Wednesday 31 August 2005

No Big Day Out for 2006?

The dislocation of the Melbourne leg of the Big Day Out may be placing the entire 2006 run of the festival in jeopardy. The traditional home of BDO in Melbourne, The Royal Showgrounds, are currently undergoing re-developments, which will not be finished in time for the January festival.

According to an article in The Age newspaper, organisers have been frantically searching for an alternative site, with many possibilities ruled out due to Melbourne’s hosting of the 2006 Commonwealth games. Festival organisers Vivian Lees and Ken West have applied to the Melbourne City Council for a grant to hold the event in the Princess Gardens in Carlton, just near Optus Oval (see map of the proposed area).

“If the Melbourne City Council knocks this back, then there definitely won’t be a Victorian show and we’d have to seriously consider canceling the whole tour because of the financial cost of losing Melbourne in the middle of the tour,” Mr. West is quoted as saying. “We’ve looked everywhere, but there really is no ‘plan B’ for an alternative Melbourne venue.”

Local resident groups have raised concerns to suggestion and a decision will be made by Melbourne City Council’s planning and environment committee next Tuesday. The article states that committee member Fraser Brindley believes there is a “good chance” that permission to use the site will be approved for next year only, due to the lack of alternative sites.

Should the proposal be approved, the Melbourne Big Day Out will take place on January 29 between 11am and 11pm.

The article also reveals that the Red Hot Chili Peppers had been slated in for the tour, but have pulled out due to delays to the release date of their new album.

(Originally published on FasterLouder)

Dark New Day - twelve YEARsilence

From the grainy cover shot of two tiny children dwarfed by a piano, to the ultra serious, angled band photo on the back, to the titles and the name of the band itself, everything about twelveYEARsilence, the debut album from Dark New Day (or DARKnewDAY as it’s written on the album sleeve), screams of a band trying too hard to emulate their idols. The fact that this then is the new venture from former Sevendust guitarist Clint Lowery and former Creed bassist Brett Hestla (now on vocals) – two bands who made their career by making safe the trails bands had blazed five years before them, doesn’t come as a big surprise.

Sounding amazingly like an amalgamation of those two bands, then if they were five years late to the party, Dark New Day are around ten years behind. The biggest problem with this album is the sense that you have heard it all before. Slow intros driven by drumming on the toms and “atmospheric” guitar or bass lines, which lead into overblown choruses and emotional verses. I’m sure the band believes in what they’re creating, but I just find it hard to get excited about it all these years later.

The album starts with the triple combination of Taking Me Alive, Brother and Free, which judging from the sticker on the front are expected to be the hit singles of the album. All are fairly inoffensive, at the expense of any form of excitement. The exception is the guitar solo that pops up during Taking Me Alive, which is perhaps a bit out of place, but at least provides a bit of surprise to the listener. The rest of the album follows the same course; their skill is clearly on display, and often there are some catchy moments, but with such perfection and smooth production it all feels so flat. This is most obvious in the song Bare Bones. “Time to get it back / Back to bare bones” Hestla sings over a wall of guitars, harmonies, echoes and chorus, with no apparent sense of irony.

Remember when Korn’s self titled debut came out in 1994? Or even back when Alice In Chains released Dirt in 1992? Whatever trajectories the later careers of those bands would take, at the time of release no one could deny those albums were something new, something fresh and exciting, pushing music to places it hadn’t been before. In a world full of Evanesences, Nicklebacks, Godsmacks and various other bands trading on familiar sounds, Dark New Day will easily find their place amongst the Triple M playlists. That is if people aren’t already too tired of this sound to give them a chance.

(Originally published on FasterLouder)

Friday 26 August 2005

Nine Inch Nails @ Rod Laver Arena, 17/08/05

When Nine Inch Nails last played Melbourne, it was part of the Big Day Out in 2000. At the end of that set, Trent Reznor promised the crowd they would return in fall, their own headline tour of the country. I suppose late winter in Australia is almost fall time in America. I guess Trent just forget to mention that it would be fall FIVE YEARS LATER!

