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The Middle East Tour

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middle east

Before beginning work on their highly-anticipated debut, Townsville’s The Middle East are heading out for a quick jaunt down the East Coast. This is on top of their previously-announced appearances at Meredith, Homebake and Sunset Sounds, which makes for a fairly busy few months again (not that they’ve been taking it easy all year by any stretch). Dragging Pianos are supporting all dates.

As an added bonus for the band, lead track from their EP ‘The Darkest Side’ was recently featured over at Pitchfork and given some decent props. All good signs. If you’ve missed what all the fuss is about,make sure you get along to one of the below shows.

Thursday October 8 Princess Theatre, Brisbane (w/ Dragging Pianos & Jake Core)

Friday October 9 Manning Bar, Sydney (w/ Dragging Pianos & Jonathan Boulet Saturday)

October 10 ANU Bar, Canberra (w/ Dragging Pianos & Margaret Helen King Sunday)

October 11 The Corner Hotel, Melbourne (w/Dragging Pianos & Oliver Mann)

Tickets for all shows available from Posse (www.posse.com)

www.myspace.com/visitthemiddleeast

Cloud Control – ‘Gold Canary’

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CLOUD CONTROLweb

Cloud Control – ‘Gold Canary’ (mp3)

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New music from the Blue Mountains! Only it sounds kinda like it originates from somewhere deep in America. Cloud Control always had an earthy, pastoral quality to their music, but it sounds all the more temporally appropriate post-Fleet Foxes. Less jangle and more twang.

‘Gold Canary’ is pulled from their debut album expected early 2010. It’s got some rootsy backing vox and yelping, tambourine+handclap percussion, references to family members in the lyrics and then… a synth solo. Yes, in the midst of this quality ho-down, Cloud Control bring the ‘Dr Who’ – and it oddly fits better than it does anywhere on the latest Muse album. This song is rad and I’ll eat my computer monitor if this isn’t all over Triple J soon.

www.myspace.com/cloudcontrol

Five Picks from ‘One Movement’

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Editor of the blog for Perth music conference One Movement, Andrew McMillen, asked me to do a guest post over on that site. It’s basically five picks from the many artists showcasing there and I figured I’d post it up here as well. Whothehell.net regulars won’t find too many surprises here since these are acts we’ve given love to in the past, some of them have even gotten quite big since then, but in case you’ve been living under a rock and are heading to the conference then these are five acts you should push your way to the front for.

Also, turns out I don’t know a lot of the bands on this line-up, which confirms that I’m quite out of touch with the Perth music scene; what with it being way over there and everything – but I’m told it’s booming, and we have a Perth contributor these days so hopefully it’s getting some love. Anyone going to the conference, please comment about rad Perth bands you catch that we’ve neglected thus far.

It never hurts to re-cap some classixx anyway.

1. Sarah Blasko – ‘Don’t U Eva’

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How can you go past Sarah Blasko? She sells out tours in Australia now, hopefully her presence at One Movement gives her some international momentum – she deserves it. Smokey vocals, some tight production and a great song here. This was her debut single and that piano line still gets me every time.

www.myspace.com/sarahblasko

2. Snob Scrilla – ‘Chasing Ghosts’

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Combining elements rock, electro and hip hop can have mixed results, but for every latter-day Dizzee Rascal there’s a Snob Scrilla. This one’s from both his EP and album and I listened to it a whole lot when I was first introduced to his stuff. Had it been a vinyl I’d have likely worn down the grooves. Also check out album cut ‘King John,’ one of my favourites of 2009.

www.myspace.com/snobscrilla

3. Philadelphia Grand Jury – ‘Going To The Casino (Tomorrow Night)’

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These guys have been everywhere in 2009. This is a super energetic and catchy song and it only feels more vibrant live. Their first single and still probably the best summation of their strengths. They’ve toured a shitload and most people have probably already caught them treading the boards, but if not then they’re definitely one to get to the front for.

