Showing posts with label Straight Arrows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Straight Arrows. Show all posts
Sunday, 6 November 2016
Straight Arrows Turn Me On
Sydney garage rock reprobates Straight Arrows are at it again. They are winging their way to the US of A, hopefully in Trump-dumping celebration mode, to play some shows with legends Thee Oh Sees - and have a glistening 7" to proffer as well. Typically fast paced and party baiting first taste 'Turn Me Off' is a such a King Khan and the BBQ Show jam, via the roots of punk pop genius, The Ramones, that you can't help but lose your shit (and let a little bit of wee out). It really bothers me that these guys aren't at the top echelon of rock acts in Australia when generic wastoids like Dune Rats keep getting kudos. Who cares how wasted you are, as long as you do it with pinpoint precision and authenticity without forgetting that it's all about everyone having a good time.
Friday, 8 January 2016
See The Fortress?
Not that you need to hear it from me - but Thee Oh Sees is still one of the most consistently breathtaking live acts on the planet. Not only carving a sweaty swathe across the globe at regular intervals, but John Dwyer and co are continually bringing out new material. Now 'Fortress' has been out since before Xmas, but I need to melt my face off to keep warm this Friday night, and knowing that pals Blank Realm and Kitchens Floor played with them in Brisbane last night (this afternoon for us UKens), the start of their Australian tour as over the course the month they traipse across the Great Southern Land doing show with mates White Lodge and Straight Arrows as well as UV Race, Terrible Truths, Power and Tyrannamen - so bummed! So I'm building a fortress with endless TOS records and beers - it should see me through, right? 'Fortress' will feature on a 7" out on Dwyer's Castle Face Records next month.
Monday, 17 August 2015
No Free Agent
Angie has another album on the way in Free Agent. For a very short period (like, a couple of days) I thought it might have been a Sonic Masala release, but Rice Is Nice have done us the pleasure of putting out this incredible record. This isn't as scabrous as her first solo record Turning, but is a great addition to what is an ever-intriguing musical voice in the Australian music undergrowth.
It starts out in a maudlin space on 'Breathing In Blue', Angie's haunting vocals echoing over the crashing of waves and plaintive keys. 'Crocodile Tears' takes us into a chugging rhythm, a garage nosedive haunting the twilight backwaters. (Angie might kill me here, but when the pace slows here, I feel the spectre of Hole's 'Doll Parts' in delivery and atmosphere - but for me it's an inimitably good thing, especially when given the scuffed up and forlorn treatment as it is here). 'Down For The Count' has even more grit in its teeth, a slackjawed swagger and sway, a rock tune that is rough in production and delivery. Things get more 70s glam punk on 'Out Of Age', with a tinny production that sounds both cavernous and transistor radio, and it slays. 'Paris Face' has a lilt in its rollicking throwback rock that reminds me of Veronica Falls at their most avuncular. 'Ricky Street' shuffles along with a more world-weary bent, and the guitar solo holds that burden like Neil Young at his most rustically rambunctious. In some ways mirroring the opener, 'The Bell Rings True' is Angie and keys, but this time a little more avant-pop, the keys following Angie's lilts and swoons, a plaintive accompaniment, and an effectively stark closer.
You can hear the aural fingerprints of Straight Arrows bandmate Owen Penglis in the conception of Free Agent, yet this is definitely Angie's beast, one we should all be celebrating. It comes out via Rice Is Nice and friend Nathan Roche's Glenlivet A Gogh Records next month - cannae wait (pre-order it here).
Monday, 11 May 2015
Vintage Angie
One of my favourite albums of the past couple of years, coming out at the tail end of 2013, was Turning, the debut solo offering from Circle Pit/Southern Comfort/Ruined Fortune/Straight Arrows firebrand Angie Bermuda (as Angie). She is bringing out her second record, Free Agent, soon (through Rice Is Nice), and first cut from it 'Out of Age' is a fuzzbox blast of atonal wildness within a harmonic frame. Angie has always played the metronomic guitar between garage abandon and Branca-era deconstructed destruction, yet here she somehow manages to do both here, with her vocal delivery monotone and deadpan. A great opening salvo - can't wait to hear this one (it's not out til September though, so play the hell out of this in the meantime).
