Australian Post-Punk (Updates)

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (334 of them)

Wicked good news from Shock. *3* double disc sets, woohoo! Leave no stone unturned, I say!

-----------------

DO THE POP! REDUX
Friday, 10 August 2007
Acclaimed collection of '70s/80s Australian Punk & Garage Rock to
return in new 3-part series, while classic '81 & '82 albums from the
great post-Radio Birdman/pre-Hoodoo Gurus band get the deluxe
treatment.

2002's acclaimed collection 'Do The Pop! The Australian Garage Rock
Sound 1976-67' returns in October on Savage Beat! Records though
Shock under the name 'DO THE POP! REDUX'. Like the original
collection - which received substantial acclaim internationally,
including a full page feature review in 'Mojo' and a rave review
from David Fricke in American Rolling Stone - the new set
differentiates itself from other Australian punk and post-punk
collections by following the unique high energy rock'n'roll sound
that spewed forth here in the late '70s and '80s, following the lead
of Radio Birdman and The Saints. The new project will be spread over
3 new double discs each released two/three months apart, and is set
to feature over 150 tracks, none of which appeared on the original
set in 2002 .

'DO THE POP! REDUX Part One' will kick off with the first ever CD
release of a rare track from Deniz Tek's pre-Radio Birdman outfit TV
JONES before showcasing THE SAINTS and BIRDMAN themselves (Birdman
are profiled with the album's title track as well as a rare live
track from one of their legendary Paddington Town Hall shows). Punk
era acolytes including THE PSYCHO SURGEONS, THE SURVIVORS, THE
VICTIMS, JOHNNY DOLE & THE SCABS and RAZAR follow, as do X, perhaps
the only Australian band of the original punk era whose reputation
rivals that of Birdman and the Saints in some quarters. Part One
then proceeds to revel in the rock'n'roll spirit that took hold in
Australia at the turn of the decade, at the very time the rest of
post-punk world was proclaiming rock dead. THE SCIENTISTS, THE FUN
THINGS, THE SUNNYBOYS, THE LIPSTICK KILLERS are amongst the bands of
this period, as are Birdman offshoots including THE HITMEN, THE
VISITORS and NEW RACE. Rare tracks from Brisbane's THE 31st (fronted
by Ron Peno) and Perth's ROCKETS will also be featured. Melbourne
fans will be happy to note that their hometown, which wasn't
represented on the original set because of its narrower focus, is
represented by a number of punk era bands, including BABEEZ, THE
CHOSEN FEW and even the legendary REALS, featuring Garry Gray, Chris
Walsh and Ollie Olsen, recordings of whom have never previously seen
the light of day.

Volumes 2 & 3 will follow, covering the multi-faceted garage rock
scene of the `80s as it explodes out of Sydney and takes hold around
the country, and ultimately around the world. Expect killer tracks
from a range of bands big and small - from THE HOODOO GURUS, GAS
BABIES and WET TAXIS to THE JOHNNYS, CELIBATE RIFLES and SPIKES -all
of whom drew heavily on the influence of 60's and 70's garage and
punk rock.

Simultaneous to the release of 'DO THE POP! REDUX Part One' will be
the release of deluxe double-disc reissues of the legendary first
two albums by THE HITMEN, comprising members of two recent ARIA Hall
of Fame inductees and soon to be touring partners, RADIO BIRDMAN and
THE HOODOO GURUS. Formed by Birdmen CHRIS MASUAK and WARWICK GILBERT
and Birdman MC JOHNNY KANNIS soon after Birdman's initial demise
in '78, the band featured future Gurus mainstays BRAD SHEPHERD and
MARK KINGSMILL by the time they came to record their two albums
in '81 and '82. Overshadowed for far too long, The Hitmen's music is
ripe for re-evaluation, and Savage Beat!/Shock's deluxe reissues
will provide just cause. Each album will come with a massive booklet
with lengthy notes and numerous images. More importantly, each will
be expanded to include about 45 tracks, with a bounty of previously
unheard demo and live material added to each set. Hitmen classics
like 'Didn't Tell The Man', 'Corridors Of Power', 'Rocket On The
Elevator Up' and '15 Hours' will be featured alongside long lost fan
favourites like 'Cold December' and 'Wings of Steel', as well as
incredible covers of the Sonics, MC5, Thirteenth Floor Elevators,
Blue Oyster Cult, Dictators and the Flamin' Groovies' great 'Shake
Some Action'. Fans of Birdman, the Gurus and high energy rock'n'roll
in general will find the wit and the power of The Hitmen an absolute
revelation, and Johnny Kannis and Chris Masuak are set to reconvene
the band towards the year's end in celebration.

