After a four-year hiatus, Sydney-based Pnau returned to the stage in all their blistering, high-intensity glory with a sold-out show at the Croxton Bandroom in Thornbury, Melbourne on Friday 24th March. It was ten years ago that I was first captivated by their bright, experimental sound and theatrical visuals. In many ways they (along with the Australian indie dance scene of the era, the likes of The Presets, Cut Copy, Bag Raiders and the like) were hugely foundational to my love of music. With this gig, I was keen to see how they’d grown up, as I had, 10 years later.
Pnau, made up of duo Nick Littlemore (vocals, production) and Peter Mayes (guitar, production), had floated among the indie dance scene since 1999, but cemented their place as Australian dance music royalty in 2007 with the album Pnau, with a slew of singles reflecting their animated, chaotic sound and threaded with bright, happy and at times ridiculous lyrics (e.g. Baby, Wild Strawberries).
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyKjaS3mn60]
Collaborations with Ladyhawke (Embrace) and Luke Steele (With You Forever, Freedom) not only demonstrated their versatility and bold reinvention of alt dance, but also nurtured the subsequent successes of both Ladyhawke and (Littlemore and Steele’s) Empire of the Sun. Their approach shaped the local dance scene irrefutably and also reverberated globally with Elton John choosing to work with them on Good Morning to the Night, a remix album of his music.
Late last year Pnau dropped Chameleon, a big, kaleidoscopic, addictively-catchy party single, as a teaser for their anticipated new album. Chameleon features vocals from Pnau’s heavenly new muse Shakira Marshall, (aka alter-ego Kira Divine) an artist of Guyanese descent hailing from Queens, NY. Divine’s unique choreography and style of dance known as #AfroSoca are featured in the video for Chameleon and were clearly a huge influence for Pnau – so much so that Marshall will reportedly feature on many songs on their upcoming album.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2pp_ZAk6Uw]
On Friday, while we shifted from foot-to-foot in impatient anticipation for Pnau’s return to the stage, Melbourne-based SAATSUMA brought the pre-party vibes with their slow-burning, warpy electronic soundscapes and distorted vocals, moving through tracks like synth-heavy Floating and the trippy, vibrant pop number Isolate.
When Pnau emerged, it was clear that these were different men than the ones that tumbled onto stages in the mid-2000s among caricatures of dancing strawberries, suns and birds. Littlemore, while still wirey and floppy haired, had an intensity and authority, a deliberacy in his movements that felt different and new.
The show opened with a penetrating synth build and Littlemore craned over a horn, his lungs squeezing every last molecule of air out; before he belted out the ridiculous but undeniable Wild Strawberries and a landslide of completely new music, track after track of big, unapologetic, unmistakably-Pnau dance numbers. Kira Divine joined the stage shortly after; a radiant neo-tribal vision adorned with glowing, dotted skin and frenetic dance manoeuvres, and largely supplied the vocals for the evening. The new songs from the upcoming album seemingly dominated the first half of the set, and they were very good, with Divine’s voice showcased in all its glory. We didn’t know the lyrics but we followed Divine’s lead and grooved alongside a smitten audience, folding and jumping and bouncing along to a slick array of new tracks.
Throughout the show Pnau weaved in some of their classic tunes like No More Violence, Forever, Baby and Come Together, with the audience’s textbook recall of the lyrics a reminder of the inimitability and timelessness of these tracks over the past 10 years. Littlemore responded to the audience’s zeal with moments of impassioned preaching, yelling gospel-like at the audience to come together and be with each other in the moment.
The highlights of the evening were Chameleon (with Divine clearly in her element as she folded and arched across the stage; a picture of unimaginably glorious femininity and power) and the final song Embrace, with Divine admirably carrying Ladyhawke’s vocals and the audience clamouring for more. It was exhilarating and exhausting, both nostalgic and renewing.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVqozczRuuM]
Reflecting back, it was a very different show to what we would’ve seen from Pnau in the past; less sunny and joyful, and more dark and intense; less tried-and-tested stage routine, and more bold experimentation. Like anything though, Pnau’s latest sound has a reassuring familiarity to it, like coming home after ten years away. A decade after doing it for the first time, Pnau seem ready to usher in another new wave of Australian indie dance music, and I for one am bloody ready for it.
Image: ABC
In October 2011, Australian singer-songwriter Kate Akhurst was visiting Stockholm and by chance, was introduced to Swedish trio Rocket Boy (Markus Dextegen, and Hampus Nordgren and Oskar Sikow) in a bar. There was an instant connection; an immediate alignment that led them straight down to the studio that very night to record a song together, Northern Lights. It was this song – and the unexpected fusion of Swedish and Australian culture – that would form the distinct sonic blueprint of Kate Boy; a palette blending the kaleidoscopic electropop of Scandinavia, unrelenting industrial rhythms and booming choruses unapologetically belted out by Kate’s piercing voice.
This November Kate Boy releases their highly anticipated debut album, ONE, which follows this year’s earlier releases of the commanding, sun-soaked single Midnight Sun and Triple J favourite Self Control. ONE is self-produced and was recorded in Stockholm, an undeniable musical epicentre churning out some of the most distinct contemporary pop music around (think Robyn, First Aid Kit, Say Lou Lou). ONE leans heavily on hand-spun vintage synths (they used a Fairlight CMI from the late 1970s) to create a backbone of warmth and brightness, and overlays layer after layer of irreverent, reimagined pop melodies in what will undoubtedly be one of *the* pop albums of the Aussie summer.
We spoke to Kate Akhurst and Markus Dextegen, based in Stockholm, to find out more about Kate Boy’s debut album ONE, how culture influences their musical sound, their upcoming plans for spending summer in Australia (which is very likely to include an early 2016 tour!) and how Kate Boy itself – the fictional extra member of the band – helps to challenge and antagonise the group to push themselves in new directions.
Hi Kate! How’s it going?
K: Hi! I’ve got Markus here with me. We’re doing really good thanks!
Two for one, sweet! Well, congrats are definitely in order for Kate Boy – it’s probably been a busy few months for you with the release of Midnight Sun and preparing for the release of your debut album, ONE. How’s that been?
M: It’s been crazy, it’s been fun – stressful but fun. But then again I think it’s been like that for two or three years for us. If anything we’re getting used to it now!
K: If anything I think the last few months have been the most relaxed. I think from the beginning, from one song, we’ve been launched into this world and immediately took off online, and we got so many amazing opportunities to play live, and we were just scraping by and ready for that. We started practising all the time, getting the live show ready, kept going on tour and coming back, kept writing songs and pulling the album together, releasing each single at a time… and now it’s done!