Sunday, 31 August 2014
Miss Destiny Likes Her Southern Comfort Straight
So I am heading to Straight Arrows tonight as they support Jack Oblivian alongside The Sheiks. It's gonna be a blast. Check out the interview I did with Owen from the Sydney garage titans back here to get a taste. But as you know, the band isn't the only outlet for these guys, and out of them the most prolific tends to be Angie Bermuda. Outside of her old stuff as Circle Pit (with Jack Mannix), Angie has done her solo record Turning (which was a late contender for best album of 2013) and this year's Ruined Fortune (with Nic Warnock), and now we another slice courtesy of Hozac Records.
But before we get to that, there is another Aussie band with a 7" pumping through the Hozac veins (anticipation is rife!) Miss Destiny is a grungey Hole-esque blast-out, and 'The One' is a killer track that belies such audacious comparison claims. The four-piece from Melbourne (which features Harriet Hudson - the link is clear in a minute) slam the speakers with some much needed bite, a bracing band that borrows from 70s garage rock and rips it to shreds with vehement glee. Great stuff.
Also out on Hozac is a 7" from Angie's "other" band (of which there are many), Southern Comfort (and the penny drops!) . Now I actually bought this 7" at the Sonic Masala Fest when Angie played, and wrote a post up about this (alongside releases by The Man and Mary Monday) but it disappeared off my laptop. So now's a good time as any to talk about it. 'Suzanne' is a much breezier jam than Hudson's Miss Destiny, and it's good to see the colour palette is wide spread. Sometimes you need to let the sun out as much as kick out the jams.
And yep, if in London you can see Angie play in another of her bands, Straight Arrows, tonight at the Bethnal Green Working Men's Club. They are supporting Jack Oblivian and The Sheiks. It is another great Upset The Rhythm show - get along to it, it's gonna be LOOSE.
Monday, 18 August 2014
The Food Court Keeps You Young
Sydney's Food Court continue to impress. I dug their Smile At Your Shoes EP, and off the strength of it I convinced Tape/Off to include them on their album tour bill back in June. They stand a little apart from most of their Sydney brethren - mainly because their brand of fun involves slack jawed grins, cars with the windows down and no a/c, head banging good times. Well, actually that could fit with much of what Straight Arrows do - but seeing as they are one of the most fun live bands currently on this wide brown land, it's a great feeling to know they have support. And whaddaya know - SA's Owen Penglis recorded the sucker! And Mikey Young (*trademark*) mastering to boot. You can't get more Aussie garage rock than that. Except they're named Food Court, so... maybe more Aussie Hungry Jack's rock. You can catch em play alongside Yes I'm Leaving and Black Zeros at the Sly Fox in Sydney on September 4 before they officially launch the single on September 20. An EP is in the works. Tasty.
Monday, 17 March 2014
Infamy and Ruined Fortune
Angie Bermuda has been very busy of the past few years, Musically alone she has been involved in cyclical cesspit Circle Pit, rambunctious Injuns Straight Arrows, strung out stoners Sourthern Comfort, and she brought out her excellent debut solo album Turning last year; and pushing on, she has Ruined Fortune, a band she has formed with Nic Warnock (RIP Society). The band itself sounds like demented thugs, a two-piece enamoured with disarray and destruction, ans the spaces between the spaces. 'In A Hole' is a scuzzy driving behemoth of an opener, all snarls wrapped in suffocating cellophane - so deliciously evil. 'All Seeing Eye' is heavy metal for the unwilling, a dirge into the funereal gutters of unlit alleys and abandoned squats. 'Transparent Faces' is almost a pop song - as near as these nihilists will let the candy coated come close to the white noise orgy.'On The Screen' holds The Velvet Underground up to the light and under a searing magnifying glass; ‘Closing Till’ is particularly enthralling, with Warnock monotonously reciting lines from interview inanities and application forms over a simplistic Casio drum beat and Angie’s squalling guitar providing a hypnotic bedrock. Then there is the eight-minute spiralling cataclysm that is 'That Strain, That Spark/End of Day' is an exercise in dealing with cacophony like a lackadaisical masochist - which is pretty much the best way. Spacemen 3 on ice?