`DO THE POP! REDUX PART ONE' AND THE HITMEN'S `THE HITMEN' AND `IT
IS WHAT IT IS' WILL BE RELEASED ON SAVAGE BEAT!/SHOCK IN OCTOBER.

Mr. Odd, Wednesday, 15 August 2007 02:49 (sixteen years ago) link

The dude who compiled 'Do The Pop' is a tool.

W4LTER, Wednesday, 15 August 2007 02:52 (sixteen years ago) link

The dude who compiled 'Do The Pop' is a tool.

Very insightful. Dave's always been friendly when I've dropped him an e-mail. And I dig _Do The Pop_. *shrug*

Mr. Odd, Wednesday, 15 August 2007 02:55 (sixteen years ago) link

I do too.

W4LTER, Wednesday, 15 August 2007 02:56 (sixteen years ago) link

Sorry. Ignore me.

W4LTER, Wednesday, 15 August 2007 02:57 (sixteen years ago) link

three months pass...

_Do The Pop! Redux_ due 12/10 according to Amazon UK. I still haven't seen a tracklisting but I'm psyched!

Mr. Odd, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 02:44 (sixteen years ago) link

about time, that's been due for release for at least a couple of months now.

electricsound, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 02:54 (sixteen years ago) link

can't stop it vol 2 is pretty good

electricsound, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 02:54 (sixteen years ago) link

what i'd like to see would be proper comps of the first fifty waterfront 45s.. there's so much gold in those hills

electricsound, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 02:55 (sixteen years ago) link

email Steve Stav and pitch it!

energy flash gordon, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 04:03 (sixteen years ago) link

A Waterfront retrospective CD release project was being undertaken or at least mooted a few years ago by someone - can't remember the name - will try to find out.

moley, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 04:17 (sixteen years ago) link

a proper au go go one would be great too - i must say i was damn surprised when i realised that the label released some truly fantastic music during its first sixty or so releases

electricsound, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 04:25 (sixteen years ago) link

can't stop it vol 2 is pretty good

i still haven't seen this for sale anywhere!

GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 05:01 (sixteen years ago) link

do the pop redux tracklist

TRACKLISTING
* Radio Birdman - Do The Pop (orig.)
* The Saints - Wild About You
* Psycho Surgeons - Horizontal Action
* The Reals - Nothing To Say
* Babeez - Dowanna Love
* The Geeks - I'm Looking For You
* Victims - I'm Flipped Out Over you
* Last Words - Animal world
* The Saints - This Perfect Day (7" version)
* Radio Birdman - New Race (Live at Paddington
Town Hall)
* Johnny Kannis - Pushin' Too Hard
* The Survivors - Undecided ('77 demo)
* Johnny Dole & The Scabs - Living Like An Animal
* The Leftovers - Cigarettes & alcohol
* The Numbers (a/k/a The Riptides) - Sunset Strip
* News - Tell Me Why
* Orphans - Heard It On The Radio
* Rocks - You'r So Boring
* X - Home Is Where The Floor Is
* The Chosen Few - There's A lot of it going Around
* Razar - Stamp Out disco
* The Lipstick Killers - Sockman
* The Hitmen - No Clue ('78 Demo)
* The Manikins - Premonition
* The Scientists - Frantic Romantic (June 79)
* Fiction (a/k/a Little Murders) - Take me I'm Yours
* X - Good On Ya Baby
* Scientists - Pissed On Another Planet
* Rockets - Mean Mistress
* Manikins - Love At Second Site
* The Saints - Call It Mine
* The Passengers - Boyfriend's Girlfriend
* The Visitors - Brother John
* Lipstick Killers - Shakedown USA
* The Fun Things - Lipstick
* The 31st - Time moves Fast
* ME 262 - Gonna die
* Shy Imposters - She Can't win
* Surfside 6 - Can't You See The Sign
* Hitmen - Tell Tale Heart
* Lipstick Killers - Mesmeriser (demo)
* The Sunnyboys - The Seeker
* Flaming Hands - The stranger
* The Saints - Gypsy Woman
* The Dagoes - 10 Years On (or I do It For Mama)
* Lonely Hearts - Don't Feel Safe
* New Race - Haunted Road
* Angie Pepper - Frozen World
* New Christs - Waiting World
* The End - 'Just Skin'
* Dum Sum Boys - Let There Be Noise

