Archive for April, 2015

Noiseweek: GWAR, Minsk, holograms, Pallbearer, Nirvana tributes and more

Friday, April 10th, 2015

The sights, sounds and words of the week in noise.

NEWS

CNN is reporting that the surviving members of GWAR are being sued by the father of late frontman Oderus Urungus — AKA Dave Brockie — William Brockie, for allegedly holding onto Brockie junior’s remains, music equipment and artwork. Brockie senior is seeking $1 million in damages as well as the return of his son’s ashes and belongings, which are reportedly kept locked at the band’s Slave Pit headquarters in Richmond, Virginia. Both parties remain uncertain on the status of the Cuttlefish of Cthulu, but sources say it remains in the possession of authorities in Charlotte, North Carolina.

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Boston Mayor Marty Walsh earned himself some serious punk cred this week with the proclamation that April 9 is now Riot Grrrl day in honour of Kathleen Hanna’s performance in the city on that night. Walsh’s Chief of Policy, Joyce Lineham, has known Hanna for the better part of two decades and used to host her when Hanna’s bands would come through town. The proclamation is adapted from Hanna’s Riot Grrrl Manifesto and includes the following passage: “The riot grrrl philosophy has never felt more relevant, with misogyny still rampant in many cultural spaces;” and “Riot grrrls redefine the language used against them and continue to fight the newest incarnations of patriarchy. In doing so, they ironically confirm one ex-congressman’s accidental wisdom: ‘the female body has ways to try to shut that down.’ It sure does: women’s voices telling their stories can shut that down.”

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In news straight out of a Phllip K. Dick dystopia, late Tejano popstar Selena Quintanilla will be next to receive the hologram treatment already bestowed to the likes of Tupac and Elvis. With the blessing of her family, tech company Achrovirt LLC will begin working on a of Quintanilla pending the success of a soon-to-be-launched $500,000 crowdfunding campaign on IndieGoGo. Jesus.

READ

How London’s NTS is helping redefine live radio | The Guardian

“If video killed the radio star, then digital streaming is dancing on its grave. Spotify and the like have redefined listening habits but they’ve also driven (mainly young) listeners away from the human interaction the FM dial offers, towards endless playlists interrupted by infuriatingly upbeat adverts about clearing hotlines. An Ofcom report last year found that Brits under 25 dedicate a measly 24% of “listening time” to traditional radio. But you can’t call up Mixcloud for a shout-out when you’re bombing up the M6 for a night out at the Warehouse Project, and that’s where east London’s NTS Radio offers a middle ground.

The station, which turns four this week, positions itself somewhere between BBC 6 Music’s diversity and pirate radio’s DIY spirit; and, like Rinse FM before it, it’s a combination that’s helping to lure music fans back to radio. It’s part of a global network of new, hyperlocal internet stations, including Soho Radio in London, Berlin Community Radio, and Know Wave in NYC, who offer idiosyncratic music selections throughout the day, and not just limited to twilight slots. Some sets come from established DJs such as Andrew Weatherall and Caribou; others, if you happen to live in Hackney where NTS’s shopfront studio is based, quite literally from the girls next door.”

How can we change the face of power in the music industry? | The Fader

“Perhaps part of the problem is the static nature of the business, but that’s not to say there aren’t also unique challenges that face women on the corporate ladder. In an innocuous quote in the Billboard Power 100 issue that hints at a deeper problem, executive VP of Capitol Music Group Michelle Jubelirer describes the moment a male employee introduced her to Mick Jagger as his boss. “I don’t think Mick believed him,” she said. Sexist attitudes in business are deeply ingrained, and will likely take a long time to change. This was famously illustrated when a Harvard business professor changed the name of Silicon Valley exec and SkinnySongs CEO Heidi Roizen to “Howard Roizen” in half of the case studies about her that he gave to his students. The professor measured his students’ responses to the study, and found that the majority would rather work for “Howard” than for Heidi, despite their two profiles being totally identical. Students described having an impression of Heidi as being more power-hungry and harsh than “Howard”; the more she asserted herself, the less they liked her.”

