Some of you may have noticed that in the graphic for our single ‘Escalating Ruination’ that the word, ‘Escalating’ was misspelt ‘Escalting’. This was a mistake. Now I could seek to change this, but it just seems too poetic to me, too perfect in its imperfection. Back in my twenties, I wrote a series of poems called the ‘Mistake Poems’ sometimes spelt MsTake for effect. The idea came about from mishearing or misunderstanding things I heard, such as the word, ‘flowers’ , which I once heard as ‘for all hours’.
As a singer unfortunately I don’t have perfect pitch. Now I could these days go through every performance with a fine tooth comb and perfect each note with some form of auto-tune, but why? Are the Beatles harmonies all in perfect pitch? No they are not. Does Bob Dylan sing in perfect pitch? No he does not? Does every blues bend to perfect pitch? Etc etc. I’m not perfect. Surprise surprise . We are not perfect. “One by one we’re all made of mistakes. “ - this is actually a line in one of the other songs on the album, ‘Trouble’. And escalating ruination may well be a mistake, if the prolonging of our species is in fact something you hope we do. The verses of the song are deeply personal, but the chorus is universal- “coz I must be a part of something special now - down - Escalating in our ruination - down down - coz we all must fall down” - those words were a personal lament on the current state of things. We all want to feel to feel special. It makes us so gullible and susceptible to trickery. We read some emotionally potent oversimplification and it triggers our sense of righteousness, and you know how pride comes before a fall, so off we go jumping on our high horse , “The sheeple this” or “the science that” , like somehow we are only ones with a clear understanding and the others are just blind or stupid. Right against left. Conservatives against progressive. Or religion against religion or the war between the sexes or the gender debates - whatever it is , we’re right and they’re wrong. It has really affected me over the years and this chorus is a lament to that and to all the folly of our human ways, but the beauty and meaning in the mistake poems that I wrote in my twenties, was all about how somehow these all too human mistakes were integral to life itself. No Resurrection with the fall in the garden. And we'd have no great come back stories, and we all love a good come back story right ? :) Every journey begins with the fools fall. Falling in love etc etc. And we learn from our mistakes, hopefully, or we don’t and we repeat them over and over again and they become part of us, part of what makes us unique. We see the flaws in our family members and we love them just the same. Sometimes we not so kind to ourselves, but at the end of the day, we are flawed , we are not perfect, we are not Gods. We may hope that Ai or robots might get closer to perfection than us, but I highly doubt being that it is an extension and invention of our own flawed selves. We will never photoshop the life out of life, but if we do it will be a great loss, for the beauty, the pathos and the meaning is made in the falling- it’s in the mistakes - so I’m choosing to leave the spelling mistake in the graphic as it is. Maybe those who notice the mistake, will notice the mistake in the act of escalating ruination also? Who knows? If you like, you’re welcome to correct it, but I think I’ll just leave it there. ;) with heart, Andy
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‘Escalating Ruination’ - the first single from our ‘Falling’ album is due to be released on all the usual platforms May 1. It was the first song we wrote for the album and the glue of the whole project. Cam and I sat down with guitars in hands and bashed out the chord changes. I sang a little melody idea and recorded it for future reference. We went our own ways that night. I went off and wrote a poem. The first I’d written in a while . I’d been experiencing writer’s block and had become hyper critical of everything I was doing. I began reading Jeff Tweedy’s book, ‘How to write one song’. It was a lovely read. So beautifully human and a nice reminder of my own values regarding creativity. It gave me the confidence to start trusting the whole process of splatting ink onto a page and letting it unfurl its own uniqueness and wisdom in the freedom of play. The poem didn’t fit the melody I’d recorded earlier, but I liked the poem, it felt honest and made me cry, so that was a start. The next morning Cam sent me through a demo with all the parts arranged. I was blown away. It was so inspiring. I went straight into the studio and just sang the words I’d written for the poem in a whatever melody it wanted me to make, letting most of the old melody go. I sent it to Cam and he totally related to the story and shared a similar experience. It was the bonding that brought the whole album together. When we began the project it was just to write one song together for my new album, but in the excitement of this first we both sent each other a bunch more song ideas and it was soon clear we had to make album. All this started last July when I was home with the flu. The sickness was most certainly transformed into something else. This song feels like a good place to start the journey. ‘Escalating Ruination’ falling May 1, 2024. With heart, Andy
Proud Dad moment. My son is very creative. He loves to paint and draw and make up intricate lengthy stories with play-doh. He’s quite content to play with his Lego for hours, making up all kinds of characters, which he gives funny rhyming names and then interacts them with one another. He also comes up with little expressions. A couple of days ago, when I got home from work he charges at me joyfully for a cuddle and says, “you’re a Velociraptor and I’m a meteorite” - it was badass. I laughed to myself and imagined a wrestler saying something like that before a fight. His playfulness with language has really come to life this past year. It makes me think of what the linguist Noam Chomsky said that, “creativity is innate”. Or Picasso, “Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once you grow up.” The realities of economic management and survival seem at times at odds with our natural state of being in wonder. There are some who’s sense of play translates well to the money game, there are others traumatized by the drama of money’s absence. I’d like to oversimplify the whole thing by saying, “have fun, enjoy every moment, you are an innately creative being, play your way to prosperity “ , but I don’t wish to insult the very real struggles of those stressed to the eyeballs with economic and existential uncertainty - 2022 was a tough year for many in our local area, some losing everything in flood and having to begin again from scratch. May opportunities for creativity and free play be plentiful in 2023 and may we find innovative solutions together as a species to prolong our time of wonder beneath the Sun and Stars. May we not be Velociraptors just yet.
I love Sunsets. I love the shifts in light; dusk and dawn, full as they are with a vivid celebration of orange , peach, pink and red, mauve , pinky blue, violet hues and Vincent like puffs of silver and gold fluffy like fairy floss floating in the sky. And I love the shifts from day to night because they fill me with a sense of awe and wonder , to be alive, to witness life, to simply be in the moment and enjoy the show. And it’s real, unlike social media which is fake, and I don't mean the people and how we chose to represent some aspect of our being, no I mean the world of bots and algorithms designed to direct you away from the present moment and the wonder around you. Designed to modify your behavior and your beliefs, to shock you into buying back some piece of peace and comfort, and designed to keep you logged into the machine as long as possible so the algorithms can track your searches, your likes, you psychology and then train you like a dog to salivate at the ring of its bell. Sunsets are way better. I’ve been playing a few Sunset gigs of late and really enjoying that moment of singing down the sun. When I'm next in your hood or if you're ever in mine, come and share in a moment of real beauty with me- a meaningfulness that you can trust to be as fleeting as life itself, with no desire to track you. Although I will be trying to sell you something, as I am now. Ah it’s a complex transaction is this…. Give me likes and feed my addiction, buy my music and feed my family.