Bonus tracks : Prehistoric Sounds
* TV Jones (featuring Deniz Tek) - Skimp The Pimp
* Kid Galahad & The Eternals (aka The Saints) - (I'm) Stranded (74 garage tape)

electricsound, Friday, 30 November 2007 08:47 (sixteen years ago) link

there's a few track that i'm irritable to see comped for the umpteenth time but there's a decent spread of tracks that were glaring omissions from some of the other comps so it's not a bad go.. interested to see what else is on the other two..

electricsound, Friday, 30 November 2007 08:52 (sixteen years ago) link

three months pass...

I found _Do The Pop! Redux Part One_ a bit underwhelming. Maybe I need more time with it but some of the lo-fi, Detroit-via-Melbourne sound gets a bit samey. Of course, I'll still be picking up the next two parts...

I wonder if there's going to be a third volume of _Tales From The Australian Underground_?

Phil - are you gonna do a new MP3 compilation this year?

Mr. Odd, Saturday, 8 March 2008 00:56 (sixteen years ago) link

i do think that redux vol one is quite a bit more narrow in the breadth of styles than some of these comps - the trashy punk stuff is fun in small doses but yeah i do think it gets a bit dull to take in one sitting. having said that, some of the additions over the previous volume are very welcome, like the manikins stuff for example

but one request: NO MORE SAINTS, NO MORE RADIO BIRDMAN, for god's sake please

electricsound, Saturday, 8 March 2008 00:59 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, more Cold Chisel instead.

...what?

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 8 March 2008 01:00 (sixteen years ago) link

i haven't heard any news about a third "tales..", but a third volume would be welcome. the second one took some time to grow but there's still some fantastic stuff on it.

there's more than enough genuinely great stuff out there to fill ten more comps that i would love from start to finish..

one band i'd love to see properly reissued is the systematics.. i recently got hold of the rural LP and it's way better than i expected it to be

electricsound, Saturday, 8 March 2008 01:03 (sixteen years ago) link

I know I've said it before, but we must have some feedtime reissues.

moley, Saturday, 8 March 2008 06:27 (sixteen years ago) link

Xgau review:

"Shovel [Rough Trade, 1988]
One Melbourne fan says they're like standing too close to a moving freight train with a six-pack in you, and that's corny-to-classic enough to evoke their size and inexorability--a little slower and more old-fashioned than the IRT the Ramones/Dolls came in on, which definitely doesn't mean they're slow or old-fashioned. Just an art band cum power trio that's spent nine years perfecting its sonic wisdom. Jesus and Mary are wimps by comparison, Motorhead sellouts, yet in the end all three (all five) provide the same minimalist thrill--the one that's forever convincing us rock and roll will never die. You think maybe it won't? A-"

That's a pretty accurate review.

moley, Saturday, 8 March 2008 06:32 (sixteen years ago) link

one band i'd love to see properly reissued is the systematics.. i recently got hold of the rural LP and it's way better than i expected it to be

a couple of guys in germany are going to release a 2 disk compilation of the systematics material this year. it's vinyl only. 1st LP is all of the tracks previously released on vinyl. 2nd is demos and rarities (all from the stuff i have on my site) and a 7" bonus ep with 4 live tracks. when it comes out i'll post to this thread with all the info - it's bound to be a small run so you'll have to get in while you can.

nonightsweats, Saturday, 8 March 2008 22:44 (sixteen years ago) link

I recently ripped my vinyl of "Shovel". Lot's of pop and scratches, maybe the record I listened to the most in 1988. Not quite the start-to-finish freight train it sounded like at the time, it still holds up 'cause of the barely audible sentiments in the songs- there's bits of narrative and emotion under all the crud. The Lamps record is what made me pull it out. Also ripped the Saints "Emotionally Yours" which is a stronger record, but I it doesn't move me as much.

bendy, Saturday, 8 March 2008 23:27 (sixteen years ago) link

How good is Use No Hooks' "Do The Job" from Can't Stop It 2? Anyone have anything else of theirs?

