Posts By Melissa Tan

INTRODUCING: Twin Caverns

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twin caverns

Too bad I love easy/sleazy listening. I cultivated this when Portishead was apparently a thing, when torrenting Ministry of Sound’s ‘Chillout Sessions’ catalogue was a thing and more recently when someone ousted me for listening to Sade’s greatest hits after leaving my Spotify on public.

Anyway, new Sydney duo Twin Caverns (Louise Millar and Michael Macias) recently did nice things to my ears and feelings. The pair draw similar parallels to other beat/vocal heavy duos like Alta and Audego – and more recently, every internet person’s rework of that Japanese Wallpaper x Wafia tune. Millar isn’t related to fellow Sydney vocal cameo star Nicole Millar, although the two do share an affinity for making a soundtrack for pool days and vanilla coated vocals.

Twin Caverns recently released their second single ‘Undiscover’. Similar to previous track ‘Swell’, the duo lean towards a more simple equation. That incandescent treble guitar line that starts the track off leaves Millar’s vocal refrain hanging from the ceiling. Thankful that this is probably one of the few decent duos that aren’t milking the drop vocal effect or the Flume formula which makes every downbeat sound like it’s being wrung through the ass end of a Microsoft vocoder. Twin Caverns need to give themselves a big midi hi-five here. Slick composition x thoughtful chords work perfectly together. This needs to happen IRL.

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INTRODUCING: Rabble Rouser

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Rabble Rouser

When a band emails you claiming they sound like Grinderman and Television, you take everything at a half-truth really. Melbourne’s Rabble Rouser aren’t quite crude, doom-slaying middle agers just yet (truly, no is quite as frightening as Warren Ellis in my mind anyway). On their split double A side featuring ‘I’m a Human Blues’, So Damn Tired’ and the blunt, 43 second ‘Wicked Chair’, the band sway from grovelling noise punk to tender, square-eyed pop like some kind of bipolar Tom Verlaine.

Rabble Rouser aren’t just a bunch of surf chumps fiddling around the psych-punk circuit though. As soon as that speckled treble guitar emerges from catacomb of an intro in ‘I’m A Human Blues’, Nick Allbrook’s soul takes flight with the wind – and in a moment of tenderness and absolute chaos, all seems all and right with the world. The guys are currently recording a five track EP in Blairgowrie to be released in the coming months. For now, catch I’m a Human Blues // So Damn Tired as a free download at Rabble Rouser’s bandcamp.

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MAP – January 2013

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map

MAP – the giant worldly music compilation behemoth we’ve helped chip at for 5 years has arrived again for January. Cool tunes from where your ears wouldn’t usually take you. Argentina and India’s picks are particularly impressive this month. Also, if you haven’t heard our recent MAPCAST wrap-up podcast from Robbie, scoot over to our Soundcloud.

We choose our MAP submissions by the 25th of each month. If you’re an Australian artist and think that the folks from Brazil to Iceland should hear your stuff, submissions are welcome – editors@whothehell.net.

Right-click on the song title to download an mp3, or grab a zip file of the full 27-track compilation through Ge.tt here.

ARGENTINA: Zonaindie
QueridasDrama Bomb

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Andrés Yeah is the lead guitarist of Mi Nave, an up-and-coming band from Rosario’s independent music scene. Queridas is his solo project, full of songs with melancholy, reverb and shoegaze guitars. Drama Bombo is one of our favorites.

AUSTRALIA: Who The Bloody Hell Are They?
Head CloudsMirror’s Image

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Head Clouds are a Gold Coast band who have been busy working on their debut LP for more than a year. Mirror’s Image may be the first track we’ve heard from them but it’s definitely no wallflower. Jaykke Maddison is a less erratic version of Wild Beasts’ Hayden Thorpe; there’s hardly room for shirking away with that falsetto. A glorious trumpet crescendo and thoughtful lyricism lights up this track. A band to watch.

BRAZIL: Meio Desligado
BoogarinsLucifernandis

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Os Mutantes, the psychedelic tropical band from the 60s, is one of the main influences of Boogarins, besides affinities with contemporary artists such as Tame Impala and Of Montreal. Lucifernandis is the opening song of their debut album, As Plantas Que Curam, released in 2013.

CANADA: Quick Before It Melts
TeledromeBoyfriend

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Calgary, Alberta, best known as the home of an annual Stampede and being firmly rooted in cowboy culture, may be the last place you’d expect a synth-based power-pop-punk outfit to emerge from. But Teledrome is the latest cultural contradiction to come from Cowtown, and perhaps one of its finest. Boyfriend is a sample of the synth-laced solemnity offered up on their soon-to-be-released album.

