New Zealand artist Silicon has been fined and pulled from the Laneway Festival bill following an incident at the Adelaide leg, in which he somehow kissed a policeman’s gun – which is apparently illegal.
The artist, real name Kody Nielson (and incidentally the brother of Ruban Nielson of Unknown Mortal Orchestra,) took to Twitter to voice his side of the story, and apologise to fans, because it looks like he won’t be performing at of the remaining Laneway festivals, including today’s event in Brisbane, and tomorrow’s in Sydney.
https://twitter.com/S_I_L_I_C_O_N/status/695466812922703872
https://twitter.com/S_I_L_I_C_O_N/status/695478096523194368
https://twitter.com/S_I_L_I_C_O_N/status/695511448764592128
https://twitter.com/S_I_L_I_C_O_N/status/695524014446366720
Nielsen then continued to cast judgement on Australia’s immigration policies, because y’know, that’s relevant.
https://twitter.com/S_I_L_I_C_O_N/status/695555789793067008
https://twitter.com/S_I_L_I_C_O_N/status/695575846019436545
Two things. Firstly am I the only one who has been really confused by the logistics of this story? How did he get that close to a policeman – and their gun, no less? Was it on stage? Who else was there? How did it play out exactly?
Secondly, while I’m as big a fan of Silicon as any (you can read Howl & Echoes’ stellar review of his recent album Personal Compter right here) this was a really dumb move.
It’s pointlessly provocative and completely unnecessary. It’s not cool or interesting, and guns sure as hell aren’t cool either. Police are at the event to ensure the safety and security of punters, and while we’re hardly suggesting that Australia isn’t a nanny state right now, this is just stupid and thoughtless. Police carry guns everywhere – not just festivals, so it’s not like it was a stab at the festival’s hyper-security. It doesn’t achieve anything, it doesn’t highlight anything or change anything. It’s Nielson’s own fault for acting out, and causing hundreds of fans to miss catching him live on the festival’s remaining legs.
Admittedly, I disagree with the festival’s needless decision to kick him off the entire tour circuit, he’s got nobody to blame but himself – certainly not the police or “Lameway.”
Anyway, Laneway continues today, with or without Silicon in tow. Full details can be found here.
Image: Twitter
The idea behind Silicon’s new album, Personal Computer, seemed a bit passe to me. Producing a piece of art centred on the tech-addicted automatons of the 21st century was obvious to say the least. Tropes about being alone in a vast digital fortress of faceless avatars, or losing one’s identity in the monster of online self-representation, have been strummed by some rather uncouth hands. I was struck with a sense that my assumptions were to be confirmed when I pressed play on Personal Computer. The title track begins with the voice of a broken, out-of-battery Bender (I miss you so Futurama) stating, “Never be lonely. Personal Computer. Someone that is listening. Personal Computer.” But, Nielson’s mostly pessimistic critique of the faux reality of pixels, is given via the textured, beat-flecked medium of soul and funk. Nielson’s future-soul-funk and his honeyed voice serve as the perfect vessels for us Apple-poisoned technophiles.
Personal Computer just sounds so good. Silicon is a master of retooling all the best that the 70s and 80s has to offer. He employs synths like voices; they move up and down, harmonise, and break into solo runs. The bass line always bounces in this oblique, off-centre way that gives the album’s general sleepiness an awakened flexibility. It is funny because, at some points, it feels like the sonic circus that Nielson has rallied will collectively collapse into a deep drowse. But, he always manages to flick just enough retro-funk, or jazz into the mix to enliven the beat. Something has to be said for Nielson’s voice, which warbles in this dark D’angelo-esque way, especially when he lifts it into falsetto and crackles and shakes with control.
I am really digging the saccharine sound of Personal Computer, not only because it is nice to listen to, but also because it evinces a clever irony. By carefully engineering the sonic resurrection of soul and funk in savvy silicon form, Nielson suggests that the technocracy has slipped its fingers into the production process. It is the splicing of genres; the glitzy, almost-pixellated post-pop; the manufactured soul of future soul. Nielson uses it all to not only make beautiful music, but also to imitate and, by so doing, parody the internet’s non-life, its flaccid and false copying of ‘the real’. Whilst this might be seen by some as a high-minded, disconnected experiment, I would argue that the record captures both sonically and lyrically the ubiquitous immersion of the 21st century in technology. Nielson declares this in Submarine where a disfigured voice beckons, “Follow me/To the sea,” or in Cellphone’s proclamation, “My body’s in the water, it’s colder than we think.”
It was not too long ago that Kody Nielson could be seen alongside his brother Ruben (now frontman of Unknown Mortal Orchestra) vomiting out rage, whilst manhandling their audience with their signature schizo-pop volcanism. When a member of The Mint Chicks, Nielson had channeled the indignation of his contemporaries in punk noise-experimentation. Now, Nielson has exchanged his pointed barbarism for the smooth gossamer-net of funk-soul. Rather than beat us, and all proximate instruments, with the reality of our disempowerment, Silicon has chosen to wrap us with silky synths, fat funk and multi-instrumental musings. Whilst it is a dramatic evolution – from knockabout screamer and noisemaker to weaver of digital age-critiquing sex music – Nielson has produced a memorable, and perspicacious record.