Suffice to say, Ruined Fortune is bloody incredible. Angie, Nic (with excellent help from Dan Spencer (Blank Realm) and Joe Alexander (Per Purpose, Terrible Truths) on skins) - thank you for the catastrophe of the year - a face melting triumph of the damaged will. Get it through the excellent Hozac Records here.
Wednesday, 4 December 2013
INTERVIEW - Angie
I have a couple other interviews coming up this month, but here is an unexpected one. I did a little Q+A for The Music with Angie Bermuda from the likes of Sydney's Circle Pit, Straight Arrows, Ruined Fortune, Southern Comfort...and now Angie. Angie has gone it alone to release Turning (out now on Rice Is Nice and Easter Bilby), and the album is a classic of down-turn malaise, dour riffs and her excellent warbled, drained vocals. The full article only uses a fraction of the interview though, so here is the full transcript (Angie was doing a residency in Brazil at the time)...
SONIC MASALA - What's brought on the change to a solo guise?
ANGIE BERMUDA - I usually write songs with others, composing at least
some of the music, or lyrics with a collaborator. Jack (Circle Pit) had moved
to Melbourne and the new songs I had made didn't quite seem to fit my more
heavier new project, Ruined Fortune, that I had created in the interim with my
friend Nic (Warnock, Rip Society). What I see for Ruined Fortune is that it is
inherently collaborative, and its a heavy, weird rock band. There songs just
had a different vibe - they were more girly, sublime almost, and therefore
didn't seem to fit the project. Over a long period of time, the songs evolved
to a point where they were 'finished' with me alone. In that sense, I thought
it was suited to also record them alone. I wasn't sure what the future would
hold for these songs, or whether there was a live impetus, but I decided to
record them with my friend Owen (from Straight Arrows) at his home studio.
The songs that ended up on the LP stretched back years,
always around in the back of my head while everything else was going on. All of
the songs were written whilst travelling or walking, without any instruments at
hand or force to consciously write a song. They all just came to me, in a
dream, on a boat, whilst staring at a strange statue or object, along an either
strange or familiar skyline whilst reflecting on my life. I remember Parallels
melody coming to me first while out at sea, on the 5th day the song came. I had
no way to record it, so I sang it over and over to myself till I could make it
back to land. Wandering was whilst walking around the city at night, along the
expresslink, feeling lost and estranged from people close to me. Others were
newer, like Missing Out and Do Yourself Right, and the songs just came together
and fit in this strange sense that I knew they belonged together on one
document. I guess it was mostly an instinctual feeling that I had to do it
myself, that came from somewhere I don't quite understand even now.
SM - In what ways did making Turning push you out of your
comfort zone?
AB - Making a solo recording is always an intense
statement, no matter the form, as it is an artistic reflection of you alone,
and in that sense I had harness a whole new set of confidence I had never used
before. The recording process came at the end of I guess a year period where I
was kinda all over the place and confused by life in general so it was also
kinda cathartic, something I had to rid myself of.
I can be very shy and anxious, so I had to force myself to be more extroverted
in order to get the ideas out there and communicate them to other people which
was definitely the most difficult, even now i'm not entirely comfortable with
this concept. I played every instrument apart from drums, which meant basically
no breaks in the studio, always on which was at times very hard, as although I
am proficient at lead guitar, playing organ, bass and rhythm guitar was at
times very difficult and frustrating as I have very little rhythmic
capabilities.