M: It’s the first opportunity to have a break.
K: And the first opportunity to really talk to people, like you! It’s been really nice.
That’s awesome to hear. So, debut albums are a pretty important moment in a band’s career. With ONE, what did you want to get across? What was important to you to put out in the world?
K: I think the most important thing for us was just to feel like we had our sonic blueprint. It’s the first album; it’s the thing that you go into the world with and say “This is us”. We wanted that captured entirely on a record and that’s why we included the first songs we ever made – those were the ‘seed’ of Kate Boy and then it kind of evolved through touring and over the years in the making, and now it’s done! We really wanted to capture that progression from the first day we met; we wrote Northern Lights the first day we met and that’s on the album. It was really a show of our journey together from the very first moment we met and that’s kind of important for us.
M: I feel like the album is like us building a house, and now we’ve finished the house and we can live in it for a while.
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You mentioned your sonic blueprint and I think Kate Boy is so unique, it doesn’t sound like anything in the Australian Indie scene. It’s got that clashing of 80s sounds with those industrial rhythms and those booming choruses. Do you think that’s a by-product of the Swedish pop scene and all those influences there, or is that something driven internally by the band?
K: It’s a good question. I initially came to Sweden because I loved that music, that Scandinavian sound. I’ve always had that in my bones, I just love it and why I found the guys, I think. It definitely has the Swedish influence to it. But I’m Australian and there’s no way of getting that out of me, so I think it doesn’t 100% sound like the Swedish sounds either. I think there’s maybe a blend that makes it something a little different from other things around.
M: I think we’re so different as musicians and that creates that end result, where you have a mix between some different sounds and that’s one of the reasons we love making music together, because we have so many different aspects to give to each other when we’re making music, rather than working with someone who does exactly what you do. It’s so much more inspiring to work with an Aussie that has a completely different mindset of how to approach a song. It’s really fun to work with. I would imagine that most artists would really feed off working with someone who has a different approach to their work, it makes it really fun and it feels like things are happening quite spontaneously; which is the whole core of making music, to spontaneously create sounds together. It definitely helps to mix and match people from different parts of the world.
Taking Higher as an example, why did you decide to centre some of the themes of the album around self-empowerment and equality, or trying to bring people together as this one bundle of energy. Is that a theme that’s consistent throughout the album?
M: It’s consistent in the sense that the album definitely has that in it, it’s a very important aspect of it, but not every song or every line has it. *laughs* But it’s definitely a core part of the album, absolutely.
K: One thing I realised subconsciously that we’ve done is that everything really is about connection and from the beginning that it’s been like that. And now every song when I look into it, it’s about connecting with each other. Even the album title ONE, it’s trying to tap into that as well and I think that through touring so much we really got to experience meeting so many different people. So many people would come up to us after a show and explain what our songs had meant to them, and what happened in their lives, and that was really touching. When everyone is singing the lines together in the room, you really bundle that energy together and it brings such a deeper meaning for us as performers, getting up every night and singing the same songs over and over again. Because the songs have a deeper message it gives us purpose and inspiration to do this, you’re not just doing it because you feel like a rock star. It’s about getting up and sharing an experience that makes you feel better and I feel in these songs that’s why those themes come together. Our audiences have inspired us through the connections we’ve had with them early on.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Zj85h0JgFE&w=560&h=315]
I want to ask who Kate Boy is, this fictional fifth band member and a bit of an androgynous character. Do you think she or he is the antagonist of the group and is she there to challenge you to think differently?
M: She or he is definitely there to challenge us.
K: That’s how we answer every problem that we can’t find a solution to, we say “What would Kate Boy do, or think in this situation?” It’s the higher mind of us all, the better version of us we feel.
M: All the good sides but none of the bad.
K: We definitely use her in that way often.
Can you tell us about the unique visual aesthetic, the album imagine really grabs you. Is that Kate Boy?
M: That’s definitely Kate Boy, that’s Kate’s head. We scanned her head in a 3D scanner. That piece is created around her scan.
K: You’re right though, Kate Boy is both. That’s what we like. It does represent everyone, too. But yes, it is my head *laughs*. We really like that feeling of evolving into something more, more than just a human. We all have to step outside of ourselves and find that place where we can let go of all the baggage and preconceived ideas of people that we have, so that’s what those images represent.
M: It’s also an image that inspires us to work with it, to find a deeper meaning. It’s as much something we want to communicate to other people as it’s something that we want to communicate to ourselves.
Kate, I know you’ve said you don’t necessarily want to commit to concrete plans and want to be quite open to everything. But if you had a hope for where Kate Boy might be in three years time, what would things look like?
M: Wow, that’s a very big question.
K: That’s hard! We really try not to think like that but I would be sad if we couldn’t keep doing this in three years time but I also want to trust the natural flow of life, so if that weren’t to happen I hope that that would mean because something else was in my life.
M: I would hope that we inspired other people, even if it’s for people to start making music on their own and start seeing dreams in front of them, and become happier people because of it. Regarding success… I think it’s so hard to measure. If we took it as ‘how many people are listening to us’ or commercial success only I think we’d be losing so much of what makes us happy. It’s a much bigger part of it; but inspiring others would make me very happy at least.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2H7pa4OQ8rY&w=560&h=315]
Finally, a key question for us Aussies: are you going to tour Australia anytime soon?!
K: Yes! We’re looking into it right now. We’re coming over for Christmas and New Years, we’re going to spend the summer there and get away from the Swedish snow. We’re going to come for a couple of months and we’re trying to book some shows early in 2016. Hopefully in a few weeks we’ll have something set.
Now that is some epic news. I’ll wrap up there – Markus and Kate thanks for your time!
K: Thanks for giving us your time.
ONE will be released 6 November 2015 digitally and on CD and vinyl LP via Caroline Australia | Fiction Records. Order it here.
It’s been a stellar few years for Melbourne’s Martha Brown, aka Banoffee, a real treasure of the electro-pop world. She’s released two gorgeous, critically acclaimed EPs, coveted festival slots, international tour dates and more. Brown’s music is a divine blend of spacious soundscapes, melded with crisp, warm synths and her delicate, sunlit vocals, that bloom and unfurl with unexpected strength throughout her songs.
