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LISTEN: Bushwalking – ‘No Enter’

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It’s such a treat to share Australian music every week. And some weeks it really does floor me how much great music comes across my desk. Today I’ll kick off with the excellent release from Bushwalking’s forthcoming LP No Enter. This is the titled track from the group formed by Ela Stiles from Songs with Nisa Venerosa from Fabulous Diamonds and Karl Sculllin from Kes Band. The opening bass line sounds like something My Disco might create if they had vaginas. I don’t mean to be controversial. This sound is pleasantly devoid of the male pounding that typically drives “droning jams over tightly regimented songs”, mess and noise.

It takes a hellova lot of restrain to create this mood. Far more beautiful and enchanting than a Celine Dion record, Bushwalking is music that your church group can get behind. Instantly recognisable for its thick bass, spiralling guitar and stirring vocals. No Enter follows on from First Time released last year and will be out through Chapter music on September 6, as the Americans say.

We’ll preview more from the LP in the coming months.

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WHOTHE HELL PRESENTS: Fifth Floor Warehouse Party ft. The Murlocs

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Anyone who has a decent appreciation for local music understands the importance of a shoddy venue. If the walls aren’t peeling, the toilet seat isn’t unhinged and the floor doesn’t sound like velcro when you trod on it, it’s probably not worth your time. This might be though. Along with the folk from Mess & Noise and Inpress, we’re proud to present the first installment of a warehouse party series by Fifth Floor.

Not many of us live on Lena Dunham’s party budget so don’t expect a mechanical bull or…this. Fifth Floor however, have put together a solid line up of bands, Baby Janis and the country’s finest projection artists to make your eyes pop.

The party will be held at a “secret” location on Saturday August 3rd with a venue announcement closer to the date. Headlining the bill are our favourites The Murlocs and joining them are Flyying Colours, Strangers From Now On (who played our last party), The Octopus Ride, Dan Trolley and Premium Fantasy. There will be plenty of visual art and projections happening too (because, Brunswick) – courtesy of Thomas Russell aka. Astral Projection & ZonkvisionIf that’s not enough of a social lubricant for you, then you ought to stay home. 

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First batch of tickets have sold out but another round have recently been released.

Buy tickets via Oztix here. Full details on the Facebook event page.

LISTEN: Sures – ‘Waste’

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Sydney band Sures came to our ears in 2011, then resurfaced again in March last year with the EP Stars – a slickly produced collection of surf rock tunes with bubblegum melodies that sounded a helluva lot like the Drums. Fittingly, Sures went on to support acts like Wavves and Vampire Weekend, they signed with Ivy League and now they’ve got a follow-up EP in the works.

New single ‘Waste’ is more Surfer Blood than Best Coast, the band setting aside the 60s-girl-group inspiration and teen-heart-throb vocals for something a bit heavier. It feels like there’s a lot of anger behind this track, which opens with the line ‘I don’t know what to do but I can tell that you’ve been wasting my time’. Tension builds throughout, as elements accumulate and the melodic motif circles, releasing emphatically in the song’s furious final third with a shouted refrain backed by insistent drumming, the fuzzed out guitar growing louder and louder. Exhausting itself in under three minutes, ‘Waste’ is a satisfying ride for anyone with some baggage to discard.

‘Waste’ is available now through iTunes, and Sures’ new EP is due out on 23 August. In the meantime, Sydneysiders can catch Sures at the Standard with Glass Towers on Friday, 16 August.

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LISTEN: Circular Keys – ‘Eurogrand’

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An older track from Melbourne’s Circular Keys called ‘Eurogrand’ has been released on 7″ vinyl through Bedroom Suck Records. Circular Keys are Phillipa O’Shea and Dennis Santiago and despite having been working on plenty of music and playing shows, this is their first commercial release. It follows an initial digital-only release of ‘Possessed’, which is now the accompanying B-Side track chosen for the ‘Eurogrand’ vinyl.

It’s another well-produced, atmospheric track. I like this sound and love the haunting riffs and jarring vocals but I’m quite nervous that this can translate in a live environment. It’ll take considerable patience from an audience that I’m not sure exists in this country… I see Berlin on the horizon.

The accompanying video was made by Santiago’s brother Alberto, using footage shot on holiday in Vietnam. I guess there’s a parallel in that it flows like the track but otherwise it’s just nice footage. Set adrift in the ocean with this one:

 

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PREMIERE: Damn Terran – ‘Lost’

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Damn Terran are first and foremost, a live band. That’s their currency, and they’re not compromising that for anything else.

Their new track ‘Lost’ is essentially…Damn Terran. What else did you expect? There’s no mulling around here. ‘Lost’ is a pulsating post-grunge number – wrought by layers of drone-like guitar and the usual splattering of guttural vocal exchanges between Lachlan Ewbank and Ali E (Heavy Beach, Little Athletics, mag publisher, lady crush). The thing I love best about this track is that there’s hardly filler – it’s indicative and true to what you’ll get in a live setting from these guys. The ink blowing video accompanying the track by Grant Joslin is hell neat too.

Damn Terran have been recording their self-titled debut with the excellent Nao Anzai, with the 20th of September set in as a launch date. Get around it.

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LISTEN: Bad//Dreems – ‘Badlands’ EP

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Adelaide’s Bad//Dreems have come a long way since recording their first demos at the Fish Shop with a bloke going by the charming name of ‘Fester’. Coming from a town that’s sometimes seen as a bit of a cultural backwater, the guys are getting some serious attention in the lead up to the release of their debut EP, Badlands.