So was the wait worth it? After Wednesday night’s performance, the answer would be a resounding YES. The resulting years between the Fragility tour and the new Nine Inch Nails album With Teeth have been well documented since the release of that album earlier this year. Reznor’s struggles with alcohol, drugs, overdoses and the need to rediscover oneself in a new sober state of mind have all contributed to many changes between the band of the 90s, and now in 2005. Perhaps the biggest change has been where Reznor’s focus now lies. In recent interviews he has spoken of how the show used to be something you endured to get to the after party, but now the whole day is about waiting for the show, and after the show, you get excited for the next one.

This new focus was certainly evident when Reznor and his new band, now consisting of Jerome Dillon on drums, Jeordie White (aka Twiggy Ramirez from Marilyn Manson) on bass, Alessandro Cortini on keyboards and synths and Aaron North (formerly of The Icarus Line) on guitar, hit Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena. Hardly a place that could be deemed to have any sense of inbuilt atmosphere, the NIN stage-show still managed to fill the entire space with sound and light.

The set was long, and focused. Almost two hours long, the band played 23 songs overall. Including the expected hits like March of The Pigs, The Hand That Feeds and Terrible Lie. But the real highlights were the extents to which Reznor was willing to go through his back catalogue and pull out and rework so many old and obscure songs. Sin is one song which has benefited greatly from being reworked for a live version, but the first real surprise came from the introspective Something I Can Never Have. An early quiet moment in the set, it certainly had many people feeling chills.

Elsewhere Burn, Reptile and Suck were all unexpected examples of some of the band’s best work, while the cover of Joy Division’s Dead Souls kept the integrity of the original while offering a distinct edge to it. Another treat for long term fans was the teaser of Kinda I Want To dropped into the breakdown of Closer, the song which broke Nine Inch Nails to the world.

The main criticism that has been placed on the band’s Australian shows is the lack of violent destruction which was such a part of the mid 90s tours. While this element was missing, it seems to have been sacrificed for the renewed focus on making the performance better and longer. As one of my companions said, Reznor no longer seems as tragic as he once did, but his music still seems so vital. Not many bands in this day and age could play a two hour set in which tracks off their newest album such as Love Is Not Enough, You Know What You Are? and With Teeth can sit next to, and hold their own with tracks from fifteen years ago like Terrible Lie, and everything in between.

Oddly enough the other criticism I’ve heard is that North is perhaps too energetic and destructive in his stage antics. Personally I found that his antics did add the more dangerous and unpredictable edge to the music that a lot of people thought was lacking. His enthusiasm for the music also seemed to rub off on other band members, resulting in broken lights due to thrown mic stands, guitars flying all over the place and Reznor tackling him mid-song. It’s a tribute to the versatile musicianship of the current line-up that none of this seemed to be at the detriment of the music. The versatility was also evident in the instrument changes, with Cortini playing acoustic guitar during Home, White switching regularly between bass, guitar and keyboards, and Reznor himself often playing keyboard or guitar. Equally impressive was the ability to go from crushing loud noise, to moments of intense intimacy, and back again. The devastating Gave Up with all its strobe lighting and flashing red & blue screens was followed by a timid Hurt, long considered the penultimate NIN song, reworked so that most of the song was just Trent and a keyboard. This was then followed by the double whammy of Starfuckers Inc. and Head like a Hole (which saw North jump off Cortini’s keyboard) to close the set in a mess of noise and fury.

The only thing I can say at the end is that I hope it’s not another five years before we get a chance to witness it again.

Thursday 18 August 2005

URANUS MILK!

brisbane is a weird place.


yuuuuuumm.


dinosaur. RAAAAAARGH!


these turtles are "hugging".


batman's house.

Monday 8 August 2005