussie musical theatre has a hot new property
When is a musical not a musical? According to director Dean Bryant, when it’?s written by Eddie Perfect. Anne-Marie Peard learns how Vivid White will surprise an audience at every turn.
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n this world premiere production of Eddie Perfect’s new musical theatre show, Vivid White, director Dean Bryant wants to know what comedy and satire can do “in a world that is constantly facing crises after crises after crises?” And he hopes to ask
this by surprising the audience at every turn. “There is so little surprise left to us as audience members,” says Bryant. “The most important thing you can do as a creator, is continually surprise the audience. They have given you something so precious: their attention for two hours. But that attention only lasts for 10 to 15 minutes if they realise there isn’t going to be anything that they didn’t see coming.” Perfect started working on Vivid White, in collaboration with Bryant, 18 months ago, and the pair could hardly be more qualified to create the next great Australian musical. Perfect began his career in satirical musical cabaret (including Shane Warne: The Musical and solo shows that won Green Room and Helpmann awards) and became a national treasure in his TV appearances in Offspring, Playschool and Australian’s Got Talent. But these days, he’s become more focused on working behind the scenes. While workshopping and
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re-writing this new work, he’s co-directed the Adelaide Cabaret Festival and been in the USA writing and composing for two upcoming Broadway shows: King Kong and the adaptation of Tim Burton’s film Beetlejuice. Bryant, who is now an Associate Director at MTC, graduated from the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts 15 years ago, and his stature as a director has been on the rise ever since. He’s worked for top Australian institutions including the Sydney Theatre Company and Opera Australia. He’s also won Green Room and Helpmann awards, including Best Director Of A Musical for Hayes Theatre Company’s Sweet Charity, and is Associate Director for Priscilla, Queen Of The Desert. Musicals are “without a doubt where my heart is”, he admits, although he stops short of calling Vivid White a musical. He promises “there are songs and there will be some choreography”, but “it is its own thing. It’s not like anything I’ve ever seen or read before.” The first surprise is the audience not knowing what to expect: “You can only surprise people once they think they know what’s coming.” He wants to “just let the audience come and experience it and name it themselves — if they want to”. With a story about the friendship of two couples falling apart when they want to buy
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the same house, it’s certainly familiar MTC material about middle-class liberals — “not political Liberals”, assures Bryant — who buy houses in the suburbs and tickets to the theatre. But Bryant also assures that this is just the jumping off point for a “satire about satire”. Without giving away too much, he says that two of its characters were once an award-winning comedy satire duo. Bryant laughs as he explains they are making a satire that knows satire doesn’t work. “You spend all night tearing strips of people and they laugh — and they’re like ‘it’s someone else. They’re talking about my friend. They’re talking about that guy who lives across the street.’ They literally cannot realise that it could well be them they’re talking about.” But there’s still “a lot of joy” to be had in seeing Australians on stage who are “talking about things we all talk about” — and we sure do talk about house prices. But it gets far more surprising if you “put them in a world where things are happening that are not normal and expected, but they still keep behaving like middle-class Australians”.
Vivid White plays from 18 Nov at Southbank Theatre.
“Musicians love playing Williams, because it’s so well conceived; it sits well, it’s idiomatic. It’s just bloody well-written music.” A recent admission by Williams hints at how much of a musician’s musician the composer really is, far from being a mere slave to the screen. In an interview with the UK newspaper The Mirror in 2016, the 85-yearold confessed that he had never fully watched the final cuts of any of the Star Wars episodes: “I’ve not looked at the finished films, that’s absolutely true. When I’m finished with a film, I’ve been living with it, we’ve been dubbing it, recording to it, and so on. You walk out of the studio and, ‘Ah, it’s finished.’ Now I don’t have an impulse to go to the theatre and look at it. Maybe some people find that weird,” adding that he also rarely listens to recordings of his own music. Fortunately for Buc and the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Williams nonchalance with his finished scores is not mirrored by the cinema and concert-going public. In fact, the huge popularity of orchestral performances of Williams’ scores has offered a unique opportunity for major symphony orchestras, who can program music of true integrity, that showcases the extraordinary skills of their players, while also being a barnstorming success at the box office.
But Williams may be the one of the last in an almost extinct breed of film composer, dedicated to the depth and richness of the orchestral canvas, and the rigour of classical virtuosity. “He’s the real pinnacle of that style of music, and as directors and music tastes change, you’re now getting people who do film music who don’t have a shred of classical background,” Buc notes. “That’s absolutely fine, and the music they produce is fantastic — sensibilities evolve, and that’s as it should be. But there’s something so impressive about a composer like Williams. He still uses pencil and paper to write his scores, sat at the piano. He doesn’t even own a computer — not many people would, or even could do that in this day and age with film.”
Star Wars: The Force Awakens In Concert plays from 7 Dec at the Palais Theatreç
The secret show where all the city’s the stage When Melbourne tastemaker Jerome Borazio went in search of a new challenge, it would lead him to one the most exciting, and enigmatic challenges of his career. Maxim Boon experiences an immersive experience like no other — just don’t expect him to tell you too much about it.