It was also the best kind of challenge, and having Owen
to record was perfect for me in a lot of ways as we are very close and have a
long detailed history. He gave me a lot of time, space and patience to create
the songs at their most fulfilled, exploratory, that I guess I wouldn't have
had the ability or confidence to do with another producer. Lincoln Brown from
Housewives helped a lot with details like my guitar tones and amp settings, so
it gave me more time to focus on getting everything down as close to what I had
in my head. I also had lots of feedback on my initial demo tracks from close
friends so I never felt truly alone in the project which was really nice.
SM - The strong focus on guitars is steeped in a droning
cyclical aesthetic - is this an experiment or something longer-form?
AB - I have been working on a new record since Turning, and the
sound is different, it is more simplified in terms of instrumentation and the
only FX used were my Moogerfooger Phaser and Wah. For Turning, there was
a lot more FX to generate the guitar styles present. I made demo tracks of each
song at home, and they were all very bass-heavy, with lots of reverb, and I
tried to convert these feelings onto the sessions with Owen as best I could.
The drums I had made with my hands but effected them so they sounded almost
like programmed drums, or drumming that was barely there. We had a long
discussion before starting where I communicated the aesthetic styles through
listening to the demos I had made and comparing sounds with other records I
liked, such as the dark guitar styles and tones in bands such as The Index,
Witch, or Chrome. Lincoln had a good handle on my guitar style and really
worked on the aesthetics with his large range of pedals that he brought to the
sessions. I can't even recall now what exactly they were. I think because I did
dual-lead tracks on almost the whole record, I really had time to regulate the
sense of guitar solos 'swimming' around each other, or the sense they were
related to each other, returning to the base note but also floating around with
a loose sense of unpredictability and danger. All of the solos were basically
improvised. I would have a rough idea of what was going on, but it was mostly
unplanned. The first solo would be laid down, and especially on tracks like
Shadow Twin and Wandering, the second solo would kinda comment and move around
the other solo, complimenting it in a sense. Wandering I feel could go on for
10 minutes the way it did, its just a sample of an idea that live definitely
will be more free and long-winding. I feel that as all of the songs started out
without any kind of instrumentation, they started out as vocal melodies, the
solos and instrumentation had the ability to be a lot freer, as they were
add-ons that came later, as opposed to the other way around.
SM - The darker tone of the album is what really got me; this
sense of claustrophobia. any particular focus that has brought this on?
AB - I would definitely say that it is a dark record. Listening back to it
now, it elicits a very strong emotional response. What is strange is that it is
the instrumental parts that really get me rather than the lyrics - the solos
more specifically - the end of Wandering, the early solo in Shared Futures. It
sure reflects some dark parts of my life, senses of betrayal and heartbreak,
but also that of desire and longing, the complicated and changing nature of
love and friendship. The period creating the songs was one for me of extreme
solitude, and although perhaps it didn't feel so good at the time, I feel it
was a very important part of my life, kind of my graduation into adulthood, as
cheesy as that sounds. I guess learning to deal with the fact that nothing is
sedentary, everything is changing, turning, and I guess the record is a comment
on these things that we can't control despite all the wanting. Its both a
blessing and a curse, but I guess sometimes we wish we could slow things down a
bit. Sometimes I feel that I'm too sensitive, I constantly worry about
upsetting other people and disappointing others - I guess Turning is the point
of me letting go, or just accepting that you can never be perfect, and to
embrace your imperfections.
SM - There are still chugging moments of your "past"
musical endeavours such as single 'Parallels' and 'Shadow Twin' - how does such
a juxtaposition with that and something like the dour drawl of 'Do Yourself
Right' sit with you? Is such a juxtaposition somewhat the point, or incidental?
AB - I'm not sure quite how to answer this, as I can't listen to the songs
objectively. The record is just something thats more 'me' than anything else
I've done, because it lacks the collaboration with other parties. I guess the
difference between these songs is just that DYR is more of an aggressive song
that the other two, which are more reflective and listful. DYR I feel is more
alike my past work, especially Circle Pit than perhaps anything else on the
record.
SM - What about the lyrical context for the album?