www.myspace.com/philadelphiagrandjury

4. I Heart Hiroshima – ‘Captain to Captain’

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What these guys do with just two guitars (no pedals) and a drum kit still knocks me over. It’s all about the riffs – and the vocals; Matt Somers sound like he’s having an anxiety attack whenever he sings. A great live show replete with crowd banter to mix with the best. I’m eagerly anticipating their sophomore album.

www.myspace.com/ihearthiroshima

5. Canvas Kites – ‘Wayside’

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Canvas Kites are the new project from Thom Moore of Mercy Arms (aka the Britney/K-Fed of Australian bands). I liked that band and I like what I’ve heard from this one too (which is pretty much just this song). I’ve not seen them live but it sounds like it would translate well. Let me know what you think if you see them.

www.myspace.com/canvaskites

One Movement For Music (OMFM) is a showcase festival and music conference that runs October 16-18 2009 at The Esplanade in Perth. Since July 2009, a festival blog named One Movement Word has been coordinated by Brisbane-based writer Andrew McMillen.

Highlights on the blog so far include a guest post from Hypebot‘s Kyle Bylin, interviews with international bands showcasing at OMFM like The Parlotones (South Africa) and Sorgente (Germany), as well as entertaining conversations with Australian music industry figures like Michael Chugg, ARIA Chairman Ed St John, and the Managing Director of Mushroom Music Publishing, Ian James.

McMillen and OMFM promoters Sunset Events plan to publish dozens more interviews on onemovementword.com in the weeks leading up to the event’s mid-October debut.

Noise Addict

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noise addict

Noise Addict – ‘Big Ups’

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Noise Addict – ‘Let’s Do Our Thing’

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I’ve heard barely anything about this album since it was released for free a few weeks ago. For those that need reminding, Noise Addict was Ben Lee’s punk band that put out music in the early 90s on Thurston’s Moore’s Ecstatic Peace and Mike D’s (of Beastie Boys) Grand Royal labels. Fairly impressive. The band eventually also included Romy Hoffman aka Romy aka Macromantics. A blast from the past!

Well Lee apparently recorded a new album with a new line-up that included Lou Barlow of Dinosaur Jr and Sebadoh fame called ‘It Was Never About The Audience.’ The reasoning for the Noise Addict moniker is that it was apparently recorded in the same spirit as that band’s output, despite Lee being the only original member after some fifteen years.

These songs are pretty fun and worth listening to. They sound fairly off-the-cuff and all that, which adds a certain charm. If you like them then head to the website below to download the whole thing for free.

noiseaddict.net

Pivot – ‘Colorado’ (Grizzly Bear Cover)

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pivot

Pivot – ‘Colorado’ (Grizzly Bear cover)

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Pivot, Australia’s only band on the extensive and illustrious Warp roster to my mind, have contributed this song to the Warp20 compilation – an album whereon Warp artists cover fellow Warp artists in an indulgent celebration of the label’s 20th birthday. Or is it indulgent? For most labels this would be a fairly routine and unexciting project, but given the influence of Warp on the electronic scene and the artists involved this is probably something to pay attention to. It is if this song is any indication anyway.

‘Colorado’ is one of the highlights off Grizzly Bear’s still-best 2007 album Yellow House (yeah, the one with ‘Knife’ on it). Pivot don’t often sound a lot like the Grizzly’s, but they sure put in their best effort here. The similarities are mainly in the vocals, with the Pike bros + Dave Miller still hitting those skins and synths like almost no one else in this fair land.

www.myspace.com/pivotpivot

Blueprint Festival reviews

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Debuting Blueprint Festival offered a hearty dissection of new and old Australian music in the placid setting of a rustic volcanic crater in rural Victoria. We were promised top notch facilities, cheap food and drink, and a musical journey shy of festival pretentiousness and annoyances like warm, expensive beer and bullshit toilet lines.  It called out for cheap-seeking students and tourists and was a mecca for dreadlocked rootsy folk.