Oh yes in case you're wondering I've been reading '10 arguments for deleting your social media accounts right now' by Jason Lanier. It's without a doubt a compelling and important read. California Stars and the unsweetened year of the pancreas
On the 14th November 2021 I lost not only my cousin and one of my best mates; I lost a hero. Richard James Brown of Croydon Victoria had always modelled for me the way of a true gentleman. He was a born leader without ever needing a follower or accolades. It seemed enough to him to simply walk the path that he knew in his heart was true. And that was example enough. He never cheated or lied that I ever saw and he always treated people with the utmost kindness and respect. He loved a laugh, could tell you a joke and knew the difference between good music and simply expensively produced music- which isn’t to say expensively produced music isn’t good, it can be, it should be, but it’s not always. He could feel when something was truly heartfelt and when something was merely phoney. He could always pick a fake. There was never any pretence. Richard was tragically diagnosed with pancreatic cancer just after Easter 2021. He put up a brave fight but barely made six months. It was a huge loss to his immediate family, and a huge loss also to pretty much every one who ever met the guy. I was honoured to spend his last days with him. Playing DJ on the vinyl and helping him in some small way. As he passed Madness were playing in the background. The song of course – “it must be love love love” Richie always had a lot of love to give. Rich had always been there for me in life. Whether it was kicking a footy, backyard or beach cricket or music, he’d always been full of enthusiasm and encouragement. Richard was older than me by two and a bit years, but we’d spent a. lot of time together as kids staying at my Nans and always just felt extremely comfortable in each other’s company. We’d introduced each other to so much music over the years. I introduced him to ‘The Sex Pistols’ and he’d introduced me to ‘Judas Priest’. I will never forget the two of us screaming our lungs out whilst singing ‘The Ripper’ together in the Balnarring Beach Public Showers. It must’ve sounded God-Awful trust me. But we loved it! Over the years our tastes shifted and grew and became more defined. One weekend not long after Richard had become a Dad, we spent some long nights catching up on each other’s music collections. We both loved the song-writing and poetry of Billy Bragg. “Have you heard the album he did with Wilco?” Richard asked me. “Who’s Wilco?” I said naively. “Oh we gotta put that on next.” He said, and that begun a love affair with Wilco’s music for me that has continued to grow stronger every year since. “They used the poetry of Woody Guthrie”, Richard said. My ears pricked up. I’d only just read ‘Bound for Glory’ a couple of years before whilst at Uni and thought it was one of the greatest novels I’d ever read. “Bound for Glory is an absolute Masterpiece!” I said. “Woodie Guthrie has one of the most authentic and natural voices I’ve ever read.” I was thinking now about Derrida and his writings on the author and the idea that we are never closer to the author than when we hear someone speaking their story, creating the very thing right then and there in the moment of their animation. As close to the inspiration and source as we could ever hope to be. I’m talking now of Derrida’s ideas about written words being dead on a page, waiting for the reader to bring life to them. Not dead so much as Zombies, neither dead nor alive, like a virus needing a host to breathe life back into those dormant ideas sleeping there on pages, and how the spoken word in comparison is so full and rich with life. Guthrie’s ‘Bound for Glory’ seemed an exception. The author’s voice feels very much alive and present– the passion still feels close to it’s source. Back when I read Derrida’s ideas I couldn’t help think about my own writing and how my writer voice seemed somehow more contrived than my spoken voice. I love to write because there’s that slight little extra bit of time you have in the process of communicating which gives space for embellishment, and for the poetry to not only enter but to brew for a bit and add to the flavour and aroma of the whole thing. In doing so though, the question remains; do I lose something of the authenticity that is more simply and naturally there in the spoken word? I always speak my words out loud as I re- read them, to see if they excite the mouth with their movement on the way out – I guess it’s a test of some sort – but who knows it may just be a vanity? What’s that expression? “He loves the sound of his own voice!” A little too self-conscious perhaps? Maybe, but I’ve always loved reading the musings of other artists and understanding their own creative process – I’ve always thought it like a fantastic baton that gets passed from one generation to the next – from Prometheus to the present – poets stealing fire from the Gods to spark a flame in the minds of the young that they themselves may carry that torch for a while inspired as they are to run with it. Reading Woody Guthrie reads as I imagine he spoke –a very natural easy flow to his voice– simple yet right on target every time- from the heart and to the point - sparks flying off every page and that is a rare gift. “Writers can only dream of writing so poetically, so economically and without any pretence.” I was erupting now with passion as I spoke to cousin Richard, jamming as we were around the magic, deep beauty and spiritual purpose of a great song or poem. “Anything too silly to be spoken should be sung”, I quoted Oscar Wilde. Anyway back to Wilco, apologies I get easily side-tracked, there’s just an infinitude in every direction, every thought sparks another and so it goes and goes and goes……so anyway where was I? Yeah well then as soon as the album ‘Mermaid Avenue’ came on I was mesmerized, and no song touched me more than ‘California Stars’. That unmistakable pocket Wilco sit in – that truly American sound. When Rich was diagnosed, his incredibly inspiring wife and soul mate Rosie, decided to put on a music festival for Richie called ‘BrownFest’. She organized a bunch of his favourite local acts including the Melbourne Ska Orchestra and started putting it together. Unfortunately, every time it was scheduled, Melbourne went into another lockdown and it got postponed. When Rosie asked me to be involved, I started planning my set list. I knew I had to play ‘Venus in bikinis’, Rich had always loved that song. I’d played it to him when it was only a single verse and a chorus and in his usual encouraging fashion he’d said, “You gotta finish that one Cuz”. I thought over all the music we’d shared and ‘California Stars’ came to mind. It’s a song about longing. A song you can pour your heart out singing. “I’ll put that one on the list” I thought. I’ve always felt so full of longing, from childhood up. My parents divorce left me longing for the kind of happy families I saw on the box, then my Pa’s passing, brother’s passing, Mum’s passing, Nan’s passing, too many friends to mention passing, all of this has filled my life with longing and of course the lost love stories – longing seemed to fit me like a second skin. Life and longing have always seemed inseparable. I’d played a few gigs during that time with a couple of new players in the line up, (being that Covid had scattered my usual band half way across the country). I’d really enjoyed the way the new players (Brett Canning on bass, Dave Sanders on drums, Dylan Curnow on piano, Alex Mcleod on lead guitar and moi) all fit together. Sonically it just felt really natural and easy. I wanted to try to capture that sound and feeling. I’d written an album of songs during lockdown, but had really struggled to make peace with them and haven’t finished them yet as a result. I’d never before experienced so much self-doubt around my lyrics, and so that album is still kind of laying around unfinished and somewhat forgotten, but that’s another story altogether. I wanted to go into the studio with the new line up and try to capture the sound. I’d done a bit of work with Dylan Curnow on my song ‘Sasika’s Revenge’ which we’d been playing live for a while and audiences always seemed to respond to the shuffle, so I felt confident we could take that one for a bit of a walk. We spent one day at our Christian Pyle’s Recording Studio in Goonengerry. I love the atmosphere out there. It’s my favourite studio I’ve ever recorded in. There’s magic there. The creativity and colour just dances and sings itself off the walls. It’s comfortable but also inspires that safe and natural creativity of free play. We did two takes of California Stars and went with the second. I’m always looking forward to the next time I can spend a day out there with the boys. It’s definitely a happy place. I wanted to record a version of ‘California Stars’ for Rich and send it to him to thank him for all he had given to my life. Unfortunately, I didn’t get to share the finished mix with him, but I can feel his pulse in the heart of the whole thing whenever I listen back to it. I reckon he would’ve appreciated our version and I hope you do. The filmclip idea began just as a little fun. I just thought I’d make something simple to accompany the song in hope a few more folk might actually give it a listen if they could watch something simultaneously. I asked my partner Bella if she’d mind filming me singing along to the track whilst I laid back on my bed. Since becoming parents we have so little time to achieve anything for ourselves, so it was a bit of an ask, but she agreed. Placing myself inside a tv seemed to give me a nostalgia for a lost time. It took me back to my childhood where everything seemed much more innocent and uncomplicated. Straight away my heart could feel the longing and the flight that comes from such reverie. “The song longs, the clip should long too”, I thought. Then the idea came to me for multiple screens and an interrupted transmission. Back in the 1970’s I recall watching ‘Gigantor’ and “A Hard Days Night’ cartoons on the old black and white tv before school and over breakfast. It was completely encapsulating as a four year old – it was magic to my developing mind. I recall also how excited the whole family were when we got our first colour tv. It was a real big deal that’s for sure! I also remember though that it was always a constant battle to get the aerial in just the right position, otherwise you’d get a screen full of white noise and static snow. In making this clip I wanted to revisit that static and try to use it creatively. I wanted somehow to revisit that thing that used to really disappoint, annoy and aggravate me and to try to find some beauty in it – a transcendence of some sort – my own little piece of alchemy. The affect just took me back to that innocent and magic filled time. The snow also looked kind of like stars, California Stars and it seemed fitting. The multiple screens spoke to me of our current world, the complete overload of screens we live with. Our attention spans being shortened, overloaded and shirt circuited by constant distraction and multi-tasking. It seems ironic to me that we have so many screens open at once craving connection when each one of those screens seems to alienate us further still. All of this seemed like a good premise for a film clip for song that sung of longing. I was all set to launch the clip and song when once again my family world would be thrown into a spin. My 3 and half year old Son was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, probably as a result of a virus – or rather as a result of his immune system’s response to a virus. It has been a very steep learning curve and an enormous amount of stress and work in trying to balance a little boys whimsical eating habits with the strict regime of a medical team who strongly suggest he have 9 to 10 exchanges of carbohydrate a day (there are 15 grams of carbohydrate to an exchange) and then insulin to match it. Their expectations are based on the old food pyramid we all learnt about back in school. But it’s complicated, small children can be fussy eaters and don’t always eat what’s put in front of them, and if he eats protein and veggies, he is less likely to want or need that much carbohydrate, but once you’ve given him his insulin, he needs those carbohydrates or he’ll experience hypoglycemia. Which has been happening way too regularly for any parents liking, whilst the medical professionals get their doses right. It's been massively stressful to say the least. And you mourn for the ease of the life you once had. My son himself has been amazing about the whole thing. It’s incredible to see how well he bounces back from all the hardship. He is truly inspiring. So yeah, there’s that – which only adds to the longing I guess– longing for health, longing for calm, longing for less stress and more joy and a simpler life. Type 1 diabetes is unrelenting, it’s life long, 4 insulin injections a day, constant testing of blood, the never ending measuring of Carbs and balancing against your insulin dose. It’s a challenge to say the least. I’ve learnt a lot though, I’ve learnt about insulin, and glucagon, the exocrine and endocrine system, the immune system and islets of Langerhans Cells and pancreatic juice ???? (couldn’t they come up with a more scientific sounding term for that? Pancreatic Juice? It sounds made up for sure!) And of course I’ve learnt more about crying and putting on a brave face, and laughing and making the most out of any situation. Boy there’s nothing quite like a trip to a Children’s Hospital or a Paediatric ward to give you a fresh perspective – seeing as you do the everyday struggles of others is very sobering. People getting on with life best they can under very challenging conditions. It’s most certainly been the year of the pancreas for me, from Easter 2021 to June 2022 has that little gland given me a schooling. The pancreas’ role is to maintain constant blood sugar levels - I’ll tell you what, without a functioning pancreas life seems a hell of a lot less sweet that is for sure. So what’s the message? Is there a message? Is there something here to learn from loss and longing? Life tempers us over time smoothing out our jagged edges as we learn to accept just how little control we have over anything. How sweet is the sunlight on your face after a storm? After a flood? Is there something to learn here from the virus of the written word? Something about how Wilco lifted Woody Guthrie from the grave to sing for us once more? Ah how we suffer to love the sweetest of all longing. Pancreas from Greek – Pan = All Kreas = flesh So….. ‘all flesh’ What’s that supposed to mean? I’ve no idea! I’m baffled. It’s beyond me. I’m small. All I know I guess is love and longing. Life – the suffering beauty of love and longing. “I’d love to rest my heavy head tonight on a bed of California Stars. I’d love to lay my weary bones tonight on a bed of California Stars.” Check out the clip at https://youtu.be/lwHWBgOa_gc With heart always, Andy. It was strange to have a milestone birthday amidst lockdown. It was a full moon in Scorpio , a flower moon. It was a very reflective time. Of course I missed my mum and brother dearly along with other close family and friends who have moved on to other dimensions. I missed speaking to my mum on the phone, her voice, a simple “getting there love how are you?” From her raspy kind voice. I reminisced over much of the past in my mind without friends around to laugh with about all the falls and blunders, the folly, the romance, the hardship and lessons. I wondered about the future, about freedom, about art, about nation, about globalism, the economy, rising tensions, struggles, about the future of democracy and capitalism , about borders and the virus and the the dermatitis on my hands from constant soap, I wrote poems and songs and then scribbled most of it out, I had my doubts and then I played with my son and experienced a little of the wonder that fills his heart and mind and I was filled with faith in life, in human creativity , in problem solving and play, in our striving to be better, no matter how many times we fall over, there’s something there, living in spontaneity that gives me hope. We both love bubbles, we both love balloons, we both love guitars, we both love music, we both love flowers, we both love Bella, we both love our Mums, we both love chocolate cake and we both love hats . :)
Stupidity is measured by its followers.