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elbourne boasts one of the most vibrant and diverse cultural offerings in the Southern Hemisphere; at any given moment there are a dizzying variety of experiences to sample. But there’s also a downside to all this choice. Melburnians have seen it all, and it takes a lot to impress them. This is something Jerome Borazio knows well. For the majority of his adult life, he’s lived and worked in the heart of this city,
and he’s put that experience to good use, creating events and businesses tailor-made for Melbourne’s choosy punters. Today, the Laneway Festival founder is regarded as one of Australia’s most influential tastemakers, but Borazio is not immune to the same Melburnian malaise his unique business portfolio caters for. His search for a new challenge would take him to Los Angeles, where a chance encounter with a piece of cuttingedge experimental theatre would set him on the path to what he believes is one of the most exciting ventures he’s ever undertaken. “As soon as I saw it, I just knew it was imperative that it came to Melbourne,” he explains. “Everything about it really connected with the kind of experience that excites me. I just knew it would fit Melbourne like a glove.” If Borazio’s comments strike you as enigmatic, there’s a very good reason. The Sequence, an immersive production created by LA-based theatre mavericks ALONE, namely Lawrence Lewis and Devon Paulson, is a cloak and dagger affair. Attendees of the media preview were sworn to keep its content a closely guarded secret. But what I can tell you, is that the five years invested in developing this elaborate production have been well spent. Arriving at a pre-arranged location in the back streets of Melbourne’s CBD, I receive a phone call
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Devon Paulson and Lawrence Lewis of ALONE
with surreal instructions. From there, I encounter a collection of fantastical characters and intense experiences, and embark on an odyssey that will traverse the vast, urban sprawl of the city. Some moments border on intimidating, but these are tempered by moments of beautiful intimacy and fascinating intrigue, which will be utterly unique to each individual performance. For Paulson and Lewis, a designer and film producer, the mystery of this show is also the secret behind its power. “If you’re at the theatre, you’re in a controlled space. You know where you are and what your relationship to the performance is,” Paulson explains. “During The Sequence, we remove that certainty. We’re in control the entire time, but when you’re in the experience we allow you doubt whether what you’re seeing is part of the show or part of reality.”
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“This isn’t an easy concept to communicate, but Jerome really got what we were all about, and why we would be making something that requires so much planning and detail,” Lewis adds. “We don’t want to compromise, and neither does he.” Melbourne will be receiving the first international production by ALONE, in February next year. But for those who can’t wait, Borazio has combined his hospitality expertise with the theatrical flair of ALONE, to create Masticating Mutually Toward Re-Embodiment, a two-hour dining experience.
Masticating Mutually Toward Re-Embodiment takes place 12 — 15 Dec?The Sequence plays from 14 February, locations to be disclosed.
A radical faerie realness ritual For four life-changing nights during this year’s Melbourne Festival, Taylor Mac took Maxim Boon to church. And it could not have come at a more important moment.
extraordinary costumes — one for every hour of the show — created by visionary designer Machine Dazzle, or the astonishing musical alchemy of MD Matt Wray’s 246 arrangements. Our expectations are surpassed, and surpassed again, in the best way possible. In perhaps the most magical transfiguration, Mac and co take Trump-o-phile Ted Nugent’s homo-hating anthem, Snakeskin Cowboys, and turn it into a slow dance for the queer prom we all wish we’d been allowed to have. There are tears to shed — a lot of them — during this day-long rite. Mostly, it’s empathy that moves us, but in many instances — and I don’t think it would be presumptuous to say I wasn’t alone in feeling this — I shed these tears for myself; my own experiences of discrimination finding solidarity in 240-years of segregation, reminding me that I am not alone. But overwhelmingly, A 24 Decade History of Popular Music is a wild, filthy, irrepressible ode to freedom. In the final hour of the show, when all
I
’ll admit that I’ve never really understood religion, largely because, as a queer man, religion has never really understood me. But the past few months have given me and many others in my community particular cause to fear the faithful. We’re not unused to this danger: in their near-hysterical pageants of devotion, Evangelical ministries have long declared our very existence proof of evil. But as the church and other Christian lobbies in Australia have proudly invested millions to remind LGBTQIA+ people that we are lesser beings, this hatred has been harder to ignore. Christian disgust has been blazed across the very sky as our equal rights have been declared the gateway to the unravelling of society. This deafening moral outrage is identically opposite to the evasive silence in which so many in the queer community must exist; queer lives are ones accustomed to being in the shadow of suspicion. Consequently, our bodies have become expert at concealing their true desires, our minds have been conditioned to feel reflexive guilt. Over and over, in myriad, everyday ways, we are reminded that queer joys are clandestine, queer truths are transgressions. And now, more so than ever, Christian fear-mongering seeks to inflame these entrenched stigmas. Is it any wonder that I, and many LGBTQIA+ people, resent and reject the idea of organised spirituality? And yet, in the church of Taylor Mac — drag icon, chanteuse, performance art radical, playwright, philosopher, prophet: a once in a generation polymath — I discovered a belief system that not only accepted me, but empowered, celebrated, and rejoiced in every shade of my rainbow family. And apologised to no one. This spiritual awakening took the guise of Mac’s audacious magnum opus, the humbly titled A 24 Decade History Of Popular Music. Performed across four six-hour “chapters” — although it has been performed once before, in New York, as an all-day all-night marathon extravaganza — Mac offers a chronicle of American culture through a queering prism. Using a scaffold of song, this epic show sweeps aside the absolving misrememberings of established histories to confront and challenge a status quo built on colonial greed and heteronormative oppression. It would be easy to describe this show with nothing but breathless hyperbole. I can’t promise this report won’t meet that fate, but I don’t think it would be inaccurate to say this extraordinary work is something akin to a religious experience, or as close to one as I’ve