AB - The first lyrics came through in perhaps about 2009 when I was in
Europe. My notebooks from this time were a big resource for my lyrics. I write
a lot, and go back and reflect upon the writings often. I know that Parallels
came from around this time, being completely consumed by a feeling for someone
you can't see, and thinking about them through everything, no matter how grand
or banal, in my case travelling through Eastern Europe. In the end its not even
about them, its about an energy that they give you, that colours your
experiences. Its a romantic idea, but not necessarily about a person. Shared
Futures came about regarding a found photograph of a young boy I bought at a
market. The photo struck something in me, and then I had a dream about him,
where we were related. When I woke I felt this incredible sadness that it was
just a dream, that I would never know him, and the confusion over my irrational
curiosity over his image. This got me thinking about how we are all related,
and the sadness and nature of friends moving together and apart, and losing
touch, and the collective history that shapes over time, that becomes your
'backup memory', and how everything always changes and nothing is ever the
same. Missing Out and A Certain Friend are definitely quite personal and I
guess the most 'upfront' songs I've written, as my lyrics are usually fairly
oblique. DYR relates a supreme cool anger. I like the way it channeled itself,
its intense, but kind of a relaxed anger, haha…. There is definitely a mixed
bag of things going on.
SM - Playing this stuff live, is there much to learn/change outside what you've done with other bands?
AB - I've played live solo a few times now, but usually with a backing band
which is the way I like it the best as I can solo as much as possible. I'm
still fairly shy about playing live, I need to constantly tell myself to face
the audience, haha. The live sets in Australia I have done with a band (Sam
Chiplin, Liam Kenny and Nathan Roche) have been really jammy, longer, free and
really exciting.. They are all great musicians and there is a buzz between us
that seems to always make for a good show. We have played the songs in longer
versions with room for improvisation which is the most exciting for me. I feel
that this set up has the first potential I have to really use guitar at its
fullest. There have been some other memorable moments playing solo, in Athens I
played along a backing track with Marco from Acid Baby Jesus on drums to a
stunned audience haha.. The drums and backing track kept going out of time so I
had to slow down and speed up, directing both around each other haha… In Paris
I played live in an abandoned movie theatre and I got mugged outside just
before I arrived, they stole my stuff so I had to basically improvise the whole
thing along to nothing. I played a show acoustic in Rio last week to a group of
local people on a coffee farm, that was definitely the most memorable! … So I
guess so far its been very different to anything else I've done as those
opportunities would not have arisen as a band touring together requires heaps
of organisation, money, planning, etc.
I wish I could be more of a 'performer' or be more expressive but its
just not me, I dunno maybe I'll change but I'm still just a weirdo about
playing live, nervous, freaking out, not making eye contact, etc. I guess the
music is the main thing, right?
__________________
I'm bummed that I won't be in the country to catch Angie as she tours Turning. Especially as she is supported by SM fave Nathan Roche, who played a blistering set at the Ocean Party album launch we threw a few weeks back. But keep Saturday December 21 open Brisbane people - "new" venue The Globe will house them both.
Tuesday, 22 October 2013
Let Straight Arrows Make Up Your Mind For You
Its hard to believe that Sydney reprobates Straight Arrows haven't put out a record in three years. Well, they haven't, so deal with it. They have released a lot of smaller stuff, toured around the world, played with pretty much all the cool kids on the planet. They even came up to Brisbane a couple times.
2014 will see the record set...straight...when the four-piece will bring out their next LP through Rice Is Nice. Lead burger Owen Penglis has been sharpening his fangs on producing a lot of records around town of late (Royal Headache, Gooch Palms, Frowning Clouds, Thee Nugs etc), so we can expect this to be something special. Don't believe me? You jackpot noodle. Then here is some aural evidence that debunks your negativity, bucko. It's very Ty Segall, which is awesome. That's pretty much all you need to know.
