Killer collection does justice to the Motor City's heyday
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 210
Motor City Is Burning: A Michigan Anthology 1965-1975 – Various Artists (Grapefruit Records)
Proof positive, if it was actually needed, that a Golden Age of Rock ‘n’ Roll existed in one of the 50 states of the USA other than Califonria and that it encompassed much more than just the Stooges and the MC5.
In Australia, of course, we have a skewed view of the so-called “Detroit Scene” (a name that almost no Americans of my acquaintance use, by the way.) We learned from the teachings of Radio Birdman leader and expat Michiganite Deniz Tek who landed here to study medicine in 1974, spreading the word about those bands in evangelistic fashion.
Of course Birdman were always much more than those two trace elements - they were just the ones on the high-energy scale that caught the imagination of most. If you’ve ever engaged the Kona Coffee Farmer in conversation for more than five minutes you’ll know his passion for the Stones and his knowledge of local acts like the SRC and the first band he saw live, Ann Arbor heroes The Rationals.
It will be post-election Mayhem at Marrickville
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 359
It’s a recipe for Mayhem in Marrickville in Sydney on May 3: The night of the Australian Federal Election. Four rocking bands. Cheap drinks. Cheaper entertainment. Playing order to be decided by a draw on the night. All in a politician-free zone.
"Mayhem in May" is presented by The I-94 Bar and features (in alphabetical order) The Jane Does, Jupiter 5, Moot and The Strike-Outs. Early-bird tickets are selling here. So here’s the rundown:
The Jane Does are two girls, two guys and a whole bunch of fun. Equal parts melodic pop and garage rock, they’ve been building a big base of fans in and around Sydney for a couple of years now and are threatening to release their first recordings. Jane Doe is a generic term for anonymity but their music is not.
Buckle up and enjoy the ride with Broham
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 495
Buckle Rash – Broham (Bad Apple/Dark Roasted)
Country Music doesn’t rate much space around these parts but scratch the surface hard enough with a wooden nickel and you’ll find it, lurking like a grinning red-headed uncle in rock and roll’s family tree. The births of the modern versions of the blues and country appear on American timelines that run through the Appalachian backwoods and the mid-western dustbowls of the 1920s.
The Australian strain of Country Music, on the other hand, is much more bastardised. It rose to prominence in the post-World War II years. In the ‘70s, media maven John Laws hitched his wagon to it, telling a generation: “You’ve never been trucked like this before”.
Best of the Streetwalkin' Cheetahs' cover version opus is headed to vinyl
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 383
In 2022, Los Angeles label Rum Bar Records released "All The Covers ( And More)", a sprawling, star-studded, two-CD compilation of every cover recorded by The Streetwalkin' Cheetahs over the course of their 25+ year career.
Three of Europe's best rock ‘n’ roll labels Heavy Medication, Ghost Highway and Take The City, are combining to give the collection the vinyl treatment.
This single disc, limited edition picks 17 tracks and packages them under the title "Best of All the Covers (and More)", featuring guest appearances by Sylvain Sylvain, Wayne Kramer, Cherie Currie, Jeff Dahl, Jimmy Zero, Bryan Small of The Hangmen, and others. Starpower!
It also adds a previously unreleased cover of a GG Allin song, "Occupation", which was recorded after the original CD release.
Each label is offering a different color variant of outer sleeve artwork (pink, green or blue), with Heavy Med's edition a pink cover and pink vinyl. Street date is May 9. More info and a preview is here.
Sly Faulkner and Chinese Burns Unit put on a Brave Face for a scorching seven-inch
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 694
Brave Face – Chinese Burns Unit with Sly Faulkner (Buttercup Records)
With a band history going back a decade-and-a-half, you’d assume Sydney punks Chinese Burns Unit have done it all. Nuh-huh. Not until they’d recorded with Sly Faulkner, ex of The Splatterheads, Red Planet Rockets and Powerline Sneakers. The idea dates back to pre-COVID so it’s taken a while to come to fruition. How goes the adage? Good things come to those who wait.
To the A side and “Brave Face” flows like fine goon wine. Engine room members Jay Whalley and John Irish lock in for the ride of their lives. Faulkner’s impassioned vocal and some melodic back-ups contrast with potent lyrics about betrayal. Duelling guitars from Glenno and Jenny T are the jam on top of the cream bun.