ever accessed. By Mac’s own admission, it is “a radical faerie realness ritual sacrifice. The performance is the ritual, and you [the audience] are the sacrifice.” And thus, alongside hundreds of like-minded Melburnians, I offered up my heart and head on the altar of Mac, as a straight, scarred, segregated past was used to light the way to an inclusive, diverse, woke future. Beginning in 1776, and the founding of America, each hour unriddles a decade of US history using an artfully selected, thoroughly researched collection of songs from the corresponding period. Through the American Civil War, the Trail of Tears, Women’s Suffrage, the Great Depression, The Civil Rights Movement, the war in Vietnam and Gay Liberation, we witness how discrimination and persecution are constants through time. Mac is at the centre of this odyssey, although judy (Mac’s favoured pronoun) is not alone. A 24-strong band, a chorus line of “Dandy Minions” sourced from Melbourne’s rich community of queer artists, a troupe of Burlesque dancers, a temperance choir, an ensemble of acrobats, two giant inflatable cocks, one giant vulva, hundreds of ping pong balls and several gallons of soup, all form part of Mac’s kaleidoscopic arsenal, as a carnival of eye-popping creativity is unleashed upon us. The audience are also included in this armoury. As we follow instructions, to dance, to sing, to connect with each other in intimate, deeply personal ways, our subjective experiences become Mac’s most powerful resource; we enter the
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theatre as strangers but leave a community, galvanised and unbowed. While essentially a history lesson, nothing is remotely predictable about this show. From a WWE wrestling smackdown between Walt Whitman and minstrel songwriter Stephen Foster, to a trip to Mars via Gilbert and Sullivan, at every turn, Mac conjures ever more surprising ways to introduce us to the past, all the while subverting the discrimination woven into the fabric of our culture. And while, in the broadest sense, it is a kind jukebox musical, everything about this production is bespoke. Take, for example, the 24
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the ping pong balls have been thrown, when all the costumes have been worn, when all the minions have frolicked through The Forum, Mac is left on stage alone. From the audience, a vast spectrum of emotions, summoned and explored during the previous 23 decades, become focused on a single point on stage. As our journey through time reaches the present, and the show draws to a reluctant close, there is nothing left to do but cheer, as long and as loud as we can. And there more tears too — this time of gratitude; at a time when our queer humanity has been so attacked, Taylor Mac has restored our faith.
MELBOURNE RECITAL CENTRE PRESENTS
SE LL IN G FA ST Los Angeles’ prodigal song-writing son and master of experimental, psych-pop Ariel Pink brings his 11th studio album exploring West Coast mythologies, haunted boulevards and the acceptance of self to the Recital Centre as part of Melbourne Music Week.
‘A master of juxtaposition.’ THE LINE OF BEST FIT
TICKETS $65 – TUE 21 NOV 7.30PM
THE TEMPER TRAP Aussie rock icon The Temper Trap returns to Melbourne for a stripped back performance of their chart topping anthems and infectious electronic, pop–rock — unplugged and intimate.
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PRINCIPAL GOVERNMENT PARTNER
Releases Ten local albums you need to know about in November Nic Cester Sugar Rush (Bloodlines): It’s the dude from Jet dropping the dirty denim rock for smart slacks rockin’ soul. (3 Nov)
Various Spawn (Again): A Tribute To Silverchair UNFD
★★★★ What a marvellously diverse band Silverchair was, and what interesting ride they took their many fans on across the course of their five-album career. Now, ten years after their last album Young Modern and 20 after the classic Freak Show, a who’s who of Aussie rock, punk and metalcore acts have got together to pay tribute to the great three-piece. And they do a fabulous job. From their early, grungy days, through the middle part of their career where they morphed into a powerhouse rock act, to the last record which put them on the quirky art-rock fringe, their great tracks are given even greater diversity in their delivery, purely due to the fact that ten different bands do ten different songs. No one version deserves to be singled out as being superior to the others. Suffice it is to say that each band puts their own unique spin on the track they are covering, while maintaining the core essence and vibe of the song. One single minor disappointment is Columbus’ rather ham-fisted attempt at the usually triumphant Straight Lines. Aside from this however, this is a reverential and highly enjoyable tribute to a classic Aussie rock act.
Catherine Traicos Luminaire (Independent): Traicos returns to the studio with a full group after a four year hiatus of recording from band work. (10 Nov) Slum Sociable Slum Sociable (Liberation): After pushing back the release as member Miller Upchurch dealt with mental health issues, their album featuring a mix of jazz, electronica and soul finally drops. (24 Nov) Polaris The Mortal Coil (Resist): You wouldn’t think an album recorded in a holiday house in an idyllic location three hours south of Sydney would sound this crushing. (3 Nov) Pnau Changa (etcetc): A welcome return for dance music royalty. (10 Nov)
Rod Whitfield
The Cactus Channel Stay A While (Hope Street Recordings): The funk and future soul is still there, only this time look for more psychedelic touches. (3 Nov) Grenadiers Find Something You Love And Let It Kill You (Green Room): More raucous rock’n’roll with punk overtures. (10 Nov) Good Boy Shirk Life (Barely Dressed): It’s the sound of early disaffected 20s punks in Brisbane. (10 Nov) Evan Klar Deepest Creatures (EMI): He signed a record deal before playing his own official shows, so does the lush sounding album live up to his initial hype? (10 Nov) Jeremy Neale Getting The Team Back Together (Dot Dash): Velociraptor’s main man releases his first solo album, but still gets by with a little help from his friends as it features a large cast of well known Brisbane musos. (3 Nov)
Mavis Staples
Blockbusters of the month
The hip heritage five
Sam Smith The Thrill Of It All (EMI) The follow up to his 12 million selling In The Lonely Hour. (3 Nov)
Radnor & Lee Radnor & Lee (Independent) Josh Radnor and Ben Lee team up with a spiritual and philosophical slant. (10 Nov)
Evanescence Synthesis (Sony) This finds them reworking their back catalogue with a full orchestra, and a couple of new tracks to boot. (10 Nov)
Machine Translations Oh (Spunk) J Walker returns to MT for their most rock’n’roll album yet. (10 Nov)
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds Who Built The Moon? (Sour Mash) Oasis this ain’t. (24 Nov)
Mavis Staples If All I Was Was Black (Anti-) Staples and Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy, this time addressing the fissures dividing America. (17 Nov)
Bjork Utopia (Pod) Once again working with Arca, Bjork has said her new album is about rediscovering love. (24 Nov)
Sharon Jones & The DapKings Soul Of A Woman (Daptone) One hell of a final statement from the departed soul singer. (17 Nov)
Converge The Dusk In Us (Epitaph) Frenetic and sludgy metalcore combine for their first album in five years. (3 Nov)
Charlotte Gainsbourg Rest (Because) Gainsbourg teams with producer SebastiAn for a sound with a disquieting, mechanistic edge. (17 Nov)
The reputation of reputation
T
aylor Swift will drop 2017’s most anticipated pop ‘event’ album, reputation, on 10 Nov. It’s the US megastar’s sixth outing — and her first in three years. But, at press time, reputation is one big blank space — Swift revealing minimal advance info and still unwilling to grant promotional interviews. So what do we know?