Catch Straight Arrows as they tour the country in support of other local rad dudes Violent Soho:
TOUR DATES:
Thursday Oct 24 - The Great Northern, Byron Bay
Friday Oct 25 - Oxford Art Factory, Sydney
Saturday Oct 26 - The Zoo, Brisbane - SOLD OUT
Sunday Oct 27 - The Zoo, Brisbane
Thursday Oct 31 - Mojo's, Fremantle
Friday Nov 1 - Amplifier, Perth
Saturday Nov 2 - Uni Bar, Adelaide
Monday Nov 4 - The Corner, Melbourne
Friday Oct 25 - Oxford Art Factory, Sydney
Saturday Oct 26 - The Zoo, Brisbane - SOLD OUT
Sunday Oct 27 - The Zoo, Brisbane
Thursday Oct 31 - Mojo's, Fremantle
Friday Nov 1 - Amplifier, Perth
Saturday Nov 2 - Uni Bar, Adelaide
Monday Nov 4 - The Corner, Melbourne
Monday, 14 October 2013
VIDEO VACUUM - Scott & Charlene's Wedding, Lee Ranaldo, Angie, Cuntz
Sometimes it's hard to take life seriously. If you get thrown enough curveballs and low blows, you either shrug and laugh and find the stuff that makes your world go round, or you curl up into the foetal position whilst chewing a dogshit-stained shoe. Today could have gone either way. But a handful of Aussie degenerates and one sonic youth on his crystal ship(sss) got me across the line, just in time to neck a bottle of red, watch the new episode of The Walking Dead, and be thankful I get another day to get things right. Maybe these tracks will help you too, hmm?
Craig Dermody of Scott & Charlene's Wedding has a proclivity for suburban malaise and chagrin, yet on this latest video for 'Jackie Boy', he's taking no prisoners. A typically laconic take on the Rocky male fantasy, the clip sees Dermody jogging around NYC, looking decidedly weedy but with a puffed out chest and a decidedly grimy gray tracksuit (hopefully from Lowes),punching wet carcasses and looking to make a difference in this mixed-up world that we live in. And when Dermody mumbles-shouts 'When you've got nothing left you've still got rock'n'roll', goddamn if it isn't a mantra after my own heart. TKO, dude.
The latest solo album from Sonic Youth alum Lee Ranaldo certainly divided the pundits what with its somewhat traditional mode of songwriting (well, at least for this progenitor of no wave nihilism and explorer of atonal terrains). Between the Times and the Tides is more about looking for more nostalgic and referential ways of telling stories, as opposed to crafting something outside the proverbial box, and in the main I'm a big fan. This six-minute clip for 'Fire Island (Phases)' is an ode to the Berlin winter, an experience that brings goosebumps to my soul, and he also garners help from skronky folk weirdniks Crystal Shipsss, which is pretty ace too. Ive been lucky enough to interview him AND speak to him in person - still one of my all-time highlights - so the bias has only risen, but I really appreciate the guy for forever being honest and subversive (even if that means travelling straight on when everyone else wants him to zig and zag).
If you want to circle back on the olde days of Sonic Youth, this might be your best bet. Angie is the new project for Angela Bermuda, the outlandish performer who props up the likes of Circle Pit and Straight Arrows. On 'Parallels' she gets the dirty, warbled, hypercolour VHS no-fi down pat, whilst the track itself is both Aussie pub rawk guitar noodling, buzzbin fuzz, and disaffected lyrics. It's a killer track, one I didn't see coming, and spiked my will to live even further. Nice one, Angie.
And lastly, Melbourne's Cuntz deliver the knockout blow, ensuring that I've never felt better with, well, 'Never Felt Better.' Still giving out dark, despairing punk spirals, all the time. Despite the whole thing is a constant drunken shit-stir, you can't help but get swept up in the nihilistic charm of its atonal wares. This is actually a depressing song, isn't it? Fuck it. Scream to your heart's content, drink a shit tonne of beers, and hold the baby.
NOW GET BACK TO WORK!