Holiday In Australasia: Oz and NZ dates for Dead Kennedys
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 472
Here’s a test for the theory that old school underground bands can be re-tooled with new singers and still work: Dead Kennedys are returning to Australia and New Zealand this September for their first tour in seven years.
After a false start where the DKs were part of that clusterfuck Pandemonium fiasco only to be bumped off a pared-down bill, they are undertaking two shows in New Zealand and five in Australia.
The band is original members East Bay Ray (guitar) and Klaus Flouride (bass), alongside vocalist Ron “Skip” Greer, who has fronted the band since 2008, and drummer Steve Wilson, who joined following the passing of D.H. Peligro in 2022.
Almost needless to say they won’t be bringing Jello (but we’ll make the point for all the dummies anyway). There’s also no new album in tow – just a set full of classic punk songs like “Holiday in Cambodia”, “California Über Alles” and “Kill the Poor”.
Dates and ticket links after the MORE button. Let the arguments a la Sex Pistols and The Saints commence...
The Handsomest Man in Rock and Roll returns
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 397
Two of the best underground record labels around, Poland’s Heavy Medication and Spanish imprint Ghost Highway Recordings, are bringing Handsome Dick Manitoba back to the vinyl racks next month.
“Back To Broadway” is an EP by the former singer of the Dictators on Heavy Medication and Ghost Highway. It has a May 9 street date and features four tunes on a seven-inch platter.
Originals “Back on Broadway" and "DeLuise Nation” are matched with a brace of recent HDM solo band live recordings: The Dictators' "Savage Beat" and "The Party Starts Now!", a classic from the great ‘Tators spin-off, Manitoba's Wild Kingdom.
You can hear the title track and pre-order the EP here and, yes, there is more than a passing resemblance to Dictators circa the “DFFD” album (which will be a relief if you heard The Handsome One's 2019 solo record, "Born In The Bronx" which was well intentioned but missed the mark.)
Manitoba and band - which includes Streetwalkin’ Cheetah Frank Meyer on guitar - has wrapped up a run of US Midwest dates and is heading to Scandinavia for more shows.
Mazinga brings a dose of cosmic cool with their comeback record
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 874
Chinese Democracy Manifest: Greatest Hits Vol 2 – Mazinga (self released)
Born in the 1990s Basement Scene of Ann Arbor, Michigan, and honed in countless dive bars across the wide expanses of The Great Lakes State, cosmic punks Mazinga have re-emerged after a decade break with their second long-player. The title, “Chinese Democracy Manifest: Greatest Hits Vol 2”, is a mouthful but the record packs a big enough punch to make your teeth rattle.
The band calls it "Maximum Cosmic Punk". Coffee farmer Deniz Tek labels it “tight as hell with great rhythm playing behind killer solos” and drums that remind him of the late Scott Asheton.
Faulty Australian Music Vault does nobody credit
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- By Robert Brokenmouth
- Hits: 1404
Sometimes, we think we have a grasp of something when we simply don't. And meaning, which we think we understand, slips out of our hands as readily as an eel (understandably) reluctant to grace our dinner plate.
Earlier this month, Sydney's favourite rock 'n' roll pollie, PM Albanese, said that the Coalition were “delulu with no solulu”.
Poor bloke wasn't really advised too well with that one. See, the meaning is now in fact the reverse; that delusion really is the solution. Although meanings, especially with slang, can twist and slide out from under like an eel.
In the middle of Adelaide is Victoria Square, with the obligatory statue of the late queen. It also boasts the poxy (and recently-moved) “Three Rivers” fountain.
Originally built to commemorate the 1963 visit of the king and queen, in true Adelaide fashion the monstrosity was finally unveiled in 1968.
- Where have all the good times gone? Peter Simpson's album answers the question
- The Owen Guns are mouthing off again
- This Is Real? Lame Sunnyboys tribute act spreads fake news about Jeremy Oxley's passing
- An Old Romantic triumphs in Adelaide
- Asteroid B-612 re-launch with a single, 25 years on
- The Stems are back with a cool new single, "Deep Freeze" and live dates
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