1. The Theme Reputation follows 2014’s 1989 — which won the Grammy for Album Of The Year. It will be more fearless, madder and darker. Swift is going fully meta, pointedly declaring the death of “the old Taylor”.
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2. The Sound The 15-track reputation has hatched three hits. The hard-hitting LWYMMD mines ‘90s electroclash. Only the wryly romantic Gorgeous is a 1989 throwback. Will reputation be Swift’s most ‘urban’ LP? 3. The Collabs Swift has engaged old studio allies like fun Swedish hit machine Max Martin. Other rumoured collabs are more OMG. Has Tay teamed with Drake? Kesha has hinted at a feature on Instagram — Swift assisting the singer during her Dr Luke legal suit.
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4. The Drama Swift channels personal dramz into art-pop. She’s infamous for her feuds with Kanye West and Katy Perry — and reputation should be dripping in bad blood. Still, Swift’s rawest songs chronicle her romantic relationships. Gorgeous is plausibly about Swift’s current boyf, blue-eyed British thesp Joe Alwyn. 5. The Image Swift shared reputation’s cover on Insty in August — and, inevitably, it’s been decoded. The monochrome artwork shows Tay as a neo-riot grrl against a backdrop of newsprint — her name endlessly reproduced, Warholstyle. Some have compared it to Yeezy’s The Life Of Pablo!
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theMusic.com.au live reviews
Elton John @ A Day On Greem. Pic: Lucinda Goodwin
Kelly Royland @ Hisense Arena. Pic: Lucinda Goodwin
“‘Get aWAAAAY!/Get aWAAAAY!’ There are lots of crazy single arms slicing the space among crowd members”
RVG @ Howler. Pic: Joshua Brabrook
– Bryget Chrisfield At The Drive In @ Festival Hall The Dillinger Escape Plan @ Corner Hotel. Pic: Joshua Braybrook
For the latest live reviews go to themusic.com.au
At The Drive In @ Festival Hall. Pic: Jay Hynes
Film & TV Stranger Things 2 Reviewed by Guy Davis
T
he Duffer Brothers have obviously picked up a very valuable lesson from the two Steves (King and Spielberg): the monsters will capture the attention of the audience, but the characters up against the monsters will keep the attention of the audience. The camaraderie of the characters, not to mention the depth and dimension given to each one by the show’s uniformly strong actors, was the cornerstone of the first season’s success. Well, that and a grab-bag of wellpitched ‘80s references and influences. So while Stranger Things 2 may seem to be spinning its wheels a little when it comes to its story (it’s scrappy, loveable teen dorks versus hell-beast from a dark dimension, Round 2),
this new nine-episode run does give the bulk of its characters room to grow and opportunities to develop. It gives this new season a big, beating heart and it makes the occasional bump in the narrative a little easier to handle Having said that, there are one or two noticeable flaws with Stranger Things 2, mainly the attempt to expand the scope of the show’s mythology by having super-powered young Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) meet up with a similarly gifted “sister” and her posse of punk misfits. It’s shrewd of the Duffers to lay the groundwork for a more expansive Stranger Things universe (they’re reportedly now writing the next season) but this bottle episode grinds the story’s momentum to a screeching halt and, more importantly, deprives us of more scenes between the unexpectedly wonderful pairing of Brown and David Harbour, whose bearish, grouchy and soulful work as the town’s sheriff/Eleven’s guardian is a perfect complement to Brown’s beautiful vulnerability. That’s not to say the supernatural stuff — which borrows from a variety of ‘80s sources — doesn’t get the pulse racing on occasion. It does. Worthy of a weekend binge-watch.
Suburbicon Reviewed by Anthony Carew
I
t’s fitting that, in a film about segregation, George Clooney’s sixth directorial effort feels like two films divided. At the centre is a story from an old Coen brothers script, a satire of all-American ‘50s suburbia, White flight conformity, and Atomic Age awshucksery. It’s all, as the familiar depiction goes, just a facade; the brochure-broughtto-life utopia really a dystopia. That’s revealed by Matt Damon’s hapless noir-ish stooge, who sinks into a downward spiral of Fargo-redo bad choices. There’s hired goons, ill-conceived plans, ping-pong-paddlin’ infidelity, an ear for era dialogue, literal white bread and, when Oscar Isaac shows up, lord does this thing sing!