Since her self-titled EP released last year (which delivered the bright pop burst of Let’s Go To The Beach and the down-tempo, moody electronica of Ninja) Banoffee recently released the single With Her, a melting little snowflake of dream-pop that explores unrequited romance and hurt (and with an unforgettable house-beat that blends it at just the right time). It’s the first delicious wedge of her upcoming EP Do I Make You Nervous (featuring production from Oscar Key Sung, Martin King and GXNXVS), set for release in October amongst a national headliner tour. It’s an exciting time for Banoffee, who was also recently announced as one of the acts for 2016’s Laneway festival, nestled right in amongst a dizzying, mind-bending lineup including Flume, DIIV and Grimes.
We caught up with the delightful, humble artist to talk about the song With Her and her imminent EP release, her upcoming post-feminist sports-luxe fashion line Pageant, and her thoughts on the importance of inclusion in both fashion and music, as well as generating dialogue about gender and diversity in music.
Well hi there Martha! I hear you just got back from Europe.
Yes! It feels like I got back yesterday but apparently I got back Saturday at 3am. I was there on holiday! I’ve never really taken one before. Since I’ve started my music as more of a career it always seems necessary to play when I’ve gone overseas, so I just wanted to try to take a little holiday from work. I went to Lisbon; András [Fox] and Oscar [Key Sung] were playing there and I met them to hang out, and then spent 4 days in Paris.
You recently released the single With Her ahead of your third EP, Do I Make You Nervous which is coming out in October. To start, With Her is quite a raw, melancholic track about a hidden romance with someone, and the realisation that they’re with someone else out in the outside world. It’s the kind of track that leaves you with a bit of a pit in your stomach. Were you writing about a personal experience?
Yeah, I took a really different approach to what I normally do with song writing. I often use a scenario to express something else that’s going on for me, but this one is pretty real, which is pretty clear in the lyrics, both verses are – well in as much detail as I can manage – very descript memories for me, and I guess it’s about that horrible feeling when you realize that everything you thought to be real is different than you thought it was. You feel stupid and feel like a fool, and that feeling is really sickening.
That’s very evident in With Her, it’s so transparent, which is quite refreshing – quite different to a lot of song writing where we always use metaphors and symbology, and talk around things as opposed to about things.
Yeah! With the video [of With Her], I wanted to show that vulnerability and realness even more by being in that pool and having that ruminating feeling of thoughts that go around in circles, reflected in the laps and dancers’ movements. They’re akin to thoughts that just keep popping up, which can come up when you’re doing anything, like watching TV or washing up. It’s that thing I can’t get out of my head.
I’m glad you brought that up. The video for With Her was released just last week and it’s really gorgeous, I love the texture and movement created by the water; the clip seems to move between almost a sense of overwhelming and drowning, and then moments of quite feminine power with the dancers and bursting from the water. Was that the intention of the clip?
I tried to make it not completely clear cut because I want people to draw what is important to them from it, but a lot of that is true about the clip. I wanted there to be juxtaposition between vulnerability and strength. You’ll notice the colour grade is quite soft and there’s no harsh colours – like wearing the pink with the faded blue water – I wanted there to be a sweetness and a vulnerability to it, but then there’s close ups of the swimming with the strong look of the dancers in those goggles, sporty swimsuits and caps. I wanted there to be a little hint that every weak moment is a strong moment, so it was a bit of showing that with that repetition of the laps. Doing laps – while tiring – is still a strong movement, pushing yourself through an element you don’t understand, which is water. We’re made of it; but we don’t understand the ocean or that element of ourselves. It doesn’t mix with us, it doesn’t go through our skin, it’s completely different to us.
So it was about the feeling of being vulnerable but being strong within it and showing strength within those circumstances. The dancers are doing really strong arm movements through it and I made sure there was a light and shade to everything. It’s sort of a theme in everything I make; I like there to be a juxtaposition of strength and vulnerability because I don’t think they’re separate, they’re one and the same.
Stepping back from With Her and looking at the EP more broadly, is the same theme of unrequited love carried through or are you exploring other themes?
You’d have to look very closely to see the other themes. This EP is very different to the last one. I made the last EP and then I went away and worked with a bunch of different producers in Australia and the States and with people from all over the place. I got to work and experience a lot of new music, and new ways of making new music, and I learned a lot. I wanted each song to reflect where I was at that time in my life and nothing more. People say it’s smart to think about how something fits together as a whole but I decided if I did each song right, then when they came together it would make sense, and it did in mixing and mastering. The EP fits together as a piece, but each song is completely different in what they mean to me, the instrumentation and the way I approached them. It’s an eclectic little group.
With Her is probably one of the most common to my last EP whereas I’m Not Sorry is a lot harder and quite angry … I was listening to a lot of dance music at the time, a lot of grind, a lot of hip-hop and percussive music and I wanted to get those things into it. Oceans is much more electronic, it’s very sparse, it’s got natural recordings that I did at the beach with my laptop and I used a lot of analog synths. Every song is really different but I made sure none of them are bullshit. I still wanted to use music to express something, but I had a lot of fun with it.
I love that, “I made sure none of them are bullshit.” Best line ever.
*laughs* Yeah. The main thing is that each track is for something, and about something, and that’s the one thing I always stick to. I always write about something. I want to be able to play it in 10 years and it still mean something.
I think that’s a good attitude to take. So, next up, you’re collaborating on a fashion line with Melbourne designers Pageant, which you’ve said you want to make inclusive of different genders, sexualities and sizes. How important is the concept of inclusion and gender identity to you?
Yes! Pageant and I are collaborating on a line that will be released later this year. I definitely wanted it to be inclusive, a line that doesn’t encourage narrow ideals about beauty, or femininity or gender. I’m a woman and people often ask about feminism or what it’s like to be a woman in the industry, and while it’s relevant and I love talking about it, the issue is bigger than that [gender]. Inclusion is being aware that just as the world isn’t black and white, gender isn’t just man and woman, sexuality isn’t just straight or gay; it’s coming out into the open but not enough.
I’m guessing that the question of ‘what’s it like to be a woman in music’ is one of the most common questions you get asked. What’s been your experience of that? Do you feel it’s a role you want to take on?
It’s a hard question. I do want to take it on. I think it’s important that every woman in any public arena owns that, and takes a responsibility on of showing other women that it’s possible, and talking about issues that someone who isn’t in their position might not have the ability to do. But it’s also difficult because it’s so much bigger than being a woman. It’s really hard to differentiate between being like, “it’s difficult being a woman in the industry” – and yes it is – but I also feel like I’m privileged to be able to say that because I’m not confused about my gender or sexuality, I’m not put down for those things. I’m privileged because I’m in this little bubble in Melbourne where women like myself are made to feel welcome.