Wednesday, 12 September 2012
Big Sound stuff

And so it begins...The 2012 Brisbane Big Sound conference and live showcase promises to be the biggest yet, and already is touted as the Southern Hemisphere's fledgling answer to SXSW. Big shoes to emulate, but there is credence in such claims. With the likes of Steve Earle and the like taking part in Q&As, panel discussions and masterclasses, it has the potential to be an industry icon - as far as that goes, I suppose. I for one can see why some people consider these kinds of things a bit of a wank, but it gets people interested in all facets of music, which can't be a bad thing.
But the most exciting thing about Big Sound is...the sound! Big Sound Live showcases 120 bands within a two block radius all playing over the next two nights. There are some amazing bands that are playing, some of which I have spoken about at length in previous posts (Violent Soho, Transistors, Kirin J Callinan, Velociraptor), but there is a huge list of great acts doing the rounds. Below is a "hitlist" of artists to try and check out. Have a listen, then if you are on the ground check out where/when they are playing here. Ill be around and about reviewing, taking snaps, and other things I won't dare to mention here. See you on the beach!
Straight Arrows
Super Wild Horses
Step-Panther
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard
Courtney Barnett
Bearhug
Drunk Mums
Go Violets
Geoffrey O'Connor
Jeremy Neale
Shady Lane
The DC3
The Gooch Palms
Thursday, 16 August 2012
Opening The Cerebral Frame Of A High Wolf

I have to say that this year's Sound Summit in Newcastle looks to be by far the best one yet. Headlined by the inimitable Blues Control (whose Valley Tangents LP I am yet to hear, but all reports is it's a best of 2012 contender), Home Blitz, Rites Wild, Twerps, Straight Arrows, Mist - and French avant garde sound extrapolator High Wolf. Now it is highly unlikely I will make this year - I will working on a special project, more about which later, that goes into the first day of the conference - but it is likely that I will get to see most of these acts.
First one announced to come say hi (other than Straight Arrows playing the BigSound convention mid-September) will be High Wolf who, along with USA-based multi-instrumentalist Benoit Pioulard and synth cowboys Mist (which includes John Elliott from Emeralds) are a part of Open Frame 2012, an initiative at the Brisbane Powerhouse put on by Room40 to celebrate the sonic Underworld. High Wolf is a master of mystic interrogation and manipulation, playing with form and repetition to reconnect with the third eye, holding a strong connection to Middle Eastern and Asian musical tropes also. He puts out many releases - the current one doing the rounds at Planet Masala is the Know Thyself cassette he put out through Sun Ark, contemporary Sun Araw's label - and this promises to be an electric, eye-opening program. Not to be missed.
The first Open Frame event featuring, Benoit Pioulard, High Wolf and Mist is on at the Powerhouse on Thursday October 4. You can get your tickets here - I strongly recommend this to anyone who likes to be adventurous with your sonic palate. Your earbuds will never be the same.

You can grab Know Thyself (and by extension a plethora of High Wolf's releases) here.
High Wolf - Side A (from Know Thyself - song titles are Landslide, Obsessions History, and MLK)
Tuesday, 22 November 2011
Love Me A Royal Headache

OK, so I kinda blew my wad over Witch Hats' Pleasure Syndrome. Well, I better change my pants AGAIN, because we have another absolute killer jumping out of the gates and totally destroying all preconceptions about what it means to create good music.
Royal Headache, in their debut self-titled longplayer, have done something that revels in its unaffectedness. In fact, it’s hard to imagine in this world today how such a band can exist. Devoutly and intrinsically DIY, these rabblerousers don’t pride themselves in living the music they play or the reputation they may garner; they just are. Now that Pitchfork et al (and to an extent, the glaring spotlight also turns on me, for better or worse) are espousing their brilliance, their progression can only go one of two ways - implosion, deliberate obscurity, or an evolution of sound. As it stands, then, 2011 will be a time capsule for the group, for this point forward their lives aren't likely to be the same unless they wilfully make it so. Therefore thank fuck for Royal Headache, an album chock full of influences, garage tendencies, fundamental mistakes and innate love of what they do that a better template of what it means to be rock and roll may not subsist.