But Clooney and co-producer/scripttweaker Grant Heslov take this Coenist lark and shoot it through with a searing take on what All-American ‘50s suburbia represented: segregation, institutionalised racism, cultural whitewashing. Inspired by a real-life tale of persecution in 1957, in the pre-fab commuter-burb Levittown, New York, the flick also finds an African-American family moving in next door, earning the ire of the Suburbicon-dwellers who fled the city in search of lily-white conformity. Hoping to drive “these people” outta the there-goesthe-neighbourhood, local yokels harass them day and night; these angry mobs going from hostile gawping to a good old-fashioned race riot, gathering with the wild fury — if not the speed, delirium, or provocation — of the interlopers in Mother!. As Damon finds his life falling apart — his humiliation symbolising the death of father-knows-best paternalism — in blackcomic fashion, the horrors of racist persecution sit, uneasily, alongside; the stories of the neighbours remaining separate, on either side of the subdivision fence. The contrast between them makes thematic sense — both of Suburbicon’s stories depict the darkness of suburbia — but not for a coherent picture.
★★★★
★★★
Stranger Things 2 is now airing on Netflix
Suburbicon is now
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REVIEWS
SEATTLE FIX TEDDY BEAR // EP LAUNCH
with special guests
HOWLITE SEASLOTH
Revolver Bandroom 229 Chapel St. Prahran 8pm // Sat 4th November // $10 Tickets: revolverupstairs.com.au
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Miscellanea HTRK, Underground Lovers, Tyrannamen, Loose Tooth, Taipan Tiger Girls, Friendships, Corin, Laura Jean and HTML Flowers. Even among the aural riches of Melbourne Music Week you’d be hard pressed to find a more vital line-up, let alone anywhere else, and that’s just the tip of the 25-act iceberg. The multi-label Melbourne Town Hall takeover is even all-ages, so bring the anklebiters and give them the right idea early.
19 Nov, Melbourne Town Hall
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The Mysticism Of Modern Living A man of many talents and artistic pursuits, Matt Wicking speaks with Donald Finlayson about the life of a poet turned singer, the release of The General Assembly’s debut album Vanishing Point and finding joy in the often forgotten art of rock lyrics.
S
peaking shortly after hosting a workshop related to his “other life”, Matt Wicking of The General Assembly recalls the time when he realised he loved words: “Ten years ago, if you had asked me if I liked poetry, I would have just said no.” But after realising his own appreciation for the art of lyricism, Wicking had a light-bulb
confidence and melodic instinct. Wicking’s voice carries the listener through the ghostly ambience of his music and stories like a trusted narrator or heroic protagonist. “It took some time to get my confidence as a singer. But now I know that I can stand in front of a room, with or without a guitar, and have the room just listen.”
“It took some time to get my confidence as a singer. But now I know that I can stand in front of a room.” moment that seemed to scream, “Oh shit, I actually love poetry!” Unlike the many poets and writers who decide to turn to the power of music, Wicking sings in a powerful baritone with clear
The sole songwriter on every track on Vanishing Point, Wicking reveals that almost every one of these electronic works originally came to life through the organic magic of his acoustic guitar. “That’s really just how
I tend to write,” explains Wicking, “mostly just out necessity, I suppose. That’s the main instrument that I play and then I’ll take it to the band and work things out from there. I’ve had these songs for about five or six years, just incubating. I think it was ultimately just a matter of finding the right musicians and the right producer to put things together.” With upcoming plans to release Vanishing Point on more digital stores and streaming services, it would seem natural for listeners to also expect a physical release of the album. But much like how they tread interesting new ground in the realm of electronica, the band also have brave new plans for the future of their music’s distribution. Choosing to forgo the production of any kind of physical merchandise, Wicking cites some of his own deeply personal environmental concerns as the primary reason behind this business decision. “When we released an EP about seven years ago, we packaged the
In the lead up to Corner Hotel’s 21st birthday celebrations, we grabbed some of the acts joining in the celebrations over the course of November to share their favourite memories from the venue.
“We had always dreamed of being able to play at the Corner from the beginning of the band. It was our holy grail, one of the best live music venues in the country. Our first taste of being on that stage was the Victorian finals of the National Band Comp. The room was probably lucky to be half full but it was, at the time, the biggest rush we had experienced. Luckily for us, we have been able to revisit that stage a few times!” – Ted O’Neil
Cosmic Psychos “My favourite memory of the Corner was when we played one of the PBS Kev Lobotomi gigs, and it was the first show we did
Vanishing Point (Independent) is out now. The General Assembly tour from 16 Nov.
scheduled. From what I remember, for my part, as his backing vocalist, he was extremely late and didn’t say hello to me. We rehearsed none of the tunes he sent! All new. Then at the gig he sat in the front of the stage, and NEVER looked back! There was no setlist! He called a whole new set of tunes nobody had rehearsed and The Bamboos didn’t miss a beat! At one point the bass amp completely failed and there was half a second of panic before the bass was taken up seamlessly by Ben Grayson on the keys - and they were going to leave him out of the band because Eddie played keys! Everything was alright, though, when he turned to me and said, ‘Do Hip-Drop for me, baby!’ And so I did!”
Key To The Door
The Vasco Era
CDs in old books that were destined for the landfill, which turned out to be this beautiful product. The initial idea was to save waste and to use less plastic but it ended up really being a bonus for the creative side of things.” Wicking expresses excitement about “taking things one step further”, revealing a hesitation for “The General Assembly to become a small manufacturing business, which is usually kind of the path you have to go down if you wanna make money as a band. But for me, it’s actually just not an option, full stop.”