There are definitely issues in the industry for women and I want to be able to address those, but in addressing those it’s hard to include everyone I want to include, because it’s not just about women; it’s about the trans community, and the queer community; the fact that Indigenous artists don’t get the same recognition as Anglo-Saxon Australians. There are so many issues to bring up in this industry that it becomes difficult to just focus on being a woman.
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Murmurings that foreshadowed the return of Melbourne indie pop duo Gypsy & The Cat (the union of Xavier Bacash and Lionel Towers) surfaced in April with the single Climb Into The Music (featuring Melbourne singer-songwriter Paul Kelly), after a two year break following 2012’s The Late Blue. It wasn’t long after that they released their bright, rhythmic dance track Evolution, a collaboration with Melbourne disco-darlings Client Liaison that couldn’t have been more divine if the 80s itself had delivered it, leotard, snap bracelets and all.
Now, they’ve gone and dropped a surprise EP Hearts a Gun, a delirious, sparkling assortment of multi-faceted, falsetto-led psyche pop splashed across 6 truly delightful tracks. Reflecting the duo’s chameleonic ability to swing between different slivers of the pop world, the EP zigzags between shimmering, synth-led dance (just TRY not to whistle to the title track Hearts a Gun), more eclectic, ambient dream pop (as with the dreamy, INXS-feeling Sunday) and the hazy, alt rock-vibes of Red Wine and Cigarettes (not dissimilar to Wild Nothing’s Empty Estate). It’s a truly delightful surprise for a Monday, and you can listen here:
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Hearts a Gun is the precursor to a highly anticipated third full-length album, which they’ve been recording for the last 18 months after their incredible two albums The Late Blue (2012) and Gilgamesh (2011), which you’ll remember fondly for its celestial, rolling keyboard-led single Jona Vark (which to this day, is the song that reminds most me of warm, glistening summer ciders in Byron Bay, where I first heard it). Standing them in good stead for the album ahead, they’ve also quietly amassed some pretty remarkable musical street-cred, having been supported by Mark Ronson on his East Village radio show, released singles through Young and Lost, Kitstune Maison and mixed their debut album with David Fridmann (MGMT, Flaming Lips) and Rich Costey (Rage Against the Machine).
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3YboETF6ZHQ&w=560&h=315]
With a trifecta of surprises under their belt for 2015, we can only hope that the album release comes just in time for Christmas, and perhaps if we’re *really* good little boys and girls this year, a national tour as a stocking-stuffer.
‘Home’ is an important theme for indie folk singer-songwriter Dustin Tebbutt, who threads the sound of his Scandinavian and Australian roots through each of his releases. The theme is carried through distinctly to Tebbutt’s upcoming mini-album which features new single Home, a gorgeous, delicate track with the initial familiarity of Tebbutt’s classic indie-folk sound, which builds into a more dynamic climax with heart-breaking strings and thunderous drums.
[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/216989582″]
Tebbutt has been back on red-dirt home-ground for some time after relocating to Sweden for two years to write and record his achingly-pretty debut EP The Breach and follow-up EP Bones. Reflecting the roots he’d laid at the time, and echoing the likes of Sigur Rós and Asgeir, both are imbued with the otherworldly feel of Nordic winter, with a sense of flickering, cabin-fire warmth created through through Tebbutt’s delicate acoustics and earnest falsetto.
Since returning home to Australia, Tebbutt released the shimmering, dream-like Illuminate, a collaboration with fellow Aussie Danny Harley of The Kite String Tangle and followed up with a national tour that showcased the best of both these emerging artists (we reviewed it here).
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXqTfAWafVY&w=560&h=315]
While sometimes returning from abroad can signal the end of the adventure, for Tebbutt, it seems it marks a road of exciting opportunity. Ahead of the upcoming seven song mini-album set to be released on September 18 and an accompanying national tour, this September streaming service Rdio have selected Tebbutt as their Artist to Watch. Rdio’s Artist to Watch initiative features a series of handpicked local and international artists (with the likes of Alison Wonderland and Last Dinosaurs) which Rdio supports in their development and success. Rdio will not only share Tebbutt’s existing catalogue but a series of exclusive playlists, a selection of influences for upcoming mini-album Home as well as Tebbutt’s pick for his top 5 artists to watch.
With the Nordic winter behind him and the Australian summer ahead, it seems it’s exciting times for one of our favourite indie-folk artists. Welcome home Dustin, we’re glad to have you back.
There’s been a lot of hoo-hah this week about a serious allegation from music venue owner and live music booker James Young that Tinder and Grindr are killing the live music scene. Speaking to the Sydney Morning Herald, Young suggested that more and more people would rather “stare at their phones and swipe left or right” rather than head out to a bar where they might meet somebody. According to Young, this is translating into an impact on the bottom line of music establishments, who struggle to recover from already thin margins, let alone removing the handful of patrons that would rather spend their Saturday nights with a glass of red and their mobile phones, swiping for potential dates.
The post quickly went viral, with other promoters quick to call bullshit. In this piece from theMusic: fellow promoter Jon Perring of Melbourne venue The Tote said it didn’t fit with his experience, saying: “The whole market’s down a bit at the moment, I think across the board for hospitality. I think everyone is feeling it. People look for reasons but seems a bit simplistic to blame Tinder.” Promoter of Brunswick’s Howler bar, Nick Casey believes that Tinder may in fact be helping to raise revenue for music venues: “If anything, it seems like the only successful thing Tinder has done is raise revenue on slower nights, be it a Monday or a Tuesday.” Finally, Sydney venue promoter of Frankie’s Pizza Bar, Jordan Mcdonald, said: “It’s definitely brought a new dimension into our joints but it hasn’t affected numbers through the door, that’s for sure.”
Now, I like swiping right as much as the next girl, but Tinder can’t be entirely to blame here. Beyond NSW’s lock-out laws (and their effects have been widespread and ruthless, with legendary venues like the Lansdowne and Hugo’s Lounge falling prey), there’s a broader issue of what music venues, and live music, will need do to innovate and respond to the changing behaviours of consumers. According to SMH, who summarised their reader backlash against the Tinder argument, readers felt that “pubs were failing to innovate and stay relevant while alternatives like trendy bars, restaurants and cafes multiplied.” If not Tinder, then what? “Expensive cover charges, careless staff, bad pub environments and bad music were the most common among dozens of reasons the live music scene is dying.”
