Smash it up! The Damned get back down under
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 2142
Iconic punks The Damned are returning to Australia and New Zealand for a series of highly anticipated shows in June.
Forged in the hot fire of first wave, The Damned are the greatest surviving British punk band, still firing on all cylinders. They are often regarded alongside The Clash and Sex Pistols as a seminal force in driving the genre’s popularity.
Record label sharks be damned. Barracudas re-issue is a revelation
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- By Bob Short
- Hits: 2235
Drop Out With The Barracudas Deluxe Edition – Barracudas (Lemon Records)
Increasingly, the recording companies attempt to milk the last of the boomer dollars before retirement homes steal the last of our bank accounts. They’ve already worked out that there's bugger all money in new recordings. Even dependable old cash cows like KISS and The Who have made public statements to that end.
So record companies have learnt to spew out deluxe editions of the familiar, the obscure and the criminally ignored. And, if someone is going to put out a multi disc collection of every taped concert on Sunset Strip, well oops. My finger slipped on the buy button before I read about the goddamn postage.
Is Flowers For Jayne's new single what you're looking for?
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- By Robert Brokenmouth
- Hits: 2445
You're Not What I'm Looking For - Flowers for Jayne (Glowing Ember Records)
So what is it? "You're Not What I'm Looking For" is classic tough power pop with a dead-set groove you can light a fire with.
So. I know nothing about Flowers from Jayne except the name and the members have "form", as The Truth newspaper used to say of "colourful racing identities". Lead guitarist Jayne Murphy played in the Lime Spiders (presumably there are one or two similarly "colourful" stories to be told there), bass player Bill Gibson is a familiar figure from The Eastern Dark, and drummer Jess Ciampa can boast being in the Jeff Duff Band and Monsieur Camembert.
These folks know what they're doing.
John Kennedy signs off for now with a gem
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 2548
John Kennedy and the New Originals - John Kennedy and the New Originals (Foghorn/MGM)
Brisbane-raised English expatriate John Kennedy patented the Urban and Western genre after he transplanted himself to Sydney 40-something years ago and found underground success. It’s been a long (and winding) road since.
There’s been a decade living overseas in Los Angeles, Berlin, London, Holland and Hong Kong. Kennedy on paper’s had what appears to be a revolving cast of backing bands - J.F.K. And The Cuban Crisis, John Kennedy And The Honeymooners, John Kennedy's '68 Comeback Special and John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong.
Reality is that there’s been an intermingling of players in those bands and the line-up’s been stable in recent years, but perseverance has been a by-word.
Josh and Hugo's sensory overload
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- By Robert Brokenmouth
- Hits: 2457
Memento Mori - Hugo Race and Josh Lord (independent)
You shouldn't put “Memento Mori” on as background music while you do the dusting or writing funny memes. I mean, you can, of course. But it's a lovely slow-paced creature, and it will snare you.
You'll find yourself slouched on the couch, wanting sleep and comfort but ... despite all the gorgeous sounds, it's damned unsettling. You'll wake with a stiff neck and your limbs out of joint, I promise. No, skip to the end for how to fully appreciate this.
But first, I must apologise unreservedly to both Josh Lord and Hugo Race. I was unable to do this review quickly enough.
Are you ready for Ready? Plastic Section keeps it real
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 1967
Ready! – Plastic Section (Outtaspace)
Self-consciously retro rock and roll bands can be a real problem. There are ones that overplay their hand and fall back on gimmicks. They almost always have a name with “Thee” appended to the front. And then there are those that apply their three chords with genuine regard for where the music emanated.
Plastic Section is part of a loose Melbourne aggregation of bands in the latter category; their peers are The Breadmakers, The Vibrajets and The Cha Cha Chas. Each faithfully plunders the past while applying their own take.
This banger from a ranga is a family affair
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 1904
Following the release last month of the new EP "Periodical Fits" by his band LEECHES!, Rhinearts and ex-Screwtop Detonators member, Perth punk and powerpop everywhereman, Benny J Ward, has released his first solo single "Tell Me Tell Me" on Cheersquad Records
With a career that spans 20 years, half a dozen bands, a dozen albums, EPs, and singles; it would be safe to assume that Benny J Ward has scratched all his musical itches. No. Taking a sojourn into solo territory, Benny J hunkered down in the studio he built with his bare hands, and produced the first single ever released under his own name – the psychedelic garage pop belter "Tell Me Tell Me".
This is not the first time Benny J has gone solo. Back in the early 2000s he caught the attention of Triple J with his ginger pride-themed country-music alter-ego The Lone Ranga (subject matter that would later resurface in five-piece alternative outfit The Red Panthers).
"Tell Me Tell Me", however, is the first time Benny J has played every instrument on a track – from his native guitar to the bass and drums – as well as recording and mixing the tune himself.
You can buy it here.
The adorable icing on the cake; Benny J enlisted his 10-year-old son, Sonny J Ward to create the animation for the video clip to "Tell Me Tell Me" – following an inspired 2am New Year's Day kitchen brainstorming session.
Schizophonics make it one for the road
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 1761
San Diego's dynamite Schizophonics are throwing a special farewell to Oz show in Melbourne on Labour Day, Monday. 13 March . Venue is the John Curtin Hotel in Carlton.
Cementing themselves as "one of the best bands to see live, ever!" with their performance at Tentpole Festival, this will be your last chance to catch them before they head home.
Local garage-punk faves Blowers are special guests, tix are just $20 + bf and you can get them here.
No fringe required when Scientists hit town
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- By Robert Brokenmouth
- Hits: 2972
The Scientists
Earth Tongue
Cull - The Band
Lion Arts Factory, Adelaide
4 March 2023
Photos: Alison Lea
It's the middle of Festival season here in Adelaide. As I walk toward the Lion Arts Centre, in the mid-1980s a sprawling, possibility-ridden centre of the most extraordinary range of Fringe shows for several years, Adelaide is chockas with assorted revellers starting out on their Saturday night of revelling, or whatever it is people do on a night roaming from club to club.
Many of the professional scroungers have arrived and are already parked on the footpath. A few will raise enough shrapnel for a box of goon and spend the rest of the night abusing passers-by until they're either kicked or arrested or both, followed by Maccas for brekky at the cop shop. A top night out; Adelaide can compete in the big leagues.
It's early yet (6.30pm), the doors open at 7, and the first band, Cull, will be on shortly after.
So. I see this bloke amble out of the venue. Spotting me, he ambles down the stairs and comes over. It's probably my new Josh Lord “Neotribalism”. T-shirt (huge red skull on the front) (note product placement). He comes over; 'Are you here for the gig?'
- Get a ticket to this circus
- Ex-Birdman Chris Masuak returns to Australia for three-week tour
- Dunnies take their best laid plans to France and Spain
- Datura4 heads east to play some Neanderthal jams
- Second time around: The re-emergence of Simon Juliff
- Lock up your red cordial. The hyperactive Schizophonics are back
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