Genius stands alone. By the time an idea is consumed by the masses, it is rehearsed and insincere; a propaganda of sorts, a replica of a replica, it's watered down and impotent, it's sterilized, homogenized, and capitalized - the truth and genius are no longer with it, they've cracked that shell with wings to fly - museums and galleries drape their walls with dead skin. AJB So I've written, directed and edited my first feature length film, 'Hell is Light' - it's a feature length coming of age, arthouse, black comedy, psychedelic soap opera and music video.
I also composed the songs of the soundtrack with help from my good friends Dave Tweedie, Antoine Beillevaire aka Poussebouton, Dylan Curnow, Christian Pyle, Alex Mcleod and Brendan Lees. It's been an epic adventure and steep learning curve. I hope you all enjoy it. I'll be applying to film festivals around the globe and will endeavour to screen it where ever possible. If you're interested to learn more or have it screen in your town check out www.facebook.com/HellIsLight and drop me a line. The premiere screening will be on Saturday 3rd November 2018 (2 PM Qld time) at New Farm Cinemas in Brisbane. It will be a double bill with the short absurdist comedy film 'Matt Gaffney must die'. We'd love to see you there. Tickets at www.stickytickets.com.au I wrote this on toilet paper this morning, feel free to wipe your arse with it.
To suffer is to be human; it is by nature inevitable, and therefore unremarkable in itself, but how we endure that suffering and how as innately creative beings we turn that suffering into imaginings of beauty and meaning - this for me has always been super-wonderful and has always enabled me to peer beyond the dark curtain of mortality that can obscure that ever-beautiful and fascinating spark of eternal creation. The world is in a state of decay it is true, but every day is an opportunity to create dazzling beauty and meaning from entropy. When in the face of the wind, the tenuous flame of mortality flickers uneasily, may the mind be comforted by ones absolute, inalienable at oneness with the singularity of all universal creativity. May the simplicity of a slang word, an unusual question, a quick wit, a random act of kindness, the evolution of a birds colourful feathers and the wonder of spontaneity in dances of seduction forever remind you of the breathtaking and spectacular creative beauty that is the core of your very being. 15 albums that have changed my life . 1992. album 10 - henry's dream by nick cave and the bad seeds4/22/2018 Day 10 - 1992
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - 'Henry's Dream' As mentioned in my previous post, my older and wildly charismatic brother passed away in 1991. At his wake, a very cool and stylish outsider girl named Kipley, who was the older sister of one of my brother's good friends Courtney Mathieson, asked if she could give me a cuddle. We were both quite drunk at the time. Soon enough we were kissing and the night turned into morning and no sleep had either of us had. Kipley had lost her Dad a year earlier I think from memory, and we both did all we could to lose ourselves in the liberation and transcendence of passion and the mad old moon. I was living in Sydney when we first met, studying at NIDA, but by the years end, I was back into the grit of Melbourne, whose muddy womb my brother's bones were now resting in. Kipley was a total rock star. She'd lived in a squat in dirty old London and have travelled through Egypt on a camel. She was four years older than me, she was wild and wise and I was her eager student. She gifted me a book 'And the ass saw the angel' written by Nick Cave. I fell in love. What an evocative writer this guy is. I loved the dark and dirty world he created. I loved the grotesque characters and his depiction of the monstrous behaviour of a town toward Cave's mute, il-favoured, innocent starry eyed lover. It is truly a beautiful book and so full of pathos. I loved that I needed a dictionary with me at all times too, and not just any dictionary either, for this baby you needed The Complete Oxford. Nick Cave's love of language was intoxicating. I was hooked. 'Henry's Dream' came out not long after and was my new favourite kind of beauty. It was dark and veiled in mystery. Every track a stunning poem and performance delivered it seemed by an impassioned fallen angel, who stood lean and tall and suited in black, growling and barking and howling to the moon, and to the father who'd forsaken and abandoned him to suffer alone the stupidity and failings of man. These haunting songs seemed like moans from a burning pulpit of an old dilapidated and decaying church, on a rainy night amidst the most violent of storms. The band sounded like thunder rolling in behind his lightening strikes. But it was so much more than all that, there was heart and compassion, there was pathos and sincerity and longing. "All the towers of Ivory are crumbling and the swallows have sharpened their beaks, this is the time of our great undoing, this is the time that I'll come running straight to you coz I am captured one more time." Nick Cave and the bad seeds seemed to know just how I felt. The organ sounded like a choir of mourners at a funeral and Nick too sounded like he was grieving for the loss of something. Their music wrapped me up in a beautiful empathy for the suffering that none of us can ever avoid. I went along and saw the band live at The Pallais Theatre in St Kilda, which was the suburb we were living in at the time. It was an incredible gig. What a monstrous beast of a band they were that night. I remember the hairs on the back of my neck stood on end electrified by the collective hum in the room and tears ran overwhelmed as I was by the immense power of 'The Mercy Seat' live. Years later I would be so lucky enough to be asked by MIck Harvey to open for them in Sydney and Brisbane. It was a dream come true and an incredible honour. Mick was very kind to me, kind to us all and put us all at ease. I went backstage after the Brisbane gig and helped myself to sandwich. I introduced myself to Nick. "Hi, I'm Andy, I was your support tonight." Nick looked at me and his face lit up. "How was it?" "Overwhelming!" I said and Nick burst into laughter. Later we all went to dinner and I got to tell Nick about a dream I'd had with him it, where we'd been walking arm in arm around the school yard and I said to him, "Nick what do I have to do to be a Rock Star?" To which he responded, "It's as simple as sticking your dick in a dim sim." Nick nearly fell off his chair when he heard of my dream. "Maybe it is?" he said and continued laughing. "Hang on was it steamed, or fried, or still cold from the freezer? Maybe I was trying to tell you it's really difficult" He laughed some more and added, "I think you should talk to your analyst about that one." It was a golden moment I'll treasure to the grave. I've loved their music every since. Every member past and present a true artist to behold. I love Nick's songs, writing, his screen plays and his collaborations, particular the one with Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard titled '20, 000 Days on Earth' from 2014, which I own and have watched many many times. But it all started here for me back at Henry's Dream. Of course I was quick to track down his back catalogue, but Kipley already had most of it anyway. Here's the opening track of the album, 'Papa won't leave you Henry' - What a band! What a songwriter! What a piece of beauty to behold! Day 9 - 1987
U2 - The Joshua Tree My first ever CD. The late eighties. Following on from 1984 and my sense of being born a second time to a whole new world of possibility through art and self expression, straight out of the alienation I experienced from the school system, I found myself right at home, completely engaged and inspired at Preston TAFE doing a 2 year advanced certificate in Performing Arts. It felt like an oasis in the desert of what had been a very trying time in my family life. Mum had moved with my brother up to Queensland, to start a new life and help create some distance for him, from the sad and very scary world of drugs and criminality with which he had entangled himself. I got my driver's license on the day of my birthday and dad had helped me get loan to purchase a 'Holden Commodore' - what a great car they were - I felt like the King of the Mountain. But unfortunately that same day I got a phone call from my mum informing me that my big brother, whom I always looked up to as being the toughest and coolest guy around, had been diagnosed with testicular cancer, which may've been caused by a violent bashing he'd received for not paying his bills to some very nefarious thugs. It sure sucked the joy out those 18th birthday celebrations let me tell you. There was a lot for me to process. I used to lay in a hot bath by candlelight and listen to U2's 'The Joshua Tree' and cry and heal simultaneously. Paul fought the good fight but lost his battle 3 years later. Still to this day he remains one of my greatest heroes and biggest influences on my life. He was such a beautiful guy. Grief is life long there's no doubt, it's kind of like pregnancy in reverse, the contractions of intense pain get further and further apart over time. But you gotta keep going and life moves on and back in 88, Paul was still alive, there was still hope and my life was opening up to me in a whole new way. I moved into my first share house in North Fitzroy with 2 of my great mates Dave Houston and Guy Richards. Dave was studying acting at VCA at the time and Guy was studying with me at Preston, so the house was always full of actors and creative types. These guys were a great influence on me at the time, sure they were bad influences at times too, we threw parties in that house that were so big and wild and legendary that it took years to clean up afterwards. I think I'm still cleaning. People were sitting on the roof, coz there was no more space in the house or either of the yards. It was chaos. Cigarette butts swimming in dregs of stubbies, ashtrays full of wine - students! We'd all read that incredibly inspiring book 'Improvisation and the theatre' by Keith Johnson, and had learnt to live life by saying 'Yes and.....' Or to quote Johnson directly, "There are people who prefer to say 'YES' and there are people who prefer to say 'NO'. Those who say yes are rewarded by the adventures they have, and those who say no are rewarded by the safety they attain." It was adventure we were seeking and art in itself is most certainly an adventure. I felt so free and so deeply engaged and purposeful in my studies as a result. I was reading and learning about great thinkers and artists such as Samuel Beckett, Mike Leigh, David Hare, Tom Stoppard, Sam Shepard, Jack Hibberd and The Pram Factory. Their ideas were given context, and my mind was set on fire. Education was now an adventure, I never missed a singe day of school. Everyday I woke up, I couldn't wait to get back to class and continue to examine the works and the minds of the greats and classics. Our teachers were so inspiring. We were all so deeply engaged. We created Political Theatre together, we pushed the boundaries, we discovered ourselves and our voices. And more than that we became friends for life. There was so much good music being played at all those parties, they were the anthems of our new found artistic freedom. 