They’ve hit the nail on the head. Like anything, the answer isn’t in what we’ve done in the past. Just as the landscape of music production, consumption and sharing is evolving with digital technology and social media, so too will the way we experience live music and share it with others. And like any business responding to digital disruption, music venues must embrace change and, first and foremost, put the user at the centre of the way they design their venue experience.
Allow me to break this down.
If we’re using digital means more and more – Tinder or otherwise – to create new connections with people, then perhaps modern venues must evolve to create inviting and safe environments to facilitate those meetings; to create an environment where there’s equal space for both privacy and intimacy, and the opportunity to then experience a show or live music, any day of the week.
Putting Tinder aside and considering the issue more broadly, if technology and social media now allow us to engage authentically and immediately with artists, share and experience new music from artists across the world with next to no barriers (save bandwidth – or let’s be real, data usage, which has got us in a real fucking headlock currently), and cut out almost all the middle men of the music industry’s supply chain, then equally, perhaps music venues need to evolve and challenge us with completely new venue experiences.
What about a venue that digitally facilitated the live concert experience? Where users could use an online vote to songs for an encore, or vote for which drinks they wanted in the $10 cocktail deal at the bar? What about venues where the physical environment became connected to the music, such as with Vivid Sydney, where the pluck of a guitar or the beat of a drum could physically alter the environment with lights and shapes? Even the humble tickets will become entirely digital (and they mostly are already) and more importantly, a key to unlock exclusive content, or fresh tunes, or a new score in a game. From the moment you even listen to the band, technology will create a seamless, and phenomenal experience end-to-end – the live act is just the highlight.
Putting aside the impracticalities of what I’ve just suggested above, the obvious cost of innovation is a cost that most venues aren’t equipped to deal with right now. This is where cities and governments need to come in. The future inhabitants of modern, global cities will expect to have live entertainment available at any time, whether it’s a Tuesday night or Sunday afternoon, in accessible, safe music venues (that hopefully become spotted throughout our Sydney laneways). Live music and performance action plans, like this one from the City of Sydney, will help venues navigate the regulatory and licensing barriers while, ideally, providing incentives and financial support to build innovative new entertainment experiences for users. Without question, live music and entertainment – beyond the fact that it’s just darned precious (hey – we’re biased) – is a good thing for the economy and our culture.
Of course, as individuals, throwing a bit of support towards live music venues – whether it’s heading out to a show instead of staying at home, or yes, even taking a Tinder date to a gig, does go a long way.
So, no, Tinder isn’t killing live music, even if it might be a sliver of the problem. It’s an interconnected ecosystem of challenges, one that indicates we’re on the precipice of something big: our live music venues need to either innovate, or we’ll see more and more close shop. Of course, it’s not about throwing the baby out with the bathwater – I recognise that there’s something timeless and human (and to a degree untainted by technology) about the experience of live music. But this could be the start of an incredible new venue experience, one we never imagined; and it all starts with you, the user.
I
I was standing
You were there
Two worlds collided
And they could never ever tear us apart
My father, like his father before him, was a sea-going man; a Captain no less, who would go to sea for many months at a time when I was young. I remember when dad came back from his long stretches on the salty sea and suddenly the house felt alive again with the chaotic energy of two young children who would tangle themselves up in their father’s embrace, rub their fat cheeks against his bristly stubble, and inhale his inimitable, familiar smell. Perhaps more vivid still, is the memory of dad putting on rock music (mostly videos of live sets, and almost always Australian rock – Midnight Oil, Cold Chisel, and the like) in the early summer afternoons when he was home, a drink clinking in his hand, the house shuddering and reverberating with the sound. This was happiness, the pure embodiment of it. I still to this day can’t shake the feeling of saturated, heady joy that comes with the memory.
The album that I remember him playing most was INXS’ Kick, released in 1987 and became arguably one of the greatest Australian rock albums ever produced; an album that soared INXS into stratospheric heights and reached platinum six times. According to BBC Music’s Cormac Heron, it’s “a near flawless collection of songs”, with a permanence and relevance that few records can match. And of course, it’s an album tinged with sadness, with the heartbreaking death of frontman Michael Hutchence in 1997, which gutted the band and the Australian public.
It would be easy (well, easy isn’t the word, but bear with me) to write about Kick with a sense of melancholy – like a heavy, grey cloud hanging over your head – knowing that those blissful heights achieved were only a precursor to Hutchence’s long fall into depression, paranoia, substance abuse and ultimately death. But I’m not going to do that. I want to remember Kick in all its unashamedly loud, spine-tinglingly good rock’n’roll glory. So here goes.
INXS comprised composer and keyboardist Andrew Farriss, drummer Jon Farriss, guitarists Tim Farriss and Kirk Pengilly, bassist Garry Gary Beers and main lyricist and vocalist Michael Hutchence. After the success of their fifth studio album, Listen Like Thieves (1985), in the words of Kirk Pengilly, INXS wanted to create “an album where all the songs were possible singles”. A dozen songs were written and composed for Kick, predominantly by Andrew Farriss and Michael Hutchence whose previous creations had given the band its strongest songs to date; The Swing, Suicide Blonde and What You Need for example. After initial resistance from Atlantic Records, who “hated it… they said there was no way they could get this music on rock radio” (manager Chris Murphy), Kick was released and catapulted into worldwide popularity, delivering four Top 10 US singles (New Sensation, Never Tear Us Apart, Devil Inside and Need You Tonight).
At just shy of 40 minutes, there’s an almost modest economy about Kick, which makes it all the more delightful to enjoy every perfectly curated song.
Kick opens with Guns in the Sky, an AC/DC-esque, anthemic rock song, with Hutchence grunting and growling against the backdrop of unapologetic, unrelenting power chords. It was this sound that boomed through my house when Dad put his CD on, causing the stairwell to shake and signaling me to run downstairs. I always knew what this sound meant: that the world was good, and the sun was bright, and my family was once again stitched together.
I always held out for New Sensation, with its unmistakable riff and thumping bass-funk backbone; my Dad’s feet would tap, and he’d point at me singing “Live baby live!”:
Live baby live! Now that the day is over
I got a new sensation
In perfect moments
Impossible to refuse
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iV-QGQVZv0k]
Devil Inside is pure pub-rock perfection, its “live feel” preserved with bare-essentials production and Michael’s characteristically raw vocals, and a divine guitar solo. You can only imagine Michael staring you down the microphone as he growls “every single one of us, the devil inside”.
