Another cute, well-crafted video for another cute, well-crafted song by Brisbane’s Ball Park Music. Damn these guys are good.
Another cute, well-crafted video for another cute, well-crafted song by Brisbane’s Ball Park Music. Damn these guys are good.
Tusk Tusk – ‘Crazy Little Birthmarks’ (mp3)
Dominic Fagan used to live in Brisbane and play keys for Screamfeeder singer Tim Steward’s solo project. Like so much Brisbane talent, he up and moved to Melbourne and has been writing sweet pop songs like this ever since.
Rollicking finger-picked guitar and choral backing vocals support Fagan’s plaintive, unsteady voice as he repeats the song’s refrain – somebody help to hold this poor girl down. ‘Crazy Little Birthmarks’ isn’t an angsty whine though – it’s more a suggestion than a panicked cry for help.
Self professed control freaks when it comes to music, the Midnight Juggernauts have always done things their way. And it’s paid off.
Following the success of 2007’s Dystopia, the Juggernauts have just dropped their second album The Crystal Axis.
Who The Hell chats to Andy Szekeres about the new record, the toils of running your own label and what it’s really to have your gig ruined when John Travolta decides to throw a Scientology bash at the same venue.
What was the big idea behind The Crystal Axis?
Well, I suppose it changed over time. After we finished touring at the end of 2008, and we’d spent that whole year away from home, we just wanted to come back and start working on the album. I think the live touring really carried over into the recording process, we just wanted to work on a much rawer sounding album, and I suppose the three of us were a lot more involved…
People seemed to be fascinated by the hype of that whole indie-dance thing when you put out Dystopia in 2006. How did you keep ahead of the game when other similar acts like the Presets and Cut Copy we’re putting out records at the same time?
That whole indie-dance thing became really popular and helped push along internationally in 2007 and 2008. But for us in the way we approach music, we’ve never really thought of ourselves being tied to a scene. I think even doing interviews at the beginning of that, we always said we were in to exploring new things and that each of our albums would be really different. We still didn’t know what the second one was gonna be like back then, but we went with an idea we had at the end of 2008 and it morphed and evolved.
It’s interesting because we have a lot of fans from that more dance music scene, and it will be interesting to see how fans will take it. We’re really proud of it and it’s definitely a different album for us. I guess we’ve written so much in our time, and a lot of it has been different styles so I guess that it’s not really weird that we’ve come up with an album like this. So if you only knew Dystopia, it’s a whole different flavour to that…
But I suppose you’re expanding your audience by trying new things?
Hopefully there’s gonna be a whole lot of new people who get a chance to listen to it. Its hard to know how anythings gonna go. And for us the next six months is just touring throughout Australia and the US and Europe and the UK. We kind of go back and forth constantly. Its good just to be able to have a new set to play
How do you juggle label duties with touring?
I mean its extra work, but we’ve chosen for it to be that way. With this album and the build up for us, like organising and co-ordinating the label side of things with releases in all the different territories was a lot of work and especially when you’ve got people in different time zones. It’s okay at the moment coz we’re in that mode of just getting up the album and working on it. But when you’re touring it gets hard, which is where you need people who you’re working with that you can trust and to handle things when you’re away, so that’s what we’ve set up with the label now.
What was it like with Chris Moore in the picture?
When Chris came along, we hand’t met him before so it was really strange. But we really liked his work and we’d spoken on the phone a few times, and it was great having him here in the role engineer and in certain times when we’d need a certain sound and him being there to facilitate that. He was really easy to work with.
Maybe we’re control freaks, but we have ideas of how we want things to be. He wasn’t there to work as a producer, but as an engineer working alongside us. He was a laid back guy so it worked well.
I read somewhere that John Travolta kicked you out of one of your shows in Paris?…
Papa vs Pretty – ‘Heavy Harm’ (mp3)
When I was first introduced to Papa vs Pretty they were significantly more weird and electronic. ‘Heavy Harm’ retains an offbeat feeling and roughness to it, but it sounds surprisingly a lot like The Okkervil Rivers, down to Thomas Rawle’s imperfect, Will Sheff-aping yelp. It’s a pretty sweet tune that shows their song-writing has matured to leans less on weirdness and more on, you know, melody. No doubt this move to more folk-rock territory was helped by Paul Dempsey who produced the EP from which this track is pulled.
Obviously being the lead track you would assume that it’s the more accessible thing on there, so it will be cool to see how reigned in (or not reigned in) the rest of their stuff is – hopefully not too much more than in ‘Heavy Harm.’ I say “hopefully” because I notice that their Myspace has had that major label makeover, with OTT customisation that hasn’t impressed anyone this side of 2006 (sorry y’all, but it looks a bit like an emo band). Not that we should draw concrete conclusions based on Myspace redesigns or anything like that…
Point is, I like where ‘Heavy Harm’ is at. It’s a cool track. Let’s stick around here.
Hi internet, I’d like to introduce you to the new/next Kisschasy. They’re called Finabah, they’re from Toowoomba in south-east Queensland and they’ve worked very hard for a very long time in this silly industry. They also won the rock category of last year’s New Artist 2 Radio initiative.
Charlie Why – ‘I Am Deliciously Wired’ (mp3)
[audiohttp://whothehell.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/I-Am-Deliciously-Wired-Ch.mp3]
The latest release in Bang Gang’s 12″ series is by the prolific Charlie Why (aka Charlie Murdoch aka 50% of production/remix team Rio Lobotomy aka 25% of Brisbane indie upstarts Comic Sans). Charlie Why is Murdoch’s solo project and above is the title track from his long-awaited debut EP, which acts as an apt introduction to his ultra-compressed and thumping electro-house leanings.
‘I Am Deliciously Wired’ is painted with a few broad brush strokes and lands like a punch in the face – which isn’t to say that this is background music for morons. Despite its immediacy, the track sounds considered and thoughtfully constructed, moving forward with purpose as variously sounds move in and out of the near perfect mix. Good stuff.
Hello! Our Melbourne party is this Friday at Ding Dong lounge, starting at 11pm. Get your tickets here
Latest Comments
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Still trying to purchase!!!ANTHONY J LANGFORD
Cool track. Congrats Joshua. Hope the release is a success.Tristan
Man I love these guys. I can't believe they are not releasing any new music. I've been to so many…sophie
^^ I love Grimes! Banoffee is one of my new favorite music artists! :) I love With Her, Reign Down,…Ace
Read your review then listened to the EP. Fantastic ! Different to most hardcore punk I listen to. Somewhat more…