Musically it was something of a mixed bag.  Stalwart Aussie rock icons like Jebediah and Blue King Brown joined an impressive crop of up-and-coming acts.  One of the first acts we saw was Melbourne six-piece The Hello Morning at the unassuming Syn stage, and they simply blew us away with seductively flowing psych-toned and alt-country tinged space pop. Lead Clifford Stevens, a clone of Johnny Cash in style and substance, and the incessantly beaming guitarist Matt Smith, provided an alluring face of the band.  Engulfing slide guitar hazes, organ fuzzes and soulful harmonies would ease you into complacency, then the horns and guitar solos would strike for epic finales.

Melbourne hip-hop Latin hybrids Labjacd spectacularly threw everyone off guard, flicking from horn-laden Latino jangles to more potent Hispanic-infused back-and-forth raps. All the while Alfie Vielma steered the perky 9-piece through the mashup with precision and speed on the decks.

Switching from the Syn stage to the RRR stage we discovered one of the true wonders of Blueprint Festival: mud. Not ordinary mud – it was mud that you would sink into but never penetrate. I’ve never seen anything like it. Throughout the weekend grown adults would frolic in the mystic mud, captivated by its gooey brilliance.

At the RRR stage The Beautiful Girls basked in rootsy glory. Their set was void of chilled out lulls as the outfit catered for an evening crowd willing to get their dance on. Crowd favourite Blackbird set the masses bouncing to a smooth reggae groove, as ladies consistently pleaded for lead Matt McCue’s babies. Next up veteran rockers Jebediah drove the crowd into frenzy. The ensuing mosh turned mystic mud into mischievous mud as many a shoe were lost. The band delightedly showcased more ambitious new tunes alongside punky classics like Harpoon, which the crowd gulped down with nostalgic vigour.

On Saturday we sluggishly took to the hillside, enjoying the sun and leisurely taking in the RRR stage happenings from a distance. The Basics drew us closer to the action, fluctuating between swinging 60s pop and gritty indie anthem. Ash Grunwald miraculously summoned stagnant factions of the crowd into his groove. A reinvented Ash pushed his token blues twang in a seriously funky direction, joined on stage by beat fiend Kanchana Karunaratna on a drum machine.

A bitter night was kindled by some luscious lentil soup and fiery sets from Bertie Blackman and Blue King Brown.  Bubbly Sydney girl Bertie Blackman doused the crowd with Goldfrapp inspired synth pop. It was a departure from her acoustic roots and rocky past, but she seemed completely at ease with her dancey new aesthetic.  Worldly 9-piece Blue King Brown churned up a blitzing set of reggae roots and capped it off with an epic medley mashup featuring MJ’s Billie Jean and ACDC’s Thunderstruck to name a few.

Sunday saw a notable decline in punters as 9 to 5ers left for work on Monday. The smaller Syn stage took precedence as a chilled out crowd soaked up sun and the day’s folky offerings.  A flock of barefooted female janglers swayed to the swinging alt-country fashions of Matt Joe Gow and the Dead Leaves.  Folk-pop guru Old Man River urged the lethargic masses to rise, and many broke into dance, unable resist the psychedelic mystique of sitar melodies and the giddy sing-a-long allure of crowd-favourite La.

Another freezing night saw festival goers don quadruple layers and drape themselves in sleeping bags.  Early on Melbourne theatrical rockers Me impressed as something of a Mars Volta and Queen lovechild, with lead Luke Ferris’ crystal voice soaring high and low to the drama of classic piano and vigorous violin.  A monotonic noise-punk set from The Spazzy’s interrupted an otherwise pleasant home straight for Blueprint Festival. Luckily Hungry Kids of Hungary were able to finish with a vibrant bang. The Brisbane four-piece hailed Vampire Weekend with their crisp pop jangles, complete with doses of melodramatic two-part harmonies and a bit of 60’s “do-wop.”  The crowd demanded encore, and the Hungry Kids delivered emphatically with a frenzied cover of the uncharacteristically rock and roll Beatles song I’m Down.

All in all it was a decent first effort from Blueprint. Minor organisational hiccups and cold weather were forgiven for an aesthetically awesome location, magic mud and a musically diverse Aussie line-up.

