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LISTEN: Flume – ‘Sleepless’ (Paces Remix)

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Mike Perry is Paces. He’s also the other half of Gold Coast DJ duo Surecut Kids. Probably another whiteboy DJ waxing lyrical/pseudo-tropical in a Hawaiian shirt – but this remix of Flume’s ‘Sleepless’ is one of the better ones circulating around at the moment. I’m usually not a remix kinda gal, but I’m really getting into this. It’s also the only form of enlightenment that’s making typing this from the suburban arsehole of 12C Melbourne taste a little like a nice, fancy overpriced cocktail. Cheers dude.

WATCH: Velociraptor – ‘The Walk On By’

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So they’ve forever crippled organised crime, died in various horrific ways and done…. whatever was going on here.
Velociraptor’s new single ‘The Walk On By’ from their mini-EP The World Warriors, is a lesson in zombie-slaying and a good stab at making low-budget high-quality.
It features a mixture of live action arse-kicking (and NIDA-worthy acting) and some great drawings from Brisbane artist Sam McKenzie. The track is also rad as hell, so make sure you’ve got enough room to dance like a moron before pressing play.

Velociraptor are currently on tour!

Thurs October 11th – Alpha Beta @ The Coolangatta Hotel, Gold Coast

Fri October 12th – Alhambra Lounge, Brisbane

Sun October 14th – Sunday Safari @ Buddah Bar, Byron Bay

Fri October 19th – The Tote, Melbourne

Sat October 20th – Ed Castle, Adelaide

Sat October 27th – The Hive, Brisbane – All ages.

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Melbourne Music Week

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Brilliant. Yeah. That’ll be the word used all over the interwebs when describing Melbourne Music Week. The program is out friends and let me just say it – Melbourne is the music capital of Australia. MMW is as diverse as it is crowd pleasing. Heaps of music stuff linked up with the most creative artists, film makers and industry specialists. Performances, exhibitions, workshops and special talks, walks and even a breakfast program. Too cool Melbourne. Let’s talk specifics:

WHERE?HOUSE

A hidden warehouse forming the heart of the festival. Well not so much hidden… you can’t hide a warehouse can you? But the location is secret. All will be revealed on Friday 16 November. Internationals will mix with locals with themed nights of very interesting music. Straight Arrows, Bitch Prefect, Oliver Tank, Lost Animal, Courtney Barnett, Terrible Truths and No Zu have all got slots. Brilliant.

LABELS SERIES

Chapter Music are celebrating their 20th Birthday with an indie music spectacle sure to make even the most hardened mess + noise critic weep with joy. Crayon Fields, Twerps, Pikelet, Laura Jean, Primitive Calculators, Bum Creek, Standish/Carlyon, Jonny Telafone, New Estate and more. Not that you’ll need it. Tickets are still available here – loco. Cutters Records and Two Bright Lakes are doing a sweet night and so is Siberia Records. All worth a look.

LIVE MUSIC SAFARI

Ok, here is where Melbourne just shows off. It’s like when European cities open the doors to old museums and stuff for one night except this features more than 40 Melbourne musicians/dj’s most of who have been plugged on here before so you can be sure it’ll be a massive night of awesome. They are playing at ten of Melbourne’s most famed least shit venues all in one day/night and it’s free. Boom.

Of course there are heaps of other things happening as I mentioned in that pumping lead paragraph so check the festival guide. One last thing though –

SIGNAL PRESENTS //THIS THING//

Yeah I’ve got a sweet spot for ‘This Thing’ cause they are… Brilliant! They are doing a free event (did I mention how much of this festival is free – it’s crazy y’all) at Signal, Northbank Flinders Walk which is one of those places that you go by and think, damn it’s sweet to live in Melbourne. It’ll be ‘all ages’ and will definitely blow the minds of every unsuspecting tourist passing by. Be there.

We’ll update you with more details of good stuff closer to the date on our Facebook but keep an eye on the festival site:

Melbourne Music Week

LISTEN: Teeth & Tongue – ‘The Party Is You’

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Beautifully haunting, emotionally uplifting, a real talent from down under. Melbourne based musician Jess Cornelius aka Teeth & Tongue has delivered another truley impressive piece of well-considered contemporary rock.