I was all too innocent for what came next: Need You Tonight. Andrew Farriss recalls playing around with the demo, trying to find the right sound, while a cab waited to take him to Hong Kong. Once he got there, “Michael said, “Give me a pad and a pen.” He sat down and wrote the lyrics in something like an hour.” (Farriss). Those lyrics would become one of the most illicit seductions to ever fall on wanting ears. Literally, if you wanted to know what sex looks and sounds like, watch Michael Hutchence oozing pure sensuality, writhing around on the stage when INXS performed this live at Wembley Stadium in 1991. The spidery fingerwork feels like cold fingers running up naked skin, eliciting goosebumps, while Michael drifts seamlessly between breathy, almost conversational murmuring; “I need you tonight, ‘cos I’m not sleeping… there’s something about you girl, that makes me sweat” and passionate exclamations, “I’m lonely!”. My naivety precluded me from understanding the pure desire that’s encapsulated in this song, but what a delight it was to discover its meanings later in life. I’d understand if you needed to take a break from reading to take a cold shower after this one.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LOw-IOikL48]
With Mediate, INXS takes us into a more experimental sound, demonstrating the incredible versatility of the band and chameleonic quality of Hutchence’s voice. Mediate is a strange, drifting New Age rap, smoldering amongst a “Brian Eno-type landscape with keyboards, one which was very emotive and gentle, against a hard funk beat” (Farriss). It’s starkly different to The Loved One, the story of a raven-haired beauty walking past Hutchence to which he fell fast and hard. It’s a classic, with lyrics that even Carly Rae Jepsen would roll her eyes at, but its overly simple chorus is given an adolescent genuineness by Hutchence’s emotive delivery.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mg9mlMnQAVM]
The theme of suburban opulence is traversed with Wildlife, amidst a celebration of “big, fat ambient drums that exist in the same sonic space as these tiny little drum boxes”, with a swinging groove that builds and layers over the course of the song. The omnipotent drums and swing feel carries through to songs like Mystify and Calling All Nations, although the latter introduces slightly stronger electronic production with its distorted vocals. Kick is big and brash and bold – “straight out rock” as Farriss describes it – with phenomenal saxophone by Pengilly, and Tiny Daggers is pure Springsteen, a bright pub rock sparkler, and if you hang out long enough, you’ll hear one of the last, and equally brilliant, guitar solos on the album.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_VU9DjQpvMQ]
It seemed fitting to save Never Tear Us Apart until the end, partly because it really was – it was played at Hutchence’s funeral – but also, because it’s an extraordinary, iconic song: Michael’s tender vulnerability laid bare in simple, sweet lyrics, amid an arrangement of haunting orchestral synth, gentle backup vocals and rolling percussion. The lingering resonance of the over-strained vocals “because we all have wings but some of us don’t know why-y-y-y-y-y” still makes my throat go dry. It’s a song that clutches at you and never really lets go.
When I listen to Kick all these years later, I’m immediately taken to that time in my life when the sunlight filtered through the curtains and the joy of this album would resonate through my house. Truthfully, it was never about my happiness (not to say I wasn’t fortunate to have happiness in abundance in my childhood – I thankfully was) but the vicarious experience of this being a moment of my Dad’s happiness. At a moment in my life now, when I’ve lost just a little of my faith, and sadness and loneliness sometimes creeps in, I’ll live and breathe through the memory of sharing these moments with him: kicking back, and listening to good old rock’n’roll.
Read Andrew Farriss’ track-by-track recap of Kick (from which many of the quotes in this piece were obtained) here.
As Melbourne indie-folk five piece The Paper Kites have shown us, there’s something pretty special about the hours after midnight, when the warmth of the sun is long gone, a blanket of stars has taken over the sky, and the mood has turned solemn and peaceful, with only candlelight to guide your way through the house. This is the setting in which frontman Sam Bentley immersed himself for months to write the concept album twelvefour (the band’s upcoming second record due out August 28) which is based on the idea that an artist’s creative peak is between the hours of midnight and 4am.
The Paper Kites ensemble (Sam Bentley, Christina Lacy, Dave Powys, Josh Bentley and Sam Rasmussen) recently released the first single from twelvefour, Electric Indigo. Reflecting a bolder, more 80s soaked sound than what we’re used to hearing from the dreamy folk quintet, Electric Indigo is a painfully pretty ballad that melds stunning, harmonies with luscious, moody electric guitar. Accompanying the single is a gorgeous video clip (see below) showcasing the magic that happens after midnight when you’re just a little more spontaneous, a little more brave and yes, perhaps a little bit more socially lubricated.
I had the pleasure of speaking to Sam Bentley to hear more about making the upcoming album twelvefour. He told us about what it was like to flip his life upside down in the pursuit of creativity (“I’d fall asleep at the keyboard and I’d fall asleep on the floor”) and what it was like to collaborate with Grammy-nominated producer Phil Ek as they produced the record (“He took us aside and said, “I think you need to let these songs be what they want to be.””). Sam also told us about what it was like to collaborate with his band and how they dealt with moments of conflict and diverging views (“you can have some heated arguments, and that’s all part of making a record. It’s all of us caring about the album we make.”).
Hi Sam! Where are you calling us from?
Hi! I’m in Melbourne – and this is going to sound really lame – but I’m currently having some tea and scones. It’s pretty cold in old Melbourne here!
As you do! Thanks for taking the time to speak to me. Congrats on the new album twelvefour. It’s gorgeous and I love the story behind it (of writing between midnight and 4am). I’m kind of bummed we couldn’t do this interview at midnight!
That would’ve been great! Maybe my responses would’ve been all too honest.
That would’ve been so cool, damn. In any case, as you’ve described, twelvefour it is a concept record based around a theory that an artist’s creative peak is between the hours of midnight and 4am. I read that when your mind gets tired your focus broadens and you’re able to see more opportunities and connections. Did you feel that was the case?
Yeah, well I didn’t really know what to expect going into it. I’d only heard through conversations with friends and I’d seen someone talking about it in an interview – but we can’t even find the original interview – so we’re not even sure if we got the hours right! But that’s what I got from it so I thought, yep that sounds good – let’s do that. I found it really difficult to start off with just because I kept falling asleep! I’d fall asleep at the keyboard and I’d fall asleep on the floor, and then you’d wake up and keep trying to write something. But I think that time of night is a really moody time of night – you feel all sorts of melancholic feelings. Even that 80s-soaked vibe that you hear through the record, that’s totally the sound of that time of night – it makes you just want to put on a Cure record!