CHILE: Super 45
Kinetica & MotivadoHoy Quiero

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Kinetica & Motivado brings together Chilean producers Emiliana Araya and Mario Martinez. Although we have previously highlighted both projects separately, their joint work deserves its own limelight. Mixing Kinetica’s mysterious, nocturnal vocals with Motivado’s tropical beats, their collaboration gives rise to sensual, intelligent electronic music. Their first single, Hoy Quiero, was released on Chilean label Discos Pegaos.

Click below to hear the full playlist.

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STUFF WE LIKED IN 2013.

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A lot of great Australian music was put out this year. We won’t be making an end of year list about end of year lists. (If you want a leisurely round-up, sit down with a tinnie, roll up your sleeves and read our archives).

However, for the last hurrah of 2013 – a year of self-funded labels, concept festivals on hilly rural estates and an upsurge in pressed suits – we’ve frantically decided to compile a mega-post in the hope that you’ll resolve your new year by buying one of these records. We’ve included artists of sentimental value – some who we’ve already covered this year, some we haven’t written about yet.

We’ll keep low on the sentimental fluff, but it’s been a great year for WTH too. We welcomed a bunch of bright writers and photographers, started a monthly podcast with our blog friends from around the globe, hosted a number of warehouse parties and events, with one recently in Berlin. Our role in documenting Australian music took a visual focus this year. Instead of sending our photographers to photo pits, they’ve ended up in in Vietnamese restaurantsback-lot studios, tropical themed boats and parking lots scoffing chiko rolls with some of the country’s best (see our photo recap in full here).

We also recently said farewell to our assistant editor/ long serving photography contributor Dave Payne who’s hanging up his blog boots to focus on his career. Dave has been an incredible driver behind Who The Hell. For those needing journo/photography work, you can say nice things to him via here or heckle him over yonder. We wish him the best!

To the artists who’ve contacted us with your work, we’re getting through it all – thanks! You label folk and bookers who keep us in the loop are heaps cool too. Hugs to our friends, collaborators & blog perusers from our backyard and abroad – thanks for reading and listening. We’re 7 years on…and chugging along.

2014 will be fun.

 

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End of year lists have always seemed pretty arbitrary to me, and so much great Australian music was released this year that rather than trying to narrow it down to three favourites, I thought I’d focus on some bands that didn’t get as much exposure in 2013 as they deserved. Shout outs to the always on point Crawlspace Magazine for keeping me abreast of these things and to the busy kids up in Brisbane – keep moving down to Melbourne, thanks.

2013-annie-toller

 Sadglint – ‘Sadglint (Spartak’s Love Like Fire reduxxx)

Brisbane’s Rohan Cooper put out his debut EP as Sadglint in December 2012. Cooper is a multi-instrumentalist whose solo work is based on loops that spiral and float, with drums and horns provided by Jacob Hicks and Richard Thayil. Feral Media, which has had a swag of great releases this year, including the Winter and Spring instalments of its Seasons EP series and Nimble AnimalBleak Moments LP – picked up the track ‘Sadglint’ for its remix compilation Strain of Origin IIIThe reworking by Canberra duo Spartak is expertly restrained, stripping back an already stately track and making a centrepiece of the horns that crest the original.


 

Primitive Motion – ‘Colours’

Another product of Brisbane’s lively experimental scene, Primitive Motion released their first LP, Worlds Floating By through Bedroom Suck in September. Comprised of Leighton Craig of Deadnotes and visual artist Sandra Selig, Primitive Motion describe their sound as ‘neanderthal pulsewave’. With drum machines ticking propulsively, the constant oscillations of euphonium, melodica and analogue synths, and Selig and Craig’s sub-lingual wailing, their music recalls the proto-punk of bands like Suicide and Silver Apples. Check out the video for single ‘Colours’ below.

 

Wonderfuls – ‘Change’

Cousins Robert Vagg and Danny McGirr have been making music together as Wonderfuls since about 2004 – around the time that Vagg began to undergo a series of psychiatric treatments, including hospitalisation, after moving to Brisbane from rural Queensland. Their first full-length release, Salty Town, can be tough going. The songs, built from McGirr’s scattered tremolo and tape hiss, have an icy sheen, and there’s a vacant, damaged quality to Vagg’s vocals that starts to burrow under your skin. ‘Change’ is a  song that bursts from the record with a shimmering riff that, for me, has to be one of the standout moments of underground music in Australia this year.

The ever-prolific Wonderfuls have just put out a collection of tunes recorded in the period between 2004-07 which you can get on Bandcamp, and they’ll be releasing a 7″ of new material on No Magic Man Records soon.