'The Violent Femmes', 'Joy Division', 'REM', 'Talking Heads', 'The Cure', 'The Smiths' and 'The Pixies' all hold the emotional memory of the late 80's for me, even though some of those bands were most certainly from earlier periods. But no single album encapsulates the whole depth of the experience more so than 'The Joshua Tree' by U2. It's a perfect album to completely immerse yourself in. Turn out the lights, light a candle, clean out the old bath tub, (which was outside in actual fact at our North Fitzroy abode), fill it up, lay back and go on that ever cathartic inner journey of self honesty and letting go; and of dreaming your visions onto that ever expansive empty canvass that is 'The Joshua Tree'. As legend has it the album was almost called, 'The two America's'. Bono and the guys loved much of what America had on offer, but it was The Reagan years and US domestic and foreign policy was something very far from the beauty of Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie, Walt Whitman, Jack Kerouac, Charles Bukowski, B.B King, Billie Holiday, Yosemite, The Grand Canyon and Joshua Tree National Park. From that epic opening track with that galloping musical build to Bono's voice full of yearning .... " I want to run, I want to hide, I want to tear down the walls that hold me inside, I want to reach out and touch the flame where the streets have no name" and it goes searching and yearning 'I still haven't found what I'm looking for' and 'With or without you' - this album is hauntingly beautiful. Bono's vocal soaring the heart to new heights and falling to great depths of longing. The Edge masterful as ever with his epic delays and unique style. A rock solid rhythm section in Adam and Larry ever supportive. Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois at the reigns - it all just seems to work. It doesn't feel like anyone of them are trying at all. Just some kind of pure simplicity, some kind of being state, an eternal outpouring and connectedness such as you feel out there whenever visiting Joshua Tree National Park. It feels like such a spiritual place. I'd always wanted to visit there because of this album and like our own red centre and like this U2 masterpiece - it's timeless!!!!! Absolutely timeless. I've sat in my car during peak hour on Hoddle Street in Melbourne and thought, "What are we all doing here?" but when you sit in such a timeless space as The Joshua Tree National Park or in a bath tub with this wonderful U2 album, and you have the time to actually reflect on all the mess that is love and life and loss and heartbreak and disappointment and death and striving and failing and falling, you actually feel rejuvenated and refreshed enough to keep going, to keep loving, and to keep trying regardless. It's a beautiful homage to resilience and nature itself, it's a storm of tears in the desert heat, it's life born from emptiness, it's the Yucca brevifolia in the Mojave desert. It's the Joshua Tree. It's poetry in nature. Here's my favourite track, 'Running to stand still'. Day 8 - 1984
Purple Rain - Prince Although I was born in 1970, I feel like a big part of me, of who I am today, wasn't born until 1984. I was 14 years old. I felt awkward. I was a late bloomer. Most of the boys in my year at high school were all born in 69 and had hit their growth spurts. I felt embarrassed and boyish in comparison. My older brother was a local legend, who seemed to have it all, good looks, a muscular lean physique, confidence, intelligence and charisma. I felt completely dwarfed by the comparison. I could never live up to his greatness and scampered around for crumbs in his shadow. I didn't know it at the time, but I was desperately seeking a point of difference by which I could identify myself with. My brother had always encouraged me, my whole family had. My Pa, on my Mum's side was also an incredibly charismatic, charming and successful man. He would always send you off after a visit with a little joke. "Did I ever tell you the one about? ......." and off he'd go with one of his funny stories or jokes. We all looked up to him and loved him very much. I showed interest in learning jokes and mum bought me a joke book for my birthday; and so after Pa would tell his joke, I'd tell him one back. "Ha, good one Pa, did I ever tell you the one about?...." and off I'd go. My brother thought I was a funny kid and would get me to tell jokes to his friends. "Go on Andy tell them the one about...." And off I'd go. I didn't fit into the school system. My home life was quite unique and very colourful. School was boring in comparison and home work was impossible amidst the ups and downs of Party's and Drama that was my ordinary world. Mum was working as a 'Promotions lady' at a local nightclub and would often bring home all kinds of colourful types once the club had closed. It was like waking up into Alice in Wonderland, when the noise stirred you from your dreams and you'd wander out into their party. There were cops and crooks and everything in between, all laughing and drinking and sharing and comparing stories together. It was a community of misfits, broken hearts and deep souls who'd lived big life stories. In hindsight I feel so lucky to have been privy to so many amazing stories at such a young age. One man, 'Dieter' who was a german architect, spoke to me, or rather breathed on me with his whiskey and cigarette breath, "Your mum told me you are a reader? You must read Nineteen Eighty-Four! You must read Nineteen Eighty-Four!" The mix of intensity with which he spoke, his drunkard slur and the spit of his enthusiasm was overwhelming to say the least. I went back to bed, thinking to myself that alcohol really makes people kind of stupid. Then the following day Dieter turned back up at the front door and apologised for his drunkardness of the previous night and gifted me that amazing George Orwell book. That book blew my mind!!! Wowee! I wasn't really much of a reader before that, but afterwards I became insatiable. The Aussie Ballet came by our school to do a little performance and needed a volunteer. Being that I never did any homework, I'd reverted to becoming the class clown to deflect the heat a little. A couple of my friends pushed me forward as the volunteer. I got up and did my first ever improvised acting. I got a few laughs and experienced some kind of magical transformation, it was like entering a dream state or something, everything sparkled and the nerves gave you something extra to work with. I was called to the office later that day and my first thought was, "Oh great, I'm in trouble again", but to my surprise the drama teacher was waiting. "I saw you today in the ballet and was really impressed" she said, "I'd love you to be a part of this years High School Musical". It was life changing. I walked around the school with a new found confidence. Some of the kids, joked and asked if I were " going to be on Neighbours?" I was already writing poetry and a friend introduced me to his mate Rohan Gunstone aka Bang Mango Cools who had started his own band and was looking for a singer. Mango is a pretty cool cat and I felt a bit intimidated but sang him the lines to a few of my poems. He invited me along to the next rehearsal and 'Audio Hangover' which later became 'Vanity Plastic' was born. I'd loved Prince's songs, '1999' and 'Little Red Corvette' and so when his film 'Purple Rain' was released I absolutely had to go along. We went as a group. There was probably 8 or 10 of us that night that made the long trek from Viewbank, through Yallambie and onto the Greensboro cinema, picking up and dropping off walkers along the way. I had my sights set on a certain young lady that I manoeuvred myself into the seat next to, hoping I might get a kiss, or a pash as we called it back then. The movie came on and I was so enthralled. The power of the music and the story brought me to tears. I cried a number of times, and that wasn't cool back then, all my mates were footy heads, we were always trying to one up each other in terms of what we perceived as masculinity, so crying was just perceived as weakness. Luckily for me the cinema was dark. I slid down into my seat to hide the water bursting from my cheeks. Something in the story, really effected me there's no doubt; the fights between the mum and dad and Prince's love story were both full and overflowing with emotion, but the music- oh my the music - the passion and sincerity in Prince's guitar playing and voice, they just cut me to the very core. His songwriting, the arrangements, the production, the absolute musical genius of this man and then his performance, his style, the mystique and the myth. A true artist. He was Jimi Hendrix, Little Richard, Sly Stone, James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Quincy Jones, Marlon Brando and Humphrey Bogart all rolled into one for me. A true star beyond the reach of mere mortals such as myself, but he gave the gift of feeling and dreaming to us all. From 'Controversy' to 'around the world in a day' to 'Sign of the times' to 'Diamonds and Pearls' , 'Emancipation', 'The rainbow children' on and on - every single album, absolute genius on one level or another and his production is just so prolific, there's still probably 10 albums I'm yet to even investigate. I saw him twice in concert - what a showman! A multi-instrumentalist, a producer - the guy is in a league of his own. Prince has set the bar so high it could be confused as a constellation or even a group of constellations flickering in the night sky. I never got to kiss the girl that night, but reflecting back now I see that the seed was planted for me to produce my first feature length music film, which I'm excited to say is now in the very final stages of post production with a whole new double album's worth of tracks. Thank you Prince, thanks for the inspiration. What's that saying, "shoot for the stars and you may just make the moon" - to see the earth from outside is to put one's whole existence into perspective. I live with the wonder. From 'Purple Rain', this was the first song that made me cry, though definitely not the last. Day 7