Immaculate Self-Conception | Pitchfork

“When it comes to portraying women, music media buys into the ideas of glamour just as much as the fashion industry, and Instagram feels like an opportunity to supercede the romantic manipulation of photo-doctoring. Airbrushing remains one of the few lies in the commercial economy that’s allowed to remain unchecked even after the public is made aware of their own deception. By that I mean this: When a product doesn’t perform as advertised, it is taken off the market; when an academic misrepresents his research, he is stripped of his title; when a media icon lies about a simple detail of his personal experience, he is suspended without pay. In music, the misrepresentation inherent to altering the female image is an accepted cultural norm despite the fact that in most other instances when people, commodities, or ideas have been publicly misrepresented, there are penalties. We are sold the myth of what women in entertainment are supposed to look like every day, and the fact remains that no one has ever revoked an advertisement or magazine cover because it physically misrepresented a (perfected) female icon. Airbrushing is designed to flatter and romanticize reality—but it’s also an act of deception, however benign.

As a contrast, the impulsive, documentary-quality of Instagram makes it feel like the only corner of the Internet where women can choose how they are portrayed; they can flatter the male gaze or subvert it. An interesting dimension of fame is that female musicians are in the unique position of having access to photos that other people of take of them; as such, their choosing to include photos from the press alongside, say, selfies with their dogs represents a new, highly-tailored way to curate their image. It says something about what women want to add to their own narrative every time a distinction is made between what does and does not get shared.”

LISTEN

Minsk — The Crash and the Draw

This might be the heaviest record of the quarter-year. After six years dormant, the fourth LP from the post-metal outfit (who share a hometown with the late, great Richard Pryor) is quite possibly the best marriage of atmospherics and brutality I’ve heard since the disbandment of ISIS. The first side of this record is ugly, but Minsk are not a group of one-trick ponies; the nine-minute The Way is Through recalls the transcendent moments of Panopticon as the masculine veneer of vocalist Tim Meed recedes, revealing a beautiful vulnerability beneath the bravado, before the rage comes again in the climax. Utterly entrancing.

Solkyri — Sad Boys Club

Solkyri imbue their music with the kind of energy post-rock bands need: a vitality that breathes life and kinetic momentum into the often stale and static aesthetic. This is uplifting stuff, recalling sleepmakeswaves and And So I Watch You From Afar while remaining firmly grounded in a dynamic riffing and compelling songwriting. Expect nothing but big things from this Sydney quartet.

Nothing — Something in the Way

This second cut from the forthcoming tribute to Nirvana’s Nevermind shows Nothing at their most subtle and subdued, substituting their usual reverb pedals and tremolo picking for distant synthetic whines, whispered words and an utterly depressing piano track. The tribute’s out on April 18 through Robotic Empire — who also released an In Utero tribute this time last year — and features covers from Boris, Young Widows, Pygmy Lush and Thou.

Golden Bats — 7?

Cvlt Nation premiered this harrowing offering from our Brisbane friends Golden Bats. It’s an ugly pair of tracks, but Golden Bats aren’t looking for a prom date, so revel in the filthy Iommic dirge and unbridled dread before the 7? drops on April 18 for Record Store Day.

WATCH

Pallbearer — Watcher in the Dark

Some eight months after the release of their sophomore epic Foundations of Burden, Little Rock quartet Pallbearer have unveiled their first ever music video, the 10-minute “Watcher in the Dark.” There are some stunning landscape shots here of what I am guessing are the Ozark Mountains in their homestate of Arkansas, alongside a slew of tripped-out galactic and alien visuals that recall Duke Nukem 3D. Killer.

Lightning Bolt — The Metal East

Speaking of tripped-out, Lightning Bolt’s first clip for their new album might just be the most messed up music video of the year. Part mid-90s side-scroller, part Ren and Stimpy, part space cartoon bad trip and perfect for the frenetic madness that is Lightning Bolt.