Clare Bowditch wall of beautiful, perfect, fuzzed-drenched wah guitar. It was fucking otherworldly. And the vibe was incredible. It was absolutely chockas, people were singing at the top of their lungs. And y’know how Melbourne audiences can be hard to impress? Well there were no arms crossed that night. There was just so much love and adoration beamed back at the band, I felt proud.”
with Dean Muller on drums, and Dirty [Pete Jones, first guitarist] played the show along with Robbie Rocket. So I just stood back and watched the Dirty, Rocket and Deano show.” – Ross Knight
Adalita “I have a great memory seeing one of my alltime favourite bands, Swervedriver, in 2011. I’d seen them before in Sydney a few years back but something about that show at the Corner just made my hairs stand on end, they were just SO GOOD. And when the Corner is packed and pumping, like this show was, there’s really no other venue experience like it anywhere. And Swervedriver just brought it. The sound was amazing, just this MASSIVE
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Kylie Auldist “It’s good to be asked these questions because it forces me to remember things and actually write them down! A few years ago The Bamboos had the privilege of playing with the legendary Eddie Bo as his backing band. Eddie gave us the songs and we had a rehearsal
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“I have SO MANY favourite memories from the Corner. Our first-ever sold-out album launch, for one. It was so incredible to us that we, young fledglings, had sold out the historic Corner Hotel! Such a great feeling! Another is watching Art Of Fighting perform and realising their hypnotic drummer was really, really good at drumming and also incredibly attractive, which was just one of the many moments I fell in love with Marty Brown (my now husband). The other is the time I asked this guy for a light (yes, you used to be able to smoke inside the Corner) and realising the guy I asked was Julian Casablancas from The Strokes, and he was quite amused.”
Corner Hotel’s 21st Birthday shows run from 1 Nov.
KAIJU HIP HOP JAZZ PROJECT KOJOE (JAPAN) X AARON CHOULAI Japanese Australian Collaboration
SATURDAY 2 DECEMBER, 10PM @ THE JAZZLAB 27 LESLIE STREET, BRUNSWICK Tickets $20: Bookings via jazzlab.club For full program details see: www.multiculturalarts.com.au
MAPPING MELBOURNE
INDEPENDENT CONTEMPORARY ASIAN ARTS
1-17 DECEMBER 2017 ACROSS THE CITY OF MELBOURNE
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New eats on the street
Night Noodle Markets If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it – but maybe, make it even bigger! This is the fine logic behind this stalwart of Melbourne’s foodie calendar as it prepares for its longest run to date, transforming the banks of the Yarra into a lantern-lit wonderland of Asian cuisine for a whopping 18-nights.
9 - 26 Nov, Birrarung Marr
Messina Creative Dept Pop-up
Banana or bust
T
here are two moments any serious festivalgoer dreads. The first is when someone offers you your favourite brand of poison at two in the morning and you forlornly shake your already-addled head. “Yeah, nah,” you mope responsibly. “Cheers, but I’m driving.” The second is when you take that proffered can, and the six-pack it rode in on, and find yourself curled up at a truck stop roughly a thousand light years from your bed waiting for your BAC to reach a less-flammable potency. Never again. Banana Bus Festival Transport is here to render those dreadful scenarios extinct. “There’s no hiding that drugs and alcohol are a part of festival culture,” says Owner and Director Dougie Harvey, “and Banana Bus offers a safe, reliable and fucking rad way to get you
there and back without the concern of putting anyone’s life in danger on the roads.” With that goal in mind, Harvey was “inspired to create a service that eliminated inconvenience for festivalgoers and allowed them to have the best time possible.” What he came up with was a unique suburban-based pick-up and drop-off festival shuttle service that’s refreshingly usable — with an app providing an inbuilt ticketing system and ensuring secure payments through Stripe. So instead of designating drivers or trekking your camping gear to a city depot, you just select your desired pick-up/ drop-off location, which festival you need wheels to, and then crack a tin, friend, you’re on your way. Each Banana Bus guest gets a complimentary festival survival kit upon arrival, including amenities such as a
To get more info, head to bananabusft.com
Gig highlights
Is there anything those flavour wizards at Messina can’t do? The answer, as showcased in this latest degustation menu, is a resounding no! This is the fourth time the gelato giant has offered this type of vibrant spread, but with just eight seats available per sitting, you’ll have to move quick to bag your place.
You’re Beautiful Boroondara’s The Weekend Of Beautiful Music is a curated program that features five diverse concerts held over three days in three venues. Running from 10 – 12 Nov, it features Holly Throsby, Georgia Fields, Jackie Bornstein Quartet and more.
Until 11 Nov, Gelato Messina Windsor
Project Botanicals
reusable drawstring bag, water bottle, paw-paw ointment, condom and souvenir Polaroid. This season Banana Bus has also introduced the option for guests to purchase additional luggage, so you don’t have to skimp on extralarge eskies or extraordinary costumes. Banana Bus runs services to a swathe of major and boutique Victorian festivals throughout the year — including Falls (Lorne), UNIFY, Rainbow Serpent, Babylon, Strawberry Fields, Earthcore, The Pleasure Garden, Meredith, Pitch, Seven Sisters, Gaytimes, Grampians Music Festival, Boogie, and Groovin The Moo.
Seattle Fix
Get Your Fix Indie/dream pop duo Seattle Fix launch their EP Teddy Bear on 4 Nov at Revolver Bandroom, joined by Howlite and Changelings.
Holly Throsby. Pic: Cole Bennetts The Belligerents
Gin juggernauts Bombay Sapphire have teamed up with a handpicked selection of artist, chefs and mixologists to create a “sensory adventure” that celebrates the complex botanical composition of their much-loved gin. During the two-hour odyssey, guests will explore the exotic origins of the botanical profile of Bombay Sapphire, before sampling dishes by Studio Neon chef Aaron Teece, inspired by this spirit’s unique flav our profile.
I Thought That Love Was Science Fiction After releasing their album Science Fiction, The Belligerents are ready to showcase it in a live setting for the first time, which will see them perform 10 Nov at Howler.