1982 - 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 or 10 to 1 - Midnight Oil Once again I have to thank my brother Paul for this one. I was still too young in 1982 to really have any idea of what Peter Garret was on about when he sang, "Gough was tough till he hit the rough yeah Uncle Sam and John were quite enough" or "Flat chat, Pine Gap in every home a Big Mac and no-one goes out back that's that!" or "US Forces give the nod, it's a setback for your country Bombs and trenches all in rows, bombs and threats still ask for more Divided world the CIA, who controls the issue You leave us with no time to talk, you can write your assessment" But I got the vibe there was more to the story than what I was hearing on the nightly news. Later on I read books like John Pilger's 'A secret country' and John Perkins 'Confessions of an economic hitman' and a the penny's did drop. I can't thank Midnight Oil enough for the example they set of what Rock Music can be - a force to be reckoned with! I've been lucky enough to see Midnight Oil live a number of times and boy are they one of the greatest in show business. They give it all. Rob Hirst is absolutely spell binding on the drums and Peter Garrett always looked like he was receiving electric shock therapy or something whenever he danced, but the music, ah the music and the message - so brave, so on point! My favourite Midnight Oil gig was at the Coogee Bay Hotel in 1990? I was at NIDA at the time studying acting and the world seemed kind of sparkly and full of promise, but kind of posh and more refined than my Melbourne Bogan roots. It was great to get along to 'Selena's' as it was called back then and into that wild sweaty and impassioned herd. A good friend of mine in Melbourne is the sister in law of Aussie guitar legend Barry Palmer, who was playing for Hunters & Collectors at the time (Another awesome Australian band with huge passion) Barry is one of the nicest guys going. I'd helped him out by removing some old insulation from his new pad and he blessed me with free tickets to a number of concerts in Sydney and the Gold Coast as a result. It was absolutely awesome to check out those two bands together. The Hunters horn section joined the Oils and blasted out that ever catchy singable hook in 'Power and the Passion'. Garrett was swinging off chains, Hirst was kicking over his kit. It was 100% real deal fearless art! The Australian Music scene at the time was thriving, there was still a strong touring circuit where bands could cut their teeth and get the kind of tight that makes great albums possible. Poker machines, the increase of Random Breath Testing stations, no more smoking in pubs, more and more regulations and noise pollution complaints seemed to bring a silence to the roar of that great wild beast that was The Aussie Music Scene. In the mid to late 80's and early 90's I saw some of the greatest gigs of my life and they were all Ozzies 'Chisel's last stand, The Divinyls, The Oils, Hunters, Inxs, The Church and on to the Saints, Painters and Dockers, Nick Cave and the bad seeds, You am I, Dave Graney and The Beasts of Bourbon ' It really was an incredible time. Sometimes I think those guys were lucky to be musicians in that era, to make a living touring whilst getting tighter and tighter as a band, and then other days it seems that the message in the music was simply more powerful and more engaging as a result. Who didn't want to see what would happen on stage when Chrissy Amphlett or The Oils performed? The scene now is smaller but the passion is still very much alive, we have so many great live Aussie bands out there still and a hand full of venues dedicated to the heart and spirit of the thing - be sure to get out there and support them whenever possible. There's a new film coming out soon about the Oils, I can't wait to check it out. Their 1990 film of their gig in front of the Exxon building in NYC is still one of my go to live gig films. A truly legendary uniquely Australian band to which I'm forever grateful. I love every track on this album - they're all such an important part of our Nations History - 'Short Memory' 'U.S Forces' 'Scream in Blue' , 'Maralinga' - I'm still horrified every time I think that after those nuclear tests there at Maralinga they put up signs in English, Italian, French and German, but failed to put up one single sign in the indigenous language of the area, being that these were the only people who would ever set foot there. :( "It' just enough to make you want to cry! It's just enough to make you want to cry!" Oh yeah and if you're an Aussie and you've never been 'outback and that's that' to remote Australia do you self a favour - you've got to feel that red sand beneath your toes, check out the Southern Cross in the night sky and find out whatever you can about our incredible Indigenous history. Yeah 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2 , 1 by Midnight Oil is the history lesson we never got in schools back in the 1980's. Here's the one that hooked me in though- the super catchy and ever singable 'Power and the Passion' Day 6 1979 The Wall - Pink Floyd In 1980 I was attending East Ivanhoe Primary School in the Suburbs of Melbourne. Mum and Paul were living interstate in sunny Port Macquarie, but because I loved Aussie Rules so much I wanted to stay in miserable, cold old Melbourne, so I lived between my Nan's and Dad's places. I didn't know any other kids who had suffered through their parent's divorce. I felt different to everyone else and quite alone. I was good at sports which made me popular. I was always quick to be chosen for a team and I guess this kept my self esteem buoyant. East Ivanhoe School was built in 1930, which isn't that old, but it was the oldest school I'd attended and with the high ceilings, old style desks and dim light etc it felt very foreboding to me as a 10 year old. It felt like a relic to another time. A time of great sorrow and hardship, but I was probably not in the happiest of headspace at the time, so it's not a reflection on the school itself. All the other kids seemed very bubbly and friendly and kind. The first time I saw the film clip to 'Another Brick in the Wall' - I was terrified. All those school students being turned into sausage meat. I didn't understand the concept or the metaphor behind the song/album/film as a kid, I just felt it and it made my skin crawl and my belly brain nauseated. The kids all singing the chorus and then turning over their desks and running a riot in the school room. It was disturbing! What was the message? What are they doing to us here at school? Like the young boy in the film, I too was already writing poems. Somehow it felt personal. I could relate. Then there was vaccination day, and we all lined up to receive the needle in our arms. I just couldn't understand what was going on. A few years later in my teens I watched the film and was blown away by the animation and the overall power of the product. I'm still not sure I fully understood it all. Still I was just feeling it, sensing it. It quickly became one of my older brother's go to movies. He'd sit in his bong room with his mates in what seemed like one eternal night and they'd watch 'The Wall' over and over, briefly interrupted at times by 'Scarface' and they'd smoke themselves into oblivion. When ever I would pass by that room I felt strange, the blue light of the screen bursting through the gaps with a waft of weed and incense, and that sound, that ever haunting sound of Pink Floyd with all it's epic melancholy and subconscious stimuli. Years went by, I suffered more at the hands of fate, I grew, I deepened, I read, I listened, I lived, I loved, I lost and I found. I re-listened to Pink Floyd from a new perspective and fell in love, particularly with 'Dark Side of the Moon' , 'Wish you were here' and 'Meddle', and in fact I've loved those albums more than 'The Wall' it's true and probably played them more often. They're enchanting masterpieces each one of them, the production they achieved is unmatched, the harmony's, Gilmore's Epic Guitar tone and the melancholy in his voice, Wright's keys, the synth parts, the drum sounds, the sound effects, the tape delays, the filtering - unsurpassed brilliance!!!! And then if your mind weren't already blown - the lyrics of Roger Waters. POW! I'm sure people have passed out listening to Pink Floyd there's no doubt. 'The Wall' was their last album together with Waters. Waters was inspired to write the album, legend has it after spitting in a fan's face on a stadium tour. Waters was feeling more and more alienated by his fame and his audience. 'The Wall' is real. I'm typing this onto it. There are a number of fantastic TED talks by Ken Robinson on how the school system, created as it was in the industrial revolution, numbs us to our creative potentials and alienates us from our passion and engaging at a deepler level with the very building blocks of our own uniqueness. When the internet was born in silicone valley by hippies and revolutionaries I'm sure they had high hopes for it's potential to bring us closer together and to break down the wall. Alienation is a terrible thing. Loneliness is one of the great killers there is no doubt. People live longer when they feel connected to others. Suicide is one of the biggest killers in Australia once you take into account the life expectancy data. Sure smoking will kill you, but if it kills you at 70, it might have taken 15 years off your life, but if you commit suicide at 34, 24 or 16 then it's taken up to 70 years off your life. :( Community is invaluable. The more we can do to build it the better off we will all be. Trust too is a key factor. Every time you get ripped off, cheated, lied to, betrayed etc you put another brick in the wall. Every time you reach out and help some body, show them kindness, forgiveness, give them a helping hand etc you take a brick out of the wall. Of course I know, i know I've helped people who've then ripped me off - it happens, people are building their walls daily. Some people are so broken by life, that it's hard to know where to begin. :( And then there's the whole refugee crises and it's going to get worse as climate change continues. I'll never forget being in Paris after September 11 in 2001 and seeing the Army and the Tanks out on the street in a show of force. My friend's grandmother started crying because it reminded her of the Nazi occupation that she had lived through many years earlier. She said the French people were worse than the Nazi's, because they lost their dignity. She said they were so paranoid, that they would dob in their neighbours as Jew sympathises if they even looked at them the wrong way. I'll never forget her words. I came back to Australia and Howard had just circulated a pamphlet that said, "Be alert, not alarmed!" - National Security is paramount, there is no doubt, we all deserve to live life free from harm, abuse and the threat of violence, but we need to build trust and we need to build community, we need to break down the walls, not build more. It very well maybe an emotionally potent oversimplification, but paranoia and fear of the other trumps it in terms of irrationality. Stay open, be kind, listen to others and help out when you can - it's easier said than done of course- I naturally retreat into the world of my art, into song, into dreams - our species seems too far gone some days, but then I think of how creative and adaptive we are as a species and it inspires me no end. The future is being created every day, I say do what you can to make it more inhabitable, fair and sustainable. Walls will fall and mountains too will erode - ah now I feel like i've toppled over into the effluent slurry of cliches and suddenly become overly self conscious - yuk yuk vomit vomit. Words words blah blah - somethings are beyond words, although I didn't understand the depth of this Pink Floyd Masterpiece when I first heard it - I felt it and I felt it deeply. I'll shut up now and let the music do the speaking. Day 5