Misþyrming — Söngvar elds og óreiðu

Thursday, April 9th, 2015

2015 is looking to be a good vintage as far as black metal goes. There have already been quite a few outstanding records released, rife with the invention and iconoclasm that flow through and wonderfully distort black metal’s core principles of sonic malevolence. In the past year or so, a scene that has shown to be well worth focusing attention upon is Iceland’s. However, despite the excellence of releases by bands such as Sinmara last year, broader recognition has yet to develop. Misþyrming are a band to recently debut with a full-length release that exemplifies this. The odd writer has picked up on their talent, perhaps most notably Noisey’s (Grim) Kim Kelly. But even after a couple of months out and about, the chatter about this band’s first record has yet to reach the pitch it deserves.

Söngvar elds og óreiðu begins in a fairly straightforward manner as far as the genre’s conventions are concerned. Whilst the early tracks may not contain many twists, the quality is undeniable. The first third is a furious conflagration of blinding speed and violence, all bred by riffs absolutely infernal in their evocation. Rather than the chilling windswept lifelessness so demarcative of the environment inspiring Scandinavian black metal traditions elsewhere, there is a strong sense of immolation, of the smoking explosive mountaintops Misþyrming’s homeland.

As the album progresses, its meditative qualities and the ornate detail in the riffs really begin to develop. Söngvar… never once resorts to the post-rock and shoegazey plays that have evolved into something akin to standard moves in creating a big atmosphere. In that sense, like Caïna and Leviathan this year, it has something in common with the better black metal releases of the last six or so months. It’s not that there is anything wrong with these elements if well executed. It has simply developed, by virtue of a saturation point being approached, that by evoking such motifs the music risks becoming average.

Instead, Misþyrming keep their art interesting by emerging from black metal’s common machine-like total instrumental unison with eruptions of individual expression, such as the free and billowing bassline bubbling underneath the guitars in “Er haustið ber að garði”. This follows straight into the next song, “Friðþæging blýþungra hjartna”. Nothing is dwelt upon at excessive length, producing a significant density as well as stylistic invocation from across the genre’s ages.

When hitting top speed, Misþyrming are without mercy, explosively hateful and bred from expertly distilled black metal riffage. The aforementioned diversity of ideas within the black metal scope the band expresses lends power and gravity to these attacks, and creates that welcome experience some black metal achieves of showing that you can be primitive and nasty whilst cerebral and ornate all at once.

As far as debuts go, Misþyrming’s is fantastic, brimming with intensity and ideas and a consuming infernal atmosphere. Having not long ago been a solo project that has expanded, there is good reason to expect even better things to come in the future. The album has been out since February through Terratur Possessions. You won’t regret giving it a chance.

Anger Management: Bloodlust

Wednesday, April 8th, 2015

Every fortnight, we check in with all things heavy on RTRFM’s Critical Mass show.

When international magazines and bands rave about Australia’s underground metal scene, they namecheck bands of the 80s and early 90s such as the mighty Sadistik Exekution, Bestial Warlust, Slaughter Lord and more that took the blackened war thrash path. Bloodlust carry on that lineage.

The background of Bloodlust’s two man wrecking crew is veritable who’s who of Perths underground metal pedigree. Having trod the boards in the likes of Infected, Tyrant, Pagan and Malignant Monster, Disaster and Spectre (plus the mysteries ‘The General’ helping out on leads) unleash their debut album Cultus Diaboli.

A loud and clear production brings these blackened thrash riffs to life, crazy drums and vocals that take the likes of the aforementioned Aussie cult heroes plus Venom, Slayer and Motorhead screaming into the now. The occasional call and response is great and really catchy, it’s hard to not sing along and headbang to “Sworn Servant Of The Devil” and “Black Blood Of Satan.”

It’s not all full speed ahead barbaric war metal though. There are some nice, almost Iron Maiden-esque twin guitar harmonies in “Crowned In Black Fire” and a nice slower bass groove on the single “Spell Of The Raven Witch.” It makes for a fantastic debut. Perhaps some live shows next, guys?