I hope that quote ends up on the next Teeth & Tongue press release. Not to build the ‘who the hell’ brand (pftt… as if we need it) but because it’s true. Also it’s totes eloquent writing yeah, for real.

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Teeth & Tongue ‘The Party Is You’

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COLLECTIVE PEG #3

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All our Collective PEG contributors last month were all dudes. Nothing wrong with that, but hey – I’m all for gender balance in music and beyond.

So here’s Collective PEG #3 – slightly more femme themed, but still with the usual helping of new and interesting Aussie tunes to get you through your month.

Big thanks to our lady-pals who curated this month: Isabella Manfredi, Jenny Valentish, Courtney Barnett, Holly Friedlander Liddicoat & Paris Martine.


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ISABELLA MANFREDI


Isabella Manfredi fronts Sydney Goth Soul band The Preatures. She is currently undertaking the Tracy Anderson workout DVD challenge in the privacy of her own home, and likes listening to Harry Nilsson and Randy Newman back to back.

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Seekae – ‘Gnor’

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Sometimes you have that catastrophic moment when you realise somebody you’ve assumed is just a nice, normal guy is actually a genius, or in a really, really good band. This happens to me a lot. It happened last month when I saw Seekae live and my brain caved in (a definite improvement). The Preatures have shared a studio with Seekae for almost a year now, and by tunnel vision and ignorance we had no idea who we were living with. To me they were just handsome John, handsome Alex, and George. George doesn’t need an adjective. But last month they invited us to see them play the first of 3 sold out nights at The Basement in Sydney. I expected it to be loud and overwhelming, but stepping up to the stage among the people, I started to part with my anxious body. The music whitewashed my mind clean as a cold tile, and everything around us moved with the same purpose like the release and tension in a kaleidoscope. It was artistic, and extremely beautiful. But more than that, it was the epitome of beauty; like the synchronicity of particles, the meaning of the universe, the purity of math. It was a complete relief from my own way of making music. That’s why, after one live show, they’re my favourite Australian band.

www.seekae.com

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HOLLY FRIEDLANDER LIDDICOAT


Holly Friedlander Liddicoat is the sole writer/owner at East to West, a blog which focuses 100% on Australian electronic sounds. She also writes for Portals and No Fear of Pop, but at the moment is taking some time off to get reacquainted with nature and the world outside of the internet. You’ll occasionally catch her on the Allnighter on FBi Radio, so if she digs your tunes that is where they’ll end up.

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Kharkov – ‘Rise’

Based in Melbourne, Kharkov and his label Brother Sister have been great championers of all things minimal/powerful and exciting in our Asia Pacific region. With some great compatriots based in Seoul and Kuala Lumpur, the calibre of tuneage coming out of these guys is unreal. Kharkov himself is a standout, his track Rise being featured on the ‘IO’ compilation, which showcases a stack of the Brother Sister artists and is well worth the couple of bucks on Itunes. It’s dark and shimmery and energetic, and really is a great representation of the talented minds behind the young and blossoming Australian dance music scene.

kharkovweb.com

 

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PARIS MARTINE


Paris Martine is a band booker best known for bringing the good stuff to venues around Melbourne. She’s done stints for Roxanne Parlour and Billboard The Venue and has booked everyone from Vanilla Ice to Peaches, and Beach House to Roland S Howard.  Paris was the first booker at The Workers Club and put the venue on the map by programming bands on the verge of big things, as well as heritage acts who she persuaded to play on the small stage. She’s also known for starting up Melbourne venue Phoenix Public House.

And to add to her long resume, she’s chalked up the coordinating arm too – running events for myriad of businesses including Lifelounge, Three Thousand, MTV, Laneway Festival, Future Entertainment to name a few. More recently, she’s assisted in booking acts for Melbourne Music Week and delegates for Face The Music conference. Paris is also band manager to Francolin.