1977 Never mind the bollocks here's the Sex Pistols It was actually the early 80's that I discovered the Sex Pistols and they were already over. The band had broken up in 78 and Sid Vicious had died in 79, but I was just a kid what did I know? My older cousin Richard Brown introduced me to the Sex Pistols down stairs at my Nan's one school holidays. Richard and I were average white Australian suburban kids, who loved Aussie Rules Footy in Winter and Cricket all Summer long, unless it was raining and then we'd play Freddy Truman's Test Match the board game inside. OK so we may've tortured a GI Joe doll or two, by tying them up with string and pulling them along behind our push bikes or skate boards, but GI Joe was tough, he could handle it. Anyway this particular holiday Richard had two tapes with him- The Great Rock n Roll Swindle by the Sex Pistols and Monty Python, 'The meaning of Life'. Those two tapes just really worked together, they shared some amazing common ground and we were obsessed by them all holidays. I went home to Mum afterwards swearing more than usual and now in my best rough pommy accent. I went straight to the hairdresser to get spikey bleached hair, which I quickly then followed up by piercing my ear. These guys were like cartoon super heroes to me, with their complete contempt for authority and the establishment. The stuff that legends are made of. They felt dangerous and out of the box. I remember watching a doco about their legendary 76 Manchester gig, where they inspired a generation of 'self empowered' punk bands such as Joy Division, The Smiths and The Buzzcocks. There was such an inspiring energy in what they created. Of course it's al fun and games until you wake up from a heroin frenzy to find your girlfriend dead beside you with a stab wound to her stomach and then die yourself of a heroin overdose not long after. A true tragedy there is no doubt. 😞 But as a band and as an idea they encapsulated something truly great. I can't remember hearing the word 'Anarchy' in a positive light, before the Sex Pistols. I might've heard someone describe a complete mess or chaotic event as anarchy, but never in a way that made you want it whilst thrusting your fist into the air. After that holiday experience with my cousin, I was quick to track down what ever I could in regard to the Sex Pistols and 'Never mind the Bollocks' was at the top of the list. What an awesome album. It's an energy. I felt echoes of it again when Nirvana released 'Nevermind', which felt like a tip of the hat to me. It's an energy, it's a self determination, it's having nothing and nothing to lose, it's an asserting one's self in the face of established and corrupted authority, it''s a David and Goliath story of the underdog. It's an uprising of the disenfranchised. I went on to read more about anarchy. George Orwell's account of the Spanish Civil War, 'Homage to Catalonia' where the folk were opposed to the rise of fascism and communism and simply wanted the right to self govern. I read Chomsky and his ideas on Anarcho-Syndicalism and worker owned co-ops etc for after all if there's no government who's going to collect the garbage and fix the roads? I loved his ideas about "how no human should be reduced to the role of a cog in a machine". We each deserve the dignity of a meaningful and self determined existence free from harm, abuse and threats of violence and oppression. I read about the Greek movement 'The Cynics' whose premise was that no one had the right to make decisions on someone else behalf. It seemed the more I read the more I understood that at the roots of this philosophy was something profound and truly meaningful - 'Responsibility', 'Self Determination' , 'Self Reliance' and ‘Self Governance’. But....I mean lets face it the whole Laissez-Faire push from the Right with its reduced Government, no regulation etc most certainly springs from a similar well, but like the chaos most people think of when they think of anarchy, the self interest and greed of the Corporations lends itself to complete irresponsibility and if the events of the 2008 Lehman Brothers crash teach us anything, it's that these institutions are also completely unaccountable for their actions. No, like anarchy, trickle down economics is simply pie in the sky utopian dreaming. It just doesn't work. We need governance, we need a social contract, look what happens when ever we destroy a rebel government overseas. It creates a power vacuum and we end up with something worse than before. But this idea at the root of it all, to question authority, to take responsibility and to stand up in the face of the bully, to express oneself freely and fearlessly- there is something of great and important value in all this. Like Bill Hicks said in regard to The New Kids on the block - I'm paraphrasing, but something like, "when did mediocrity become a good influence for our children? Government approved Rock n Roll, we're partying now? Corporate suckers of Satan's c@*k the lot of them!" We need space in our culture for the rebel, we need that perspective. I watched the Gala event for the Melbourne Comedy festival on the ABC. I was horrified! Everything is so PC it's shocking, disturbing, worrying! Rant over, never mind the bollocks, here's the Sex Pistols. Day 4
1975 "The screen door slams Mary's dress sways Like a vision she dances across the porch as the radio plays Roy Orbison singing for the lonely Hey that's me and I want you only Don't turn me home again I just can't stand to face myself alone again Don't run back inside darling you know just what I'm here for So you're scared and you're thinking that maybe we ain't that young anymore Show a little faith there's magic in the night You ain't a beauty but hey you're alright And that's alright with me You can hide neath your covers and study your pain Make crosses to your lovers Throw roses in the rain Waste your summer praying in vain for a saviour to rise from these streets Well I ain't no hero that's understood All the redemption I can offer girl is beneath this dirty hood with a chance to make it good somehow Baby what else can we do now except roll down the windows and let the wind blow back your hair well this night's busting open and these two lanes can lead us anywhere We got one last chance to make it real and trade in these wings on some wheels Climb in back Heaven is waiting down on the tracks Oh come take my hand We're riding out tonight to case the promised land Oh Oh Oh Oh Thunder Road Oh Thunder Road Oh Thunder Road" There are certain songs that are just so bloody good you know every word to them. It's like those specific words and no others were meant for the melody. It's absolute magic when it happens. They're my favourite songs and obviously the favourites of many others too, that's why at concerts you can see and hear an entire audience singing along. It is amazing feeling. Few artists write such songs. Bruce Springsteen writes whole albums worth. I have to thank my Mum for introducing to 'The Boss'. She was a single Mum raising two boys in suburban Melbourne with longings of her own. She was a good looking lady and many wolves came huffing and puffing at our front door. We laughed and cried so many times together. She was so full of life and all its colour. The first album Mum brought home in 1980 of Bruce's, was 'The River' - oh my god what an album. Mum loved the song 'Hungry Heart' - we'd sing along to that in the car, we knew all the words off by heart, and all the words to 'The River' too, that one always brought me to tears. "You're an old soul" Mum's friends would say to me as I sat there quietly listening in to their colourful stories of heartbreak and betrayal. The very first concert I ever attended was 'Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band' - Paul Kisvarda and I stayed out at The Royal Melbourne Showgrounds overnight so as we could run through the gates as soon as they opened them and get a spot right up the front. It was electric. The songs, the feeling, the camaraderie between the band members and Bruce, the audience, the magic in the air, the smiles, the tears rolling down everyone's faces as the songs spoke deeply to our hearts and to our longings. I knew that night that more than anything, I wanted to be a songwriter, I wanted words to flow through me and sing their songs of longing. I wanted to disappear into the quantum soup of the collective unconscious and harmonise with her secrets. Bruce spoke for my heart and I wanted to follow in those footsteps. The E street band were tight and came across as a band of brothers. It was a communion of the truest kind. We all met inside those songs and shared the beauty, the sorrow, the heartbreak, the longing and all it's meaning together. We cried and we smiled together. We danced and sang together and it was beautiful and it was life profoundly expressed. By the time I saw that 'Born in the USA' tour I knew all of Bruce's back catalogue, but to this day, the album that thrills me most is this one from 1975. 'Born to Run'. It's a concept album looking at the hopes and disillusionments of 'The American Dream'. It open's with 'Thunder Road' - still my favourite track on the album. It sets the scene for the entire album. It's brought tears to my eyes on many occasions. I love the piano line, Bruce's voice. Clarence Clemons on Saxophone, the passion in the drum tracks.... I was very lucky a couple of years back to be taken along by Lisa Huntto see them all again sans CC, who sadly passed away a few years back. It was amazing. They played for over four hours, Bruce took requests from the audience. It was everything you could possibly want from a gig. His book too is awesome as to be expected, authentic to the core, poetic and thoughtful. Here they are : Bruce and the E Street band live with track one from the 'Born to Run' album- 'Thunder Road'. Day 3