Saw that Primitive Calculators & Friends comp at my local record store - gonna head back there on payday to grab it.

etc, Monday, 10 March 2008 00:56 (sixteen years ago) link

use no hooks were a predominantly live/jam band so their recorded output is slim and rather variable in quality (from the little i've heard).

nonightsweats, Saturday, 15 March 2008 06:44 (sixteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...

The Systematics vinyl release - "What We Did In The Afternoons" - is mastered and the artwork is being prepared. However, there's a small spanner in the works as Vinyl on Demand (another german company) want to release a 5 LP box set of M Squared related material and to include some of the major Systematics things: they can fight about it amongst themselves. VOD have also have available a 5 LP box of Severed heads stuff and a box of SPK rarities.

nonightsweats, Friday, 11 April 2008 21:50 (sixteen years ago) link

o rly.. i might have to check this out

electricsound, Saturday, 12 April 2008 02:40 (sixteen years ago) link

Among those SPK rarities would probably be the SoliPsiK single, "See-Saw', one of their best tracks, and interesting also insofar as it has the distinctive M Squared sound, especially with the thin, pale female vocals.

moley, Saturday, 12 April 2008 03:47 (sixteen years ago) link

it's a really good single that one. nice mixture of noise and melody

electricsound, Saturday, 12 April 2008 12:44 (sixteen years ago) link

...which can be found on the excellent _Can't Stop It II_.

Mr. Odd, Saturday, 12 April 2008 14:17 (sixteen years ago) link

I bought the reissue of SPK's Machine Age Voodoo. It's pleasant enough but she's not really the best vocalist in the world. I love the title track, though.

Bimble Is Still More Goth Than You, Saturday, 12 April 2008 15:29 (sixteen years ago) link

I am waiting (agonizingly) for my SPK box set in the mail. I know it has 3 singles, so I'm pretty sure one is the SoliPsiK one. But not positive. I'll post when I get it.

That's kind of a bummer about the conflict w/The Systematics, but I could think of worse things than having multiple labels clamoring to reissue your stuff.

sleeve, Saturday, 12 April 2008 16:30 (sixteen years ago) link

I downloaded the top three tracks and they we're all brilliant but not complete. thats a bummer

sonderangerbot, Saturday, 12 April 2008 17:29 (sixteen years ago) link

Okay I decided I really don't care about Systematics, sorry.

SoliPsiK thing is alright, though. She should have stuck to that style of talking/monotone singing.

Bimble Is Still More Goth Than You, Sunday, 13 April 2008 05:53 (sixteen years ago) link

systematics are vastly better than a lot of the stuff you champion

electricsound, Sunday, 13 April 2008 07:06 (sixteen years ago) link

hahahaha

Bimble Is Still More Goth Than You, Sunday, 13 April 2008 08:04 (sixteen years ago) link

Ya Ya Choral is worth checking out if you like the Systematics. They almost went kinda sorta metal towards the end of their career. Their best track, 'Two Lines', was earlier than that though - again the thin female fronted electropop thing. A few years later, that sound would resurface with Pel Mel, and then, in the early 90's, Single Gun Theory.

moley, Sunday, 13 April 2008 08:44 (sixteen years ago) link

Hmm, actually, Google tells me 'Two Lines' came out three years later than the classic Pel Mel stuff, so the influence was probably the other way around. Nothing quite like that is being written any more, but if anything comes close it would probably be Miss Kitten in about 2002. I just think of it as the quintessential M Squared / Newtown sound.

moley, Sunday, 13 April 2008 08:51 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah i remember coming across some of the metal YYC after only knowing the two lines 45 - kind of a shock really.

electricsound, Sunday, 13 April 2008 08:54 (sixteen years ago) link

SoliPsiK - i'm fairly sure this isn't in the box set as it was NihiL + his then girlfriend + a guitarist doing stuff whilst SPK were in London. I think Revell and co don't see it as their work. So the female singer on this is a different person to the SPK female singer.

Systematics - all resolved: Rural will be in the box as the 2LP comp is a small run and it should sell out before the box is due - sometime in 2009.