I’m so glad that you say that, The Cure is one of my favourite bands. I definitely picked up on that 80s vibe in the album. Can you take us back to those midnight writing hours and set the scene for us? Was it candlelight? Was it a mostly solitary experience?
Matt (Matthew J Cox, the filmmaker) – who directed the documentary that’s coming out – shot this really beautiful opening scene, which is very true to how the setup was. He came over at midnight and did this one long shot following me walking through the house from my bedroom, into the kitchen, and making a cup of tea, and came into the studio and turned everything on. He really nails the mood. It’s all very low light (or no light, just the moonlight showing), with a lot of candles; anything to cool the mood down a bit. I didn’t like it overly bright in there, I wanted it to feel kind of lonely and sombre. But now I’ve got the neon signs up (from the album cover) in my studio, so that would’ve been great to have.
Since Electric Indigo has come out and you’re sharing that you’ve gone through this creative process, have you had other artists reach out to share their view on their own experience, or ask for advice?
Yeah, a few people. A few writers have emailed and said they’re looking to try it or said that they felt it was true [being more creative after midnight]. I think anyone that does any sort of art or writing can identify with it – often people don’t find time throughout the day to sit down and work on their craft until those late hours. I’d definitely encourage anyone who hasn’t done it to try it – you get some interesting results. It’s funny, even if it’s not actually true, there has to be some sort of placebo effect about it; when you’re writing in those hours, you feel more creative.
I read an interview where someone had said your songs were perfect songs to drive around at midnight and clear your head with. Was it your intent that people listen to this record at night, perhaps alone?
I don’t know! I think it caters to both night and day. There are certain songs that really capture that midnight mood, like Neon Crimson; it’s so sad, and so moody. But there’s some up songs like I’m Lying To You Cause I’m Lost that are more ‘up’ songs – it doesn’t feel like a ‘late night’ kind of song, even though that’s when it was written. I think it’s not necessarily something that has to be listened to at midnight but it would be interesting to listen to it during those hours. I don’t think I have yet – I should probably do that. There were so many songs written for the record and each song was so different. We had an interesting time trying to put all the songs together.
I managed to get a preview, and as Electric Indigo may have suggested, sonically the record does feel like it explores a lot of new sounds for you – overall it feels like a bolder sound, some of the songs have a strong 80s vibe, whereas some have a quite strong country feel to it, beyond your ‘classic’ folk sound. Was it a conscious decision to explore and experiment with multiple genres?
That was the beauty of the whole twelvefour thing. I didn’t want to be held back by what I thought I should do. Sometimes you get ideas for a song but you just scrap it because it doesn’t fit with either what you expect from yourself, or what your band expected from you. I was really conscious of not doing that this time. If a song wanted to sound like a shoe gazer song, that’s what I’d let it be. Even working with Phil in Seattle, that’s what he said to us. He took us aside and said, “I think you need to let these songs be what they want to be. If the song wants to sound lush and 80s, let it sound like that. If it wants to sound gritty, let it sound like that.”
We did end up with a whole lot of different songs because I wasn’t sticking to anything, which kind of made it hard for everyone when they got all the demos. Every song was different than the last one, and a lot of weird songs that didn’t even make it on the album – like ones influenced by Massive Attack and trip hop – which didn’t quite gel with every other one. But I still wanted to let each song be what the song wanted to be. I didn’t really make any apologies for it being such a weird eclectic bunch of demos. But in culling the songs, and picking a top 10, we had to make it work together as a record – and I think it does, and I’m glad it makes sense for people, because combining like an 80s vibe with shoegaze is a little weird. There’s still elements of folk and singer songwriter that you would expect from us. We weren’t sure if it was going to work but Phil said to us, you need to trust it.
It’s great to see you flirting with different genres and being open to different sounds.
I can’t limit myself to one kind of music and I want to be a bit of a chameleon artist, I would hate to stick to one thing. I am sure it frustrates my band. I need to keep it fresh and relevant to what I’m interested in.
The Electric Indigo video clip is a story of spontaneity, bravery and all the great things that happen after midnight. Who came up with the story line?
I read it and sent it to Matt because I really wanted him to direct it. It’s actually sort of one of a trilogy, not storyline wise, but different scenarios that go on in those hours [between 12 and 4am]. We wanted to create these late night scenarios that could happen and wanted to draw on that late night mood and 80s soaked vibe – that was the first idea. Ever since I saw the song I saw something like that video with it. It was a pretty ambitious video but I think Matt did an amazing job. Charles and Laura [Charles Grounds and Laura Brent, the twelvefour actors] are so good together, they have amazing chemistry.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWF5_wdqQj0&w=560&h=315]
In the trailer for the twelvefour documentary you’ve hinted at a few moments of conflict and diverging views within your team. Can you describe what it was like to work together and how do you deal when you have moments of conflict?
The whole point was to document what it’s like to make a record and have a very candid view, and show that it’s not always easy. For each of the members of the band, we have our own ideas of what we can pull off, what we should be playing. Sometimes that clashes. When someone challenges another person in the band about what they think we should being doing, sometimes it’s hard not to get defensive or sensitive because we all care about making a good record, and when you start messing with people’s ideas … you can have some heated arguments, and that’s all part of making a record. It’s all of us caring about the album we make. But we slog it out with our conversations, each person tries to present their point about why something should make it or shouldn’t, but at the end of the day we’re all really good mates and it’s all in the best interest of trying to make something that we’re proud of. It was funny having the camera there for some of the conversations. I’m glad it’s going to show a more realistic view of what artists put into making their records.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=–rfEK-vEPk&w=560&h=315]
I’m sure that bands who are just coming together would value you being authentic about what it’s like when there’s different points of view about what direction you should take.
We certainly had a lot of moments where we were really frustrated – Matt would come up with the camera and you’d want him to piss off. I’d get really worked up about it because I’d be trying to push this idea and people wouldn’t get it, and vice versa. We were being challenged and no one was letting up. There were a few moments when we looked back and thought, gee, I hope people don’t think the band will break up because of the arguments that we had!
We definitely don’t want that – we’re big fans of you! Thanks for talking to us today Sam.
Thanks – it was lovely to speak to you.
If your bones are still achy and your legs sore from Splendour, you’ll want to ease into the week with some new videos from two strikingly different artists.