1971 - Hunky Dory - David Bowie. My older brother Paul was a born leader and a true rebel. He knew exactly what he liked and what he didn't like. He had a swagger and a dangerous charisma. David Bowie's music was something he most certainly loved and that suited that swing in his walk. My mum too was a huge Bowie fan. There was never a problem in our family home when someone wanted to put Bowie on the stereo. When I look through my record collection, few artists feature as often as David Bowie. He was a consummate artist right to the very end. Every one of his albums is a wonderful journey to behold. Although I grew up singing along to his songs, it wasn't until 'Scary Monsters and Super Creeps' that I really became a fan myself. It was the 'Ashes to Ashes' film clip that hooked me in. I was only ten years old but I had a sense that I was watching something truly magical. As the years went by and I started playing in bands, one Bowie album or another would be on high rotation and not a year has past since without spending some reflective time analysing the lyrics, arrangements, production or overall concept of one Bowie album or another. The one I've listened to and loved the most though, in all my years as a fan, and I love them all believe me, is 'Hunky Dory'. It opens with 'Changes' - what an opener. I love the bass line, the production, the vocal - then onto 'Oh you pretty things' - how good is that song? The piano work of Rick Wakeman is stunning on this album. - it's hard to choose a favourite track - they're all just so great - the album is full of great poems and big ideas - it tips its hat to Nietzsche, Andy Warhol, Robert Zimmerman (Bob Dylan) - it's just such a great work of art full of little wonders. 'Kooks' always makes me smile, 'Queen Bitch' 'The Bewlay Brothers' 'Quicksand' - I love love love it! Bowie makes me feel normal. I love watching old interviews, I love his humanity and intellect and the gratitude I feel to his body of art inspires me no end. Some albums in my collection that I've loved by certain artists, I skip over if I come across them, maybe I overplayed them, maybe they became too popular and I lost interest, maybe they dated - I don't know - but there hasn't been a year yet since I first fell in love with this album, that I haven't welcomed a spin. Without further adieu here's track four 'Life on Mars' -the low harmony vocal in the verse, the strings, the poem, the defiance, the build to the change and then pow !!!!- what a chorus!!!!!! that doubled tracked vocal - then the guitar hook - it really is a piece of perfection. enjoy Day 2
This album was recorded the year of my birth but not released for a quite a few years after. The first time I heard this album I was 13 and it set my heart and mind on fire. Although I didn't discover this band until I was 13, the album was recorded in 1970 so it's next on my list. An older boy, Dean Candy, who first come into my family home via my older brother, quickly became one of my heroes. He was a cheeky character who could always make me laugh. He'd already left school and was on the dole. He didn't want to work. I guess you'd call him a bludger, but to me at age 13, he was beacon of light in a world of darkness. He took me under his wing and taught me how to hunt rabbits using a bow and arrow. I lived right on the fringe of suburbia in a dead end street, where just over that barbed wire was a world of rolling green to wander through and day dream in. Dean showed up one day with a cassette. He was excited and wanted to show it to me straight away. My head exploded as the energy and power of the music blasted through those pioneer speakers. It was a mix of pure sex and anger, philosophy and freedom, carnival and nostalgia, such as I had never heard before. Yet it also seemed strangely familiar as though I'd always known it. It was Rock, it was Blues, it was Cabaret, it was Jazz,it was poetry, it was theatre, it was an improvisation, it was chaos, it was a burning star exploding in a night sky - it was a drug and I was high! There was no greater hero as a disenfranchised, rebellious 13 year old suburban white boy from a broken home than Jim Morrison. "Five to one baby, one to five, no one here gets out alive, they've got the guns, we got the numbers, we're gunna win, yeah we're taking over, come on yeah!" I bought the whole thing hook line and sinker. I was down at Brashs the next day and begun buying up every doors album I could get my hands on. But the first was this one, which had been side one of Dean's Cassette. Live at the Hollywood Bowl or 'Alive She cried' as the album is called. The very first song I heard was a a resurrection of the Van Morrison hit 'Gloria'. Jim taking to that stage like Dionysus reborn. Of course as an adult reflecting back on Jim Morrison I see a lost kid still discovering himself, testing the boundaries and looking for a place to call home, but as a 13 year old he was a god. I saw a great doco where Jefferson Airplane recount a European Tour the did with the doors in 1968. There's footage of Ray having to sing the concerts coz Jim is curled up in a ball, fragile in the corner, overwhelmed by the cocktail of 60's psychedelia, touring and the myth of himself. We've all been that guy or girl, overly excited by the big party and then having a good friend hold your hair out of your face whilst you drive the porcelain bus. "Ride that snake Jimmy, ride that snake." But Jim spoke to me, to millions of us on a very deep level and the music of the doors was the perfect vehicle for his passion, his theatre and his poems - there's no doubt. What a great band. I went on on to read Huxley's 'doors of perception' , Blake's 'marriage of heaven and hell', Rimbaud, Baudelaire and Castaneda, breaking on through to a whole new perspective of reality where to quote Blake "the road to excess leads to the palace of wisdom and in order to know when you've had enough, you need to have too much". Meeting Dean and being introduced to Jim Morrison and the doors altered the very course of my consciousness there is no doubt. So without further adieu - day 2 The doors 'Alive She Cried' and here's track one 'Gloria'. OK so here goes.
I was nominated by Al Stark and my cousin Richard Brown to post the most influential albums of my life. I think the idea is 10 albums in 10 days, but since the albums that have most influenced me have also encouraged my rebellious side I'll be doing 15 albums - that's just the way it is. I will count down from the year of my older brother's birth starting at album 15. The list could have easily been longer - music has been King in my world since I can remember. I've learnt more through listening to albums than I have in all my years at school. So here goes Day 1 - the year of my brother's birth and one of the greatest albums ever. There's been so much written about this album I'm not sure I can add anything, 'Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'. Over the years I've read quite a few books on The Beatles, one of my favourite's is ' Revolution in the head - The Beatles music and the sixties - by Ian MacDonald' - well worth a read. One of my first memories of life is watching 'A hard days night' cartoons on our Black and White television in the morning before my brother had to leave for school. The Beatles were a intrinsic part of my development as a result. When I revisited their albums with absolute awe and wonder in my teens and early twenties, it seemed their albums were an endless stream of creative inspiration. I love the beatles! All five of them - including George Martin. I don't have a favourite. Like the Rolling Stones it's the synergy - it's the magic in the mix. This song is a great example of the synergy. What an incredible group of artists. What an incredible album. What an incredible song. You can really go on a journey with The Beatles music, listening chronologically. It's around the Revolver album that they start to get wildly creative with the form of pop music, introducing tape loops in 'Tomorrow Never Knows' taking on board some of the concepts of 'musique concrete'. Their minds were alive with possibility and art and LSD too if the tales be true, but it's their natural sense of honesty, playfulness, humour and self expression which speaks to me most. The pathway to art is no linear journey, it's made of wondrous fragments, keep safes and souvenirs, of sleeping in gutters and marvelling stars and of consuming great ideas and boldly speaking back - it's an improvised conversation at the deepest level where the heart and mind are one. Sgt Peppers was certainly a great leap forward for popular music and what's more should've included Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields, which had been released as a double sided single under pressure to put something out. It's an album I can go back to again and again and discover something new every time. 'A day in the life' was the first song they tracked and certainly set the tone for the bold album they were about to make. I love it to pieces. A response to Dave Graney’s ‘WORKSHY’ by Andy Jans-Brown