-David Elliot-Jones

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The following review is done by one of our giveaway winners Yen Nguyen:

Blueprint Festival, Ararat, Sept 18th – 20th

Australia has a strong reputation for its music festivals, and it seems that every year there’s a new batch popping up across the country for punters to choose from. The Blueprint Festival is one such festival that debuted this year, held outside of Ararat, Victoria, a town that up until now I was only aware of because of it’s prison. Blueprint is a good half hour out of Ararat set amongst a beautiful country landscape of Canola fields and greenery. The Festival was on the smaller side with two stages; the RRR and SYN stages, (named so for some anonymous sponsors) and featured an all-Australian line up of well known names such as The Panics and festival staples Blue King Brown, as well as a healthy dose of emerging artists. The two stages were spaced only a short walk apart, but with great acoustic separation between the two, so no problems hearing the spill from the other stage when watching an acoustic act. Overall, it was a fairly relaxed festival. There was plenty of space for camping, all of your standard range of festival foods, and market stalls selling knitted beanies, fisherman’s pants and herbal remedies.

Perhaps a reflection of the country Victorian setting, the line up featured a lot of Country-Rock and Blues-Rock acts such as Kasey Chamber’s hubby; Shane Nicholson and, insert dread-locked-slide-guitarist here; Ash Grunwald. One highlight of the country types was Wagons, who performed their brand of alternative-country-rock with a refreshing dose of humour and charisma. Their set included a hip-hop interlude in which their drummer took the mic and busted out a rhyme about “sucking on a big spliff.” Bertie Blackman, was another highlight, bringing some electro-indie-pop to the main stage. Her songs are catchy and lush, made slicker by the pre-recorded backing vocals and backing tracks being triggered alongside her band.

Blue King Brown brought their too-many-to-count-piece line up to an eagerly awaiting crowd, playing a tightly rehearsed set of dub, afro-beat, and latin-funk to a crowd that lapped it up. The band is a group of highly skilled musicians who have also made it their mission to save the whales. They implored the crowd to join sea-shepherd, and to never feel alone when standing up for what you believe in.

Tim Rogers’ solo is distinguished from You Am I as an opportunity for him to play more country and folk oriented tunes. He performed with a full band that featured members of You Am I as well as Violin and Cello. Rogers’ has carved a spot for himself as an icon of Australian music over the last decade or two and he has the talent and credibility to continue in this position for many years to come.

The highlight of the festival for me was definitely The Panics, who have recently returned from a tour of the UK with Paulo Nutini. The Panics know how to write songs with quality lyrics and inescapable hooks as they demonstrated in a set that mostly featured songs from their album “Cruel Guards,” as well as a few oldies thrown in. Another case of the backing track featuring heavily on their performance of “Don’t Fight It,” but what is that song without the horns? I’m told the band are currently working on re-releasing “Cruel Guards” in the UK in an effort to reach overseas audiences. For my money, The Panics are definitely one of our best Australian bands and I wish them all the best in their overseas conquest.

For those that wanted a break from the big name Triple J acts, there were plenty of emerging talents on the SYN stage. Saturday night was very, very cold in the tent, and made a little concerning by a bogan who had parked his ute facing directly at us. This guy kept revving his engine and beeping his horn well into the wee hours. Festival goers may have seen this guy before, he has peroxided dreadlocks, sunnies at all times, carries a tinnie and answers to “Robo.” He often hangs out with “Micko” who has a white-boy fro, a wife-beater and wears the Australian flag as a cape. These two can be found sitting outside their tent, blaring Aussie Hip-Hop out of their car and ringing Rosie at Triple J to request “The Festival Song” by Pez. I didn’t see these guys checking out much music during the festival, but they suddenly appeared during the Funkoars set and seemed to have multiplied greatly in number.

Blueprint has the makings of a good festival, and once they’ve ironed out a few problems of their first year (like getting the shuttle busses between the festival and Ararat to actually show up), they’ll make a fine addition to the Australian festival circuit.

Yen Nguyen