Kate Boy – Midnight Sun
Kate Boy, the Stockholm-based electro-pop group with Aussie roots (Kate Akhurst is originally from Australia) have returned with a new single, Midnight Sun ahead of their debut album ONE, set for release in November. Midnight Sun, co-produced by Christoffer Berg (Depeche Mode), is everything you want from Scandinavian pop: industrial rhythm, layered booming synth, and Kate’s contemporary, bright voice. The video accompanying the track, self-directed and shot with Emil Klang, depicts two contrasting worlds; one in black & white and one rich in colour, featuring Kate engaged in back-bending choreography spliced amongst metal architecture. Of the video, the band says: “When we wrote this song it was during a snowy December, and we were longing for the midnight sun and the endless Swedish summer days. The video is about two opposite worlds colliding and unfolding over each other.” The result is a shimmery pop delight that oozes summer, which is exactly what you need to brave the final month of winter.
Watch Midnight Sun here:
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2H7pa4OQ8rY&w=560&h=315]
Tamper – cover of Disparate Youth by Santigold
On the other side of the spectrum is Brooklyn duo Tamper, who’ve released a cover of Disparate Youth by Santigold as a follow up to their debut EP release earlier this year. A perfect sound for the mid-week blues, Tamper’s downtempo, indie-electronica vibes create a melting digression from the original Santigold version, with a backbone of rhythmic electric guitar that gives way to a building layer of textured chillwave electronica. The video is simple and peaceful; a montage of vocals, instruments and urban landscape scenery, filled with organic colours and warm pastels. If you enjoyed their phenomenal new single Take It In, you’ll dig this cover.
Check out Tamper’s cover of Santigold’s Disparate Youth here:
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0qB1n93scc?list=PLLQZq6oG0MSZNl8xjYNTR60LtpLpCnQWQ&w=560&h=315]
For the original Santigold version:
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIMMZQJ1H6E&w=560&h=315]
On a dreary, drizzly Thursday evening, as eager festival-goers trudged into the mud to set up camp, the first night of Splendour in the Grass 2015 commenced and with it came an opening party like no other, with a premium assortment of electronic dance acts, with names like Yahtzel, SLUMBERJACK and LDRU, lighting the Splendour candle at the Red Bull Music Academy stage. The scene was hectic and heaving; a feverish buzz in the air as people prepared themselves for four days of intense partying by flinging themselves into a sweaty dance mass.
If you managed to get into the stage area, you would’ve been privileged to witness the headliner set from the very suave Just A Gent, who we managed to interview just before he hit the decks.
Jacob Grant, the man behind Just A Gent, has just finished a massive national tour, has been signed to both Australian and US labels, is a Triple J Unearthed winner, and concocts some of the sickest dance floor bangers to grace your ears. Did we mention he’s just turned 18? Yeah – we feel inadequate too. This delightful chap is instantly recognisable with his slick top hat, dapper suits and pulsing, grinding electronic productions with a particular flair for remixes, having worked with the likes of ZHU, Alison Wonderland and American Authors (plus, check out the gentlemanly mix he did for us here).
[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/users/44017071″]
We caught up with Jacob to talk about his first Splendour in the Grass experience, coming of age, the iconic Just A Gent wardrobe, his current influences and his plans for the next year. Keep your ear to the ground for this gentleman – good things are ahead.
It’s your first Splendour as an 18 year old! How did you go setting up camp and getting into your gumboots?
It’s a bit messy out there, but exciting! Our tent snapped, but we got some rope, so it’s all good. I do have gumboots but they’re not very gentlemanly, neither is having no vest. I dropped my vest in the mud.
What’s in store for your headliner set tonight at the Red Bull Music Academy stage? It’s pretty hectic out there.
I came a little unprepared, I thought Byron Bay would be really chilled out, but not out there! I rocked up and watched SLUMBERJACK’s set and thought, “this is not the right time for chilled out”. My whole mind is set on getting my tent set up though – I really need to get in the mood – this is helping! I had two Red Bulls, so I think I’ll be pretty good.
Who are you planning on seeing at SITG?
There’s so many! Tame Impala – I was listening to their new album on the way down, Shlomo and Blur – once in a lifetime opportunity.
So, how big is your JAG wardrobe?
The funny thing is, all I have is suits in my wardrobe. During day-to-day I always wear these dodgy clothes from like 10 years ago because I spend all my money on suits. Recently I’ve been shopping a bit more for casual wear, not very gentleman-like. If you open my wardrobe there’s about 30 jackets and that’s all that’s in my wardrobe.
When going overseas, does your JAG outfit change according to the country you’re in?
Hmm, I can try that! But I think the English gentleman concept just sticks everywhere, as much as I’d like to try other things. When I was in the USA I wore Converses while I played, which looked really bad, but I was getting into the spirit.
Tell us about your 18th birthday just gone, and your national birthday tour? (As you do)
My birthday was in April, and it was really fun! At a few of the gigs I was made to skull drinks on stage – but I’m meant to be a gentleman on stage! The whole crowd was encouraging me to do it. They were the best gigs I’ve played so far – Perth was probably a highlight.
Now you’re 18 and a full-on adult, what does the next year entail for you? Can you give us any hints?
It’s been so long since I’ve released any music, so it’s in the works. Right now I’ve been focussing on production, but I have a few shows over the next few months planned and then back to production again. I’ve recently signed to a big record label (both in Australia and the US), but I want to stick in Australia for as long as I can.
Having turned 18 we imagine you’re experiencing a bit of pressure to possibly go to university, move away from home and make some big life choices. What are your thoughts on that?
Yeah, I’m feeling the pressure a little bit, especially because I left school in Year 10 to focus on music. What should I do? Do I need to grow up yet? I’ll move one day (from Newcastle) but not for now. I’m still happy working from home.
I read at one point you had something like 200 projects on the go at one time. Is that how you like to make music?
I produce every day, and I try to make an idea per day. It’s a thing I’ve been doing for ages. I used to get caught on tracks that went nowhere, so I decided to focus on a track a day, and sometimes I spend extra time on extra tracks – they’re generally the ones that are released *laughs*. Back then I had 200 … now I have no idea how many.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ha_WQ6mI6iA&w=560&h=315]
Has your sound been evolving? Are you being influenced by any particular artists at the moment?
It’s definitely changing all the time – my sound has been getting darker. It’s funny, I feel happier, but my music is getting darker. I’ve been listening to a bunch of stuff, like SLUMBERJACK who are playing now. Their drums are incredible. Other influences are MR•CAR/\\ACK, osky (from Brisbane), Apache and NGHTMRE.
Awesome. Well, we’re seriously looking forward to your set – have fun and enjoy the rest of your Splendour!
You can find out more about Just A Gent’s upcoming shows here.