OK, so that sounds like an outrageous declaration. However, after one listen to this album it becomes evident that this kind of lightning cannot be emulated. Each track on Royal Headache brims to overflowing with original wants, demands and expectations – this is fun, dammit. No pretensions, or aloofness, or affectations.
Maybe it comes from the juxtaposition between the frenetic musical interplay and the almost friendly, appeasing vocal stylings of vocalist Shogun (the comparisons to Ted Leo notwithstanding - and more than a little OTT) – his crooning on 'Back And Forth' when offset by the manic garage punk wailings becomes a beast unto itself. Shit, there is a song that sounds like fucking Rod Stewart! But 'Honey Joy', one of the strongest songs on offer, shows exactly who Royal Headache are. A song filled with heart-rending despair with a hint of loving redemption, played without a hint of irony, reference wink-nudges or aspirations.
Like I said, whether this kind of alchemy can be maintained under scrutiny is dubious at best. Let's hope that they find a way.
For the love of God, buy Royal Headache now! Its becoming very difficult to buy this on record, just so's you know...
Royal Headache - Girls
Royal Headache - Down The Lane
Royal Headache - Honey Joy
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Get Pleasured By Witch Hats

Today heralds in a few days' worth of posts devoted to some fantastic Aussie releases that I have been saving up, including ones by Royal Headache, Straight Arrows, Dead Farmers, and Total Control. Not all of them are this year's news, but are warranted another look in. This one though, is fresh off the presses, and is a veritable delight to boot.
Melbourne's Witch Hats have the guttural firepower and diseased charisma necessary to corrupt the minds of the masses. On their debut release Cellulite Soul the rawness and aggression inherent in their swagger suggested that style and substance weren't independent of each other, instead always wrestling for control. And in Pleasure Syndrome they really nail their MO to the wall. The beauty of this LP though is that the cohesion, the Araldite that grips a band into a fevered vortex of sonic elation and cosmic power, seems to have arrived. By the metric tonne.
Opening track 'The Bounty' is the perfect example of this. Frontman Kris Buscombe still sounds ready to double glass you at the drop of an ill-place syllable, yet there is a comfortable presence behind his lyrics now that suggests that such a glassing wouldn't be a violent outpouring so much as a graceful balletic manoeuvre that you would be in awed fascination by even as pints of blood pulses out of your split forehead. Such reigning in of the bountiful seams of sleazy abandon is what makes Pleasure Syndrome an infinitely better release, and possibly one of the best Aussie releases of the year (neck and neck with another that I will talk about very soon...) 'Mahoney' lends lyrics that sings to their previous incarnations, the S&M rife imagery as disturbing as it is titillating. 'Hear Martin' has taken references to serial shooter Martin Bryant, thrown together some Clash and Doors hubris and percolated it all with a sense of lackadaisical longing - something that shouldn't work, yet offers a slinky number that exudes originality and intensity. Closer Closing out with the suitably heavy 'Ashley', Witch Hats assert the notion that they are well-heeled rabblerousers with hearts of tainted pitch.
Pleasure Syndrome is out now through Longtime Listener.
Witch Hats - Hear Martin
Tuesday, 8 March 2011
Straight Arrows Make It Happen

Sydney garage punks Straight Arrows are releasing their world domination mission statement via debut LP It's Happening through Rice Is Nice Records. The album showcases reverb-laden, catchy, fuzzed out punk garage that marries 60s psych pop with 70s dirty garage, and that has attracted shows with the likes of Thee Oh Sees, Eddy Current Suppression Ring, The Black Lips and Jay Reatard (RIP) in the past, and is likely to continue the meteoric rise of this rapscallions. What is a decidedly new 'direction' for the band is getting some semblance of fidelity in their production, as it is occasionally nice to be able to ascertain what is going on in any one song - well, thats my archaic opinion. Anyway, its pretty ace and well worth picking up.
Straight Arrows - Bad Temper
Straight Arrows - Magic Sceptre
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)