YYC - i love their early stuff: it's 2 people from Systematics (Patrick and Fiona) + one of the M2 M's - Michael Tee. Definitely post Pel Mel, much more pop oriented. I was in their choir, once - you can just hear us on God's Buzzsaw.

nonightsweats, Sunday, 13 April 2008 21:29 (sixteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

another systematics update:

Rural will not be on the VOD M2 release as this (weirdly) is limited to material that was not previously released on vinyl. This is also the case with the Severed Heads box. So it's going to be up to some one out there to compile M2 correctly.

Markus Schmikler has been approached to do the mastering for the Systematics release and the responses have been very positive.

nonightsweats, Saturday, 3 May 2008 22:25 (sixteen years ago) link

is Inner City Sound (the book) much cop/worth acquiring? managed about 30mins of Dogs In Space, but the complete lack of plot killed my interest. will re-attempt in an effort to see the Primitive Calculators footage.

etc, Monday, 5 May 2008 04:39 (sixteen years ago) link

it's kinda thin in parts but an enjoyable read. the cd is fantastic

electricsound, Monday, 5 May 2008 04:41 (sixteen years ago) link

well, there's not much plot in ICS - just a roll-call of bands and reviews, lots of pics of everyone and a post-punk outlook. still the best thing available regarding aus music of the time, though.

nonightsweats, Monday, 5 May 2008 05:41 (sixteen years ago) link

so this 2LP will have the tracks from that double 10" on Invitation au Suicide, yeah? really looking forward to this

Vinyl On Demand has always been cassette-only in terms of what they reissue, with a few small exceptions.

sleeve, Monday, 5 May 2008 05:44 (sixteen years ago) link

ICS is a really fascinating read - well written (in a serious style, and the hindsight aspect is also interesting. I'd like to see something like it for today's crop of underground bands.

moley, Monday, 5 May 2008 05:57 (sixteen years ago) link

i fear a book like that would be like a spiked hammer to my skull. unless it's an underground of awesome bands i haven't heard yet

electricsound, Monday, 5 May 2008 06:08 (sixteen years ago) link

Well yes, I see what you mean. Things have changed a bit haven't they? These days, underground means overground, wombling free.

moley, Monday, 5 May 2008 06:46 (sixteen years ago) link

<i>unless it's an underground of awesome bands i haven't heard yet</i>

I think that's the crux. If I had the time and was sufficiently masochistic I'd be able to write at least three chapters of that book myself. Those bands certainly exist, in my opinion, and I've had the good fortune to see a handful of them in Sydney and Melbourne - usually in the most unlikely locations, eg, house parties, warehouses, abandoned lots, etc. Most of them don't get too many gigs on the pub circuit - they don't bring enough punters. Most of them are, in some sense or other, heirs to the post-punk aesthetic, and not in a cute, fatuous way either. I'm sure there is plenty of 'deeply underground' music (shall we say) in the other states too.

Perhaps the problem is that truly underground music nowadays is really not that interesting to anyone in the music or publishing biz. Those bands will not sell records in sufficient quantities in these difficult times. These bands are lost amongst the huge heaving sea of no-hopers on MySpace.

Who is today's equivalent of Clinton Walker or, say Bob Blunt? Maybe he or she is writing that book right now. I can't help feeling, though, that the idea of people working intuitively and creatively in lanthanine noooks and crannies in the inner city is just not that appealing to publishers at the moment. Pitching a book like that would be difficult. It's a diabolical combination of an unsaleable book about unsaleable music.

Blogs were supposed to cover this territory, but all the blogs I see slavishly follow a cohort of this year's fashionable indie bands (please do link me to exceptions - I am talking about stuff no-one's ever heard of, not the latest me-too reviews of this year's next big indie things). Perhaps these blogs exist, but are themselves inpossible to find in the huge chattering blogmos.

moley, Monday, 5 May 2008 07:02 (sixteen years ago) link

So ICS just compiles back-in-the-day reviews/interviews from ... zines, papers, &c? Is it hefty enough to justify paying $35+shipping? I finally picked up Can't Stop It! I & II (I'd heard about a quarter of the tracks already) locally after dithering re: ordering them from Chapter for years, & am more blown away than I thought I'd be - real, real quality.
Still on a Severed Heads kick, too. Anyone wanna write a Severed Heads bio?

xpost: What bands, moley?

etc, Monday, 5 May 2008 07:07 (sixteen years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.