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No Zu – ‘Fa Foma Fi’

What do I like? Lyrics. Jarrod Quarrell‘s golden lung. Kirin J Callinan’s lewd ‘Thighs’. Or Teeth and Tongue‘s ‘Unfamiliar Skirts’. There is usually an element of cynicism and playfulness to the music I like. This is why Francolin interested me, they use music and lyrics to, as David Nichols so aptly put it, “cast a critical and withering eye on their world and their part in it”. Lyrical themes about good natured slackers found in Lower Plenty, Dick Diver’s ‘New Start’ and Bitch Prefect‘s ‘Bad Decisions’ – my music taste starts to take shape.

Maybe my love of lyrics is why I never completely connected with jazz or funk and although I dig beat-based music, it’s rare for it to stick to me.  I make all of these observations to magnify how rare I find Nicolaas Oogjes’s project – No Zu. No Zu combine genres of music that haven’t had a lasting effect on me and they distort language with nonsensical lyrics and yet the result is music that I LOVE.  I know this track is not spankin’ new and I really should try harder.. But hell, I don’t get asked what I like often enough to waste this opportunity.

Here’s a sack of stolen words that describe No Zu’s life; delayed trumpets, obsession with the ideas of ‘exotica’ and ‘Australiana’, tribal beats, psychedelic texturing, the avant-garde 80‘s, and endless David Byrne references that come from the use of interpretive vocals.  The album is classy. Nao has done a sublime job with the recording.  My only bone is Daphne’s vocals should be up in ‘Fa Foma Fi’.  Daphne can’t help but stand out in any project. She is like a cat amongst the pigeons. I once asked her to make me a mix tape and it was studded with trashy, questionable 90s dance anthems.  She is also responsible for introducing me to the brilliance that is Mark Ronson’s ‘Somebody To Love Me’ ft. Boy George. Guilty pleasures.

Around I go dancin’ bout architecture… wearing a bulletproof expression made for people who are not great at music journalism.  The song I am dancin’ to is ‘Fa Foma Fi’. It’s in the background. Drown me out & turn it up up up up!

nozu.bandcamp.com
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COURTNEY BARNETT

Courtney Barnett plays guitar and writes songs. She put out her first EP I’ve Got A Friend Called Emily Ferris this year. She also plays with Immigrant Union and Jen Cloher.

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The Merri Creek Pickers – ‘Starlight Dreammaker’

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The Merri Creek Pickers wrote this 11 minute opus in the bungalow at my place. Over the few months it took them to finish their epic journey I saw them spiral into an obsessive musical hole fueled by tea and the dead. A Guernica abyss. However, where Picasso’s masterpiece was born from war and torment, ‘ Starlight Dreammaker’ was born from a label on a mattress.

merricreekpickers.bandcamp.com

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JENNY VALENTISH


Jenny Valentish is the editor of Time Out Melbourne and former editor of Triple J Magazine.

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Dune – ‘Shoestring’

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When Jade MacRae found herself in the unenviable position of relaunching her career – having taken time off to support husband Phrase and rethink her public persona –  she had to acknowledge that her name was no longer considered current currency by some sectors of the industry.

The role she’d fallen into, as the sunny soul singer invited to guest on TV shows, didn’t feel authentic to her any more. Lately, the former Sydney Conservatorium student had been composing strange, stark new tracks with a futuristic bent on the vintage synths of her father – a musician who had been embroiled in the 1970s experimental electronica scene of the UK. In order to pursue this, she was willing to go it alone, label-free, as Dune.

At her debut Melbourne show in August, I felt like I was at the beginning of something big. I heard glints of The Belle Stars, Bow Wow Wow, The Go-Gos, Santigold and Warpaint in the steel drums and tribal rhythms, while Jade has referenced Gary Numan and Brian Eno as production influences. She utilised a live rhythm section and projections of initiation ceremonies, Egyptian dances and wild animal footage that emphasised the lone wolf feel. Above all that were her famous vocal chops, still evident even in this new incarnation.

Lyrically, first single ‘Shoestring’ encompasses her willingness to sacrifice everything she’s worked for, both for love and for integrity.

thisisdune.tumblr.com