The EP was named for the southern capital’s derelict northern suburbs – an area of disused factories, abandoned motor tracks and dried-out grasslands. In songwriter Alex Cameron’s words, it’s ‘the weird murder hamlet’ of his hometown. The songs are about the frustration of feeling out of the metropolitan loop. They deal with ‘isolation, claustrophobia, doomed relationships, bad Sundays, fear of home life, paranoia, dreaming, kicking against the pricks …’.

Badlands opens with the misanthropic ‘Chills’, which was inspired by one of those intense heat waves that only South Australia can produce. ‘Take me away where the sun don’t shine / Give me chills, give me darkness all day / Make me sick, let my soul rot away,’ vocalist Ben Marwe sings. ‘I’m only happy when nobody’s happy’.

‘Chills’ is the first single Bad//Dreems released, back in January 2012. It’s notable for being the only track on the EP that was recorded by Jack Farley during the band’s first Melbourne studio session. Farley’s known for his work with groups like the Twerps and Scott and Charlene’s Wedding, and ‘Chills’ fits right in with bands like these, referencing the sound of Australian and Kiwi music from the late 70s and 80s.

The rest of the songs on Badlands were produced by Woody Annison, a guy the band describes as having ‘the energy of a jack russell and the constitution of an elephant’. These recordings really pack a punch, separating themselves markedly from the lo fi, ‘jangly’ aesthetic so common in the Australian indie scene. The new tone is forceful and jagged. Merwes’ rich, throaty delivery is a cut above earlier takes, sounding as compelling and frayed as a young Paul Westerberg.

We’ve already played you the brilliant ‘Hoping For’; lead single ‘Caroline’ is also a ripper. It opens with rollicking drums, which sticksman Miles Wilson says were inspired by Paul Kelly (Paul Kelly on a high dose of amphetamine, maybe), vicious chords and a fast-paced lick. The chorus is cathartic, releasing what sounds like months or even years of pent-up anger. ‘Home Life’ is a dark number that calls to mind the post-hardcore sound of Lync, and the searing guitar and icy post-punk textures of ‘Tomorrow Mountain’ are a world away from the affable band we used to know. Merwes rasps on the track with an almost frightening disaffection: ‘I am bored / I am lonely / I’m scared / I’m scared’.

Bad//Dreems have got to be one of the best bands Adelaide’s produced in decades (agreeing to pretend, for one pleasant minute, that Barnesy never happened). They’ve got a sound that’s distinctly Australian, but frankly, they’re a mile ahead of the pack.

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Badlands is out through Mirador today. Get it here and here.

These are the launch dates – don’t miss them:

Friday, 26 July – the Gasometer, Melbourne with the Clits, Velcro, the mysterious and shit hot Destiny 3000 and the Angel and Baby Chain

Saturday, 27 July – the Hotel Metropolitan with Summer Flake and the Ocean Party

Saturday, 3 August – Spectrum, Sydney with Drown Under and special guests

STORYBOARD: I’lls – A Warm Reception

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The last six months have been amongst the best of my time. A home base in Toronto and extensive travels about North America gave me the time and space to work on different projects while consuming Australian music through a more long-form process.

Each flight, cross city train ride, or 7 hour bus ride across great snowy landscapes lent itself to a more reflective consumption of music. In particular, new records from Beaches and Standish/Carlyon demanded my attention. But it was A Warm Reception, the new EP by I’lls that kept swallowing my thoughts.

What follows is a series of camera phone pictures accompanied by direct quotes from the stranger folks I met along the way.

It’s an essay explaining a visual and very personal story of a 6 week road trip circling the East Coast of the USA; driving from the fishing villages in Maine, stopping by haunted mansions in Savannah – to hanging out in dingy New Orleans jazz clubs and tourist-ing the maze of museums in DC. The colour, smell, sound and atmosphere of 5000 miles of the pure American dream…

 

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Track 1: ‘Speak Low’

Listen to

“I don’t drink coffee. Or drink that much. I’m not really addicted to anything…except, well, I’m a sex addict. Anyway, so you want to hear a haunted story?”.

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Track 2: ‘Plans Only Drawn’

Listen to

“I hear you like the Man From Snowy River? I’m a big fan. I’ve got an 8’ kangaroo whip. I’ll crack it for y’all if you like?”

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Track 3: ‘Outright’

Listen to

“I play a Benjamin Franklin glass harmonica for tourists on the freedom trail. I’ve pretty much learnt every national anthem so that if someone asks for the… Mongolian national anthem (she gestures with her fingers) I can play it.”

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Track 4: ‘Sharing’

Listen to

“Aren’t you two just a gorgeous couple? And on this lovely sunny day, that’ll be a pretty picture.”

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Track 5: ‘To All The Blurred’

Listen to

“Oh, hey… I laid some carpet in Elvis’ house. 6 weeks after he died. Man, that was a long time ago. Hey could you spare some change for a veteran with colon cancer?”

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Track 6: ‘Mine’s Here or My End’s Here or Nineteen’

Listen to

“My biggest fear is losing my special lady friend cause that’s what gets me through the night.”

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I’lls Warm Reception EP available through Yes Please here.

Catch them launching the EP tonight at Yes Please’s 2nd Birthday:

July 18 – Melbourne
The Worker’s Club
$12 pre-sale
$15 door

with Fishing
Wintercoats
Guerre
The Townhouses

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