23 – 26 Nov, 524 Flinders Street
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SELL
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NORTHLANE
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DANCE PARTY - DISCO INFERNO
THE GROWLERS
TWELVE FOOT NINJA
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06/11
RONI SIZE UK + FABIO & GROOVERIDER
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VIA
FAST
WWW.170RUSSELL.COM SELL
22/11 The Age Music Victoria Awards, RRR and PBS present
UK
07/11
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BOO SEEKA
SOMETHING FOR KATE
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SOL
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BRITISH INDIA
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USA
‘THE AFTER PARTY’
10/11
SELL
09/03
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ON SALE NOW
USA
UK FAST
USA
VERUCA SALT
BOO SEEKA ING
DAVID DUCHOVNY
PAPA ROACH
OCEAN COLOUR SCENE
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ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT 17/11
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ANATHEMA
SCOTLAND
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‘Australia Day - Rock In The City’ feat.
THE NEW POWER GENERATION
THUNDERSTRUCK + GOLD CHISEL SELL
02/02
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MANCHESTER ORCHESTRA
USA
27/03
THE NEW POWER GENERATION
USA
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10/12
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NONAME
KING PARROT
WE THE KINGS
MORCHEEBA
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THY ART IS MURDER
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CRADLE OF FILTH UK
170 RUSSELL ST, MELBOURNE, 3000
DEBUT ALBUM OUT NOW
“Masterful”
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“A c t u a l j a w - d r o p p i n g s t u f f ” semplesize
POINT
“A m a g i c a l e x p e r i e n c e ” The Plus Ones
Touring November: Melbourne 16th (The Toff in Town), Brisbane 22nd (The Milk Factory), Sydney 25th (The Bearded Tit), Newcastle 26th (The Lass) More info at: www.generalassembly.com.au
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Your Week
Melbourne Music Week is here again to flood the city with innovative noise. Here are a few items that have us extra excited this year. Visionary Sounds: Women Make Music Videos
Julianna Barwick: Opening Night Who doesn’t love a good opening night? Especially when it’s headed up by Julianna Barwick. The ethereal Louisiana-raised, Brooklyn-based singer is joined by New Haven folk-cult hero Kath Bloom in her Australian debut, ambient doom duo Divide And Dissolve, emotional folk-punk favourites Two Steps On The Water and more.
Recognising the stunning visual efforts of women in the industry, Visionary Sounds is a screening of video clips from some of Australia’s best film makers, followed by a conversation about music video production. Some of the artists include Gemma Lee (Stonefield/ Children Collide), Michelle Grace Hunder (Briggs) and Claudia Sangiorgi-Dalimore (Kaiit/Diafrix and 360).
17 Nov
23 Nov
Barney McAll: Non Compliance Electric Local powerhouses Analogue Attic and WAT-artists are joining forces to explore the electronic themes and improvised nature of jazz for Non Compliance Electric. Many of Melbourne’s most respected contemporary musicians are taking part, including Albrecht La’Brooy and Sleep D, and jazz pianist Barney McAll will form a special trio for the event.
25 Nov
Face The Music
The Hub: St Paul’s Cathedral
ZOO
Face The Music isn’t just a MMW highlight, it’s a glittering star in Australia’s music calendar. In the summit’s tenth year there’ll be more panels, bands and leading industry figures than ever before. Expect game-changing conversations from the likes of Ariel Pink, Chippy Nonstop, Marky Ramone and Silke Westera.
For the fifth year MMW will come to close in a collision of live music, performance and visual art for ZOO. This year features beats from Briggs and the UK’s Fatima & Alexander Nut, New Zealand party starters Weird Together, Cali’s AFTA-1, local legends 30/70, ascendent neo-soul star Kaiit and more.
Last year Melbourne Music Week used the State Library as its base of operations, this time around the MMW Hub will be none other than the historic St Paul’s Cathedral. We’re more than a little keen to hear cutting-edge tunes from club legends, hip-hop giants and electro wizards pealing out of the 126-year-old gothic landmark.
23 & 24 Nov
25 Nov
Melbourne Music Week runs from 17 Nov
Your people:
Founder of Body Electric Dance Studio
agreed to run some fun beginner-based jazz classes in Fitzroy and it took off from there.
Over the past ten years, Body Electric has grown into a Melbourne institution. What first inspired you to set up a dance show for amateurs? A short film my brother made, Remember My Name which featured in MIFF, included a scene with one of Melbourne’s first-ever flash mobs. It took place in the middle of Bourke Street, on the tram tracks, at Christmas time. The 20-odd dancers secretly rehearsed for several weeks beforehand and nobody knew what they were up to, or what they were capable of. Suffice to say everyone – family, friends, colleagues – were amazed and inspired and wanted to start dancing from there. I
How has the event grown since you first staged it? The first term of BE started with two classes. We held an end of term showing at the Spanish Club in Fitzroy and thought we’d invite a friend or two each. I remember giving them a talk backstage and said, “Don’t be disappointed if only 20 people turn up”. As it turned out more than 400 people were lining up on Johnston Street and had to be turned away as we were over capacity. It was amazing! The audience screamed the house down the entire performance. We’ve held two performances a year since then and the number of the students and audience members have
Jade Duffy
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continued to multiply. What kind of people become Body Electric? Anyone who is passionate about dancing! For most people who join, it’s about having an outlet and something fun, creative and expressive to focus on. They’re not only learning how to dance but are totally committed to performing. There’s also the social aspect of it. I love hearing about what jobs my dancers have during the day. I’ve seen numerous lawyers, doctors and architects learn to dance. Ordinary people doing extraordinary things!