So I wrote this inspired after reading ‘Workshy’ by Dave Graney. I’m no reviewer and a very infrequent blogger and often feel a tad self-conscious and clunky whilst writing in this form, lacking as I feel I do- some kind of natural speaking pen and technical ability. All the same, I feel compelled to speak out in support of other Australian content creators and producers. Word of mouth is often the best and most far reaching publicity we receive. I guess I write this as a response more so than a review, which I’m obviously not qualified to write. It will no doubt say more about me than it does about the book itself, but the fact the book has inspired me to take to the pen once more and write for the love of it is compliment enough to Dave’s wonderful book. I also hope to pass the fantastic baton on and inspire a few of my blog readers and facebook friends to read ‘Workshy’ and to create fresh and unique art your selves. I believe in diversity and think if we all consume a bit more free-range arts culture in general, it will lead to a more tolerant society, and there’s a lot of great authentic and original stuff just outside the bounds and pushed to the edges of mainstream culture. So anyway here I go…… I’ve just closed the final pages of Dave Graney’s latest art ‘Workshy’ and like all the great books on my shelf I feel a sense of loss. The kind of feeling you get when you have to say goodbye to a dear and close friend. It’s an invigorating and inspiring read. Many times throughout the book I felt completely transported to another place and time. I smiled a lot as Dave brought to life the atmosphere and the spirit of the worlds he has walked through and the characters he’s met along the way. Many of them felt familiar to me even though I’m a decade and a bit shy of Dave’s vintage. If you’re an artist this is an absolute must read, full of great lines like “He was playing Brian Wilson songs like ‘Caroline No’, all dressed in leather-trousered and open-shirted undernourished rock’n’roll loucherie.” or “She certainly seemed to see me as a foolish type of person – skipping lightly through this world by his own choice, a man with too many options.” But Graney is nobody’s fool. For me ‘Workshy’ sits somewhere in the realm of greatness alongside such books as George Orwell’s ‘Down and out in Paris and London’ and Woody Guthrie’s ‘Bound for Glory’, but let me put you in the picture of my personal experience to give you the context of my reading. I first discovered Dave’s music back in 1993 when I was living in Eildon Rd, St Kilda. I’d just moved into this old house, which had been divided into units. The rent was cheap, it was perfectly located, a short drunk walk to the Prince of Wales and Esplanade Hotels. The house itself was old school and had all that groovy post punk underworld grit and criminal funk of 90’s St Kilda chic. I felt like I was in the right place for me at that time in my life. I saw bands like ‘Beasts of Bourbon’ and ‘You am I’ all blow the roof off the joints. The vibe seemed more dangerous back then, there seemed to be more outlaws, more junkies and more prostitutes around – it was their world, but they didn’t seem to mind the company of artistic weirdo’s, bands, gender benders and other such outsiders – it was an eclectic mix of black leather, splashes of left over fluorescent Mohawk, psychedelic colour tie-dye and incense to mask the smoke of all that was burning to the ground around us; somehow it all just seemed to work. It was pre-Grand Prix – that face-lift was still a few years away. I was in my early twenties and was fresh back to Melbourne; which was my roots, after years of trying to pretend to be something I wasn’t at the National Drama School in Sydney. You see I’d grown up a mad bogan footballer from Heidelberg in the Diamond Valley League, but with divorced parents, which wasn’t as common back then, and being turned on to the world of George Orwell, The Sex Pistols, Talking Heads and the plays of Samuel Beckett, I felt strangely like an outsider in my own suburb. NIDA, though a complete eye opening experience, had not fit me well either. I was still searching for my people and my place. Returning to St Kilda in my early twenties felt like a good fit. I was in relationship with an older girl that I’d hooked up with at my brother’s funeral. She was a wild one; a super cool, rebellious and well read natural outsider who’d been living in London, Sid and Nancy style, shaking loose the shackles of her suburban upbringing. Her younger sister lived in the unit next door. She threw a lot of parties. I’d regrouped with my best mate from High School and reignited our old band, ‘Vanity Plastic’. Melbourne was in a recession and we rented a rehearsal space with a bunch of other anarchist type artists in an old sewing factory in Collingwood behind Studio 52 Recording Studios. It was cheap and we renovated it with scraps we found in waste bins. We called the place ‘The Biscuit Factory’ coz whenever we talked about our grandiose visions for the place we felt like a bunch of tossers playing ‘soggy biscuit’ (a masturbation game we’d all heard rumours about but none of us had ever actually played) I used to catch that 96 tram out of St Kilda most days and switch to the 86 in Fitzroy. It was full of weirdo’s and junkies on the nod. Drugs were cheap. Anyway I digress…. ‘Night of the Wolverine’ was the first Graney album I heard. ‘You’re just too hip baby’ the very first song. I was a fan before the song had finished. It was unique, catchy and very cool “You take a feather from every bird - you see it never flies” It was refreshing and seemed to have a finger on the very pulse of the times. It felt like the anthem of the world I found myself flying in. Since those years I’ve followed Dave’s career with a keen interest, seeing live shows when I could- myself migrating between the east coast cities of Australia, and then onto Paris and London. Sometime in 2008 I was lucky enough to catch Dave again in Lismore of all places, where I’d completed my bachelors degree in music composition up in Northern NSW. He played an inspiring solo show on tour with Henry Wagons. I gladly bought both their CD’s. ‘We wuz Curious’ By Dave Graney and the lurid yellow mist– a complete masterpiece, quickly became my favourite album of the year. Once again Dave seemed to know how to cut through the façade of the whole thing and speak some kind of truth I’d felt but hadn’t managed to put my finger on. That’s always been one of the indicators of great art to me, when an artist shines a light onto some dark wall within you and manages to articulate something you’ve always felt but never put into words. All my favourite books, albums and songs have this magic ingredient. ‘Workshy’ does the same – in it Dave puts forth an argument for a way of being that every artistic soul has touched upon. A truth that when you’re doing what you love, when you’re being truly who you are, your productivity doesn’t feel like work at all. Dave takes it one step further by somehow remaining true to his artistic nature in all kinds of offbeat and unrelated workplaces, taking behavioural notes of the fascinating animals and environments with which he found himself surrounded. Many years ago whilst living up in Brisbane and teaching acting, I was at the peak of my passion for the Unabridged Webster Dictionary that my Grandfather had given me; which is so big and heavy that you could kill a man with it. At the time I was reading that book daily always being blown away by the poetic definitions their writers had come up with. I’d often look up words I thought I knew the meaning of and be astounded by the poetic definitions inked on those pages. The word ‘weird’ was a revelation to discover. I was expecting a definition of “uncanny or unusual” but in stead was greeted with definitions such as “fate and destiny” apparently coming from mythology and ‘The Fates’ or Shakespeare’s Wyrd Sisters in Macbeth. It seems that the Fates, or the Sisters of Destiny as they were also known, had a unique power beyond the Gods, to weave together the tapestry of every single persons destiny. One of the sisters would feed the wool, the other would spin it and the third sister would cut the wool of each person’s fate into very specific lengths. This definition liberates and empowers the individual in what can feel isolating and alienating at times. I like words and meanings that offer solace in our struggles as humans. Of course there is no need to try to be anyone else, what’s the cliché? “They’re already taken anyway” and other such bumper stickers, but let me put down my shovel for a moment and step out of this hole I seem to be digging for myself…..what am I trying to say? There’s something in this idea that to be fatefully weird, is to be true to who you are and who you are meant to be, and this continues to resonate with me still even as I search in this outpouring trying not to be too weird, whilst obviously still being weird. Is that weird? You get me? Dave Graney has always struck me as being weird in the best kind of way. He has consistently reinvented himself as an artist and walked his own path. His voice is completely authentic; in his own words he states that he is, “qualified to be himself with all the raw material for an interesting vocabulary.” In experiencing Dave’s art, this seems true. He’s definitely qualified! In our current world of fake news, snapchat selfies, hype and copycat cookie cutter polished junk and overproduced pop, Dave Graney is a hero of authenticity. I’ve often felt that sincerity is as fickle as the breeze and as shy as silence; you speak its name and it’s gone. Dave bypasses this whole game like a rover or a half forward flank; he reads the fall of the ball, swoops in as others fumble and breaks away from the pack with those two big white sticks in his sights. ‘Workshy’ is another goal on the scoreboard well kicked by Dave Graney in a breakaway Grand Final third Quarter. It’s uniquely Australian, but not in that cultural stereotypical Crocodile Dundee, or Aussie Aussie Aussie Southern Cross Tattoo kind of way – no somehow Graney walks confidently, centred, comfortable and true in all his understated but well dressed Rock Star Detective Gangster Cowboy Noir Dandy, and with all his hard-earned tricks of the trade, and with all the “sand he has had to dig from his own soul”, he somehow shows us some piece magic and art that can be made from the red clay of our dry sunburnt and sarcastic country where tall poppies are constantly cut down. He has made sense and meaning from his uniquely Australian upbringing and unashamedly shown it off on the world stage with his unique swagger, humour and aesthetic. “I’ve had to go in closer to people than I really wanted to- I was built for a more remote style” – Dave confesses and maybe that’s his key- to have somehow remained outside, to have somehow kept all the bullshit at arms length whilst focusing on doing the work that mattered. The world of music has changed dramatically since Dave’s days as the Aria winning ‘King of Pop’. The direction it has taken has lead us away from authentic culture with its natural rebels and breakaways such as Dave is. Record Companies no longer invest in developing artists, in stead they run karaoke and popularity contests on TV to make safer money marketing mediocrity to the masses. Let’s just say its certainly not revolutionary stuff. You won’t be seeing the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Tom Waits or David Bowie growing out of that homogenised muck. Thank Goodness artists like Dave Graney have found a way to adapt and continue to deliver their poetry and music so that our culture may continue to grow, blossom and be expressed beyond the straight jacket of conformity and mediocrity placed on it by the marketing power of the mainstream cookie cutter monster machine. As we move closer into an age of drone warfare, sex robots, organic machines, internet control and a computerised existence, rebels like Dave and their books with paper pages keep us beautifully human. Five stars – a class act. |