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2013-madeleine-laing

The Gooch PalmsNovos  (Independent)

This Newcastle duo’s debut is an album about small cities and big ambition; a punk record that’s catchier than pretty much anything you’ll find on a Top 40 list. Featuring one of the most impressive new vocalists in Australia in Leroy McQueen, whose knockout wail recalls old school Aus Rock without ever feeling stale,  Novos is brimming with scrappy charm and rough pop genius.

Jeremy NealeIn Stranger Times EP (Create/Control)
Obvious? Maybe, but this long awaited EP well and truly proved Brisbane’s Jeremy Neale worthy of his massive hype.The singles are so great it’s almost not fair; ‘Swing Left’ especially brings super slick production and a stomping, sultry kind of mood that turns epic as soon as that soaring vocal in the chorus kicks in, but the album tracks are equally impressive – the super smooth ‘Lone Tiger’ and emotionally raw ‘Merry Go Round’ are standouts.

Dick Diver Calendar Days (Chapter Music)
A lot’s been written about these guys and this album lately as they continue to (most deservingly) top almost every local list around, so I’ll just say I love this album because it’s beautiful – it speaks to me in the voice of my friends, with lines we all wish we were smart enough to come up with. This record is smart, subtle, and effortlessly cool; the kind of album you always feel like listening to.

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LOOK: Fifth Floor Warehouse Party II

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fifth_floor_warehouse_party_11

(Photos: Vlad Chant)

Last month, we put on a thing in a warehouse with FIFTH FLOOR in Brunswick, Melbourne. A twelve band line-up including Wolf & Cub, Damn Terran and Hollow Everdaze took to a half-pipe transformed into a stage for the night. Kaleido visuals from Astral Projection Artwork kept everyone occupied, while everyone else was content flailing around to Mangelwurzel –  the funktoid, girl version of Fugazi throwing up jungle punk in a trashcan. Saw some guy in the room wearing a leopard bucket hat. What year is it?…

The Fifth Floor team are in Berlin at the moment, where they put on a show with local expats Ascetic two weeks ago. We’ll have photos from the event soon.

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GUEST: Hot Mosh

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Hot Mosh Emmeline

 

Hot Mosh is a new(ish) publication out of Sydney. Run by Fin Duggan and Emmeline Peterson, the humble zine features a whole host of point and shoot snaps documenting all the grot-glamour of local music. Previous issues have featured everyone from The Gooch Palms to Donny Benet’s revered bald spot. The Hot Mosh team have teamed up Deep Sea Arcade to present their first curated gig ‘Visions’ this Saturday at Oxford Arts Factory.

Cruising down the line up alongside Deep Sea Arcade will be Shining Bird, The Tsars & Preatures DJs.

We cut Hot Mosh’s curatorial skills by asking them to pick out their favourite new Oz artists. Emmeline gives us the low down on her top 5 below.

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Black SoulThis guy is a newcomer on the scene. I’m pretty sure he’s only played one gig, but I was there… and it was awesome. One of few Sydney artists experimenting with the witch house genre right now; chopped and screwed beats and slowed down hip-hop. At least that’s what he sounded like when he was going under the name BLVCK. Now he’s Black Soul. It could be very different. HE’S A MYSTERY.

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Lunatics On PogosticksWhen I first heard their song ‘Freud And The Nazi’s Go Surfing’ 12 months ago, I proceeded to find the band’s Facebook to tell them how amazing they are. That’s when I found out they were 17 year old babies. I wish I asked them if I could be their manager right then because since then they have gone on to release a bunch of amazing tracks and win Triple J’s Unearthed High. This is how everyone who saw The Beatles at The Cavern Club felt in 1962 I bet.

Zeahorse  – One of those bands that has been kicking around for ages but has consistently ruled. Go buy their album on vinyl right now and just pay whatever the record store wants ok?!

 

HousewivesThese guys are releasing some of THE BEST punk in Sydney right now. The band have released a sick EP called Lick The Pip. Title track closes in at 1 minute 30 seconds, which means you can hear it 960 times today. GO.

Chicks Who Love Guns Full disclosure, this is my boyfriend’s band. But he’s only been my boyfriend for about 1/4 of the time I’ve been obsessed with this band, so really I’m just a groupie who hit the jackpot. This year they released their single ‘Pencil Neck’, a total step up from their thrashy punk beginnings, accompanied with a clip created by Manuela Leigh, which involves food being thrown on some hot babes.

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visions

 

Hot Mosh – Facebook / Web / Issues

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