Body Electric 10th Anniversary plays 18 Nov, Trak Live Lounge Bar, Toorak
WEDS 1/11
SAT 9/12
FUEL
HERMITAGE GREEN (IRE)
(USA)
FRI 10/11 fri 22/12
LOST IN PROVINCE W/ TORREN FOOT
ANVIL
SAT 11/11
(CAN)
SAT 2/12
40th anniversary tour
ELSEWHERE FOR 20 YEARS
A SOMETHING FOR KATE CELEBRATION
FRI 17/11
JAX JONES FRI 24/11
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FEAT. LONDON ELEKTRICITY, FRED V & GRAFIX, NU:TONE, ROYALSTON & MC RUTHLESS
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tight ass Tuesdays
WEDNESDAYS
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FREE POOL $3 POTS BOAGS $5 BASIC SPIRITS $5BBQ WINGS
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* ALL FROM 6PM ONWARDS
FRI 16/2
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HOSPITALITY 2017
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LIVE MUSIC FREE ENTRY
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saturdays late
P.P.B DJ’S
PLAYING YOUR FAVE TUNES UNTIL LATE! FREE ENTRY • PARTY UNTIL LATE
sundays
ELWOOD BLUES CLUB every sunday!
The lashes
the best and the worst of the month’s zeitgeist
Front
Back
Word up
FU SSM
Bot ban
Sacrelicious
Disgraced in Hollywood
Say no to trolls
Good news wordsmiths: we got a whole bunch of new additions to the Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary this month. Prepare to annihilate the competition next time you play Scrabble with the likes of “kangatarian”, “humblebrag” and “rurosexual”. Read ‘em and weep!
John Oliver, of Last Week Tonight, is the latest comedian to weigh in on same-sex marriage equality. Oliver is a ninja-level satirist, and on this topic, his comedy kung fu was especially strong, branding the use of $122 million to pay for the nonbinding postal survey, “the weirdest waste of Australian money since every Baz Luhrmann movie ever.”
Legislation passed in NSW, which will hopefully be rolled out nationwide, is being introduced to prevent automatic bulk buys of gig tickets by automated bots, so that scalpers and third party ticketers can’t resell at grossly inflated prices. With any luck, music lovers being ripped off will soon be a thing of the past.
Back in ‘60s, Sam Panopoulos invented the Hawaiian pizza, creating an unholy marriage of fruit and pizza. Now, the latest affront to our fav hangover cure is here: strawberries on pizza. To this we say, fuck off strawb pizza. Fuck right off and never come back. Ever. Seriously.
Nauseating revelations about historic cases of sexual abuse in the American entertainment industry continue to emerge in the wake the Havey Weinstein — or as we call him, Harvey Shitstain — scandal. The latest disgraced A-lister is Kevin Spacey, who tried to distract from abuse allegations by coming out as gay.
Aussie hip hop artist L-FRESH The LION’s new music video was targeted with a wave of racist and abusive comments this month. The Western Sydney-based rapper’s clip, Raci$t/Our World was released in conjunction with YouTube’s Creators For Change initiative designed to “help counter xenophobia, extremism and hate.
The final thought
Words by Maxim Boon
S
o, you think you’re controversial, Milo? You think that, as a white, middle-class, right-wing man, your stance on women and racial minorities is shocking? You think, as a mouthpiece for an extremist hate rag, that calling feminism “cancer” and rape culture “a myth” is outrageous? You think that because you’re a gay man of privilege who is utterly divorced from the LGBTQ community, that your stance against samesex marriage equality is scandalising? You think your hate-mongering, fear-spreading obsession with digital trolling, while dressed
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like a gay conversion therapy scarecrow, makes you “dangerous”? And you think being dangerous is something worth boasting about? Well, it is the title of your autobiography. Sorry to burst your bubble Milo, but in these times of alt-right cluster-fuckery, you’re becoming a tragic cliche, one that gets more redundant with each passing Brexit, Travel Ban and Plebeshite. If you really want to cause controversy, I suggest you take a leaf out of Kathy Griffin’s book. After all, you both sold out your Australian tours. Granted, she has actual talent, whereas you’re just gobshite with frosted tips, but let’s focus on why Griffin is a virtuoso of subversion, rather than the finer points of her craft. For starters, while by her own admission she ‘doesn’t give a fuck,” she does actually care what people think. I hear you gasp, Milo, but empathy can be your friend too. It’s given Griffin the objectivity to laugh at herself. She knows she’s irritating as fuck, but by owning that flaw she’s given her punters the license to laugh with her, not at her. This has been an especially essential skill during the white-hot hysteria in the wake of her infamous Trump photo. Surely you can empathise with Kathy, just a tiny bit on this? You’re like two peas in a pod: she held up a bloodied mannequin head for a satirical photoshoot and was inundated with death threats, subjected to a two-month federal investigation, and put on a no-fly list without
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ever breaking a single law. You advocated for paederasts and had to give a short apology speech, only to come back a few months later, seemingly unscathed and unrepentant. After that ordeal, Milo, surely you can feel some solidarity? But probably a fair bit of envy too, right Milo? I mean, she cranked up the right’s phoney outrage machine into overdrive without ever uttering a word, typing a tweet or mobilising a digital army of racists to hound Leslie Jones. As someone who traffics in the same relentless attention seeking, that must have smarted, just a little. If only you could still raise hackles like that, Milo. Now the best you can manage is blowing raspberries at Clementine Ford via The Daily Mail. But perhaps the most important lesson Kathy can give you, Milo, is her sheer, defiant refusal to be obliterated by a country that is so morally colour blind, it would liken a publicity stunt to an act of terrorism, while simultaneously allowing its leader to start nuclear Armageddon with a tweet. That, as a woman, she was able to weather the storm of an industry so comfortable with misogyny, sexual predators are only challenged after they have decades of assaults under their belts. Imagine if you could muster that same unbreakable spirit, Milo. You might just be able to break out of the hall of mirrors that must surely be your ego. And wouldn’t that make the world just a tiny bit less shit than it is right now.
NOW AVAILABLE IN CANDY APPLE RED
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