Critical Mass airs every Wednesday from 9PM (GMT+8) on RTR FM 92.1 in Perth, Australia.

PREMIERE: Noise rock trio HEADS. spit bile on “Chewing on Kittens”

Monday, April 6th, 2015

The usual suspects ring through on this positively ugly cut from HEADS. forthcoming EP — The Jesus Lizard, Shellac et al. — there’s not much better than a band with a sound that combines the best parts of their predecessors.

The German/Australian trio — which features The Ocean bassist Chris Breuer — employ snaking, dissonant guitars, the thunderous chug of the rhythm section and deadpan sermonizing to familiar but excellent effect.Genre tropes be damned; no one’s obliged to reinvent the wheel, and when your music sounds this good, you can get away with a lot. Who thought noise rock could be this catchy?

Heads. is out on May 5 through This Charming Man and Heart of the Rat Records.

Noiseweek: KEN mode, Failure, Marriages and Nothing

Saturday, April 4th, 2015

The sights, sounds and words of the week in noise.

READ

An Interview with Brian Cook by Jonathan K Dick of Steel for Brains | The Farm Family

“I think it’s Woody Guthrie that said “If you’re using more than two chords, you’re just showing off.” I feel like most people in my generation got their musical legs in punk rock music, and I think it’s because it’s so simple and it’s something that’s very empowering when you’re like “Oh shit. It’s just power chords? That’s so fucking easy.” I remember finally learning about power chords and it was like oh my god, every fucking rock song is just power chords. It was like this whole world opened up – the fact that people who’d made so many different types of songs were just using the simple structure of three chords or four chords or whatever was really fascinating when I started off. Then at some point you can maybe get too proud of yourself and go “Oh, well I need something more complex and meaningful than that,” but again I think it’s the same kinda thing you were saying with Roy Acuff. You get older, and it’s like “Holy shit, you know what’s really awesome? You can fucking write a really good song with three chords, and that’s all you need.” I think making more out of less is somehow more gratifying to me now as I’ve gotten a little older.”

How To Be Alone: Musicians Confront Suicide | NPR

“For a writer like Sufjan Stevens, who usually stresses patterns and mythologies within his work, the turn toward autobiography is risky. It opens the door to fetishization, something Stevens already has to deal with because of his good looks and invitingly gentle performance style. In the era of pop music, many artists people mention as embodying solitude have very noisy personal narratives indeed — they are troubled figures like Nick Drake or Elliott Smith, both possible suicides, or ones who consciously cultivated singular paths parallel to their natural communities, like Miles Davis, Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen. Cohen, famous for his devotion to Zen, is a star of the essayist Pico Iyer’s recent TED-sponsored book on secular solitude, The Art of Stillness — the prime example of a meditative life that can still make room for major concert tours, Courvoisier and the occasional “beautiful young companion.” Iyer writes of hearing Cohen’s croaky late masterpiece, Old Ideas, in a Starbuck’s in downtown Los Angeles, and ponders, “Cohen seemed to be bringing us bulletins from somewhere more rooted than the CNN newsroom, and to be talking to us, as the best friends do, without varnish or evasion or design.” To be open to his plain words, though, it helps to know that Cohen’s been perfecting it for half a century. His biography is a key to understanding his messages, but it’s also something of a distraction.”

Lightning Bolt’s Bassist Is Making an Amazing-Looking ‘Rhythm Violence’ Game | Vice

“[Brian] Gibson, has a lesser known side-line to his bass-slaying position as 50 percent of Lightning Bolt – indeed, it’s been a full-time gig for him more often than not. He’s served as an artist on several games for Harmonix, the studio behind Guitar Hero and Rock Band, as well as the about-to-relaunch Amplitude and the Disney-affiliated Fantasia: Music Evolved. But much of what he’s done in the past will be cast into shade when the colourful aggression of Thumper strong-arms its way into the rhythm action genre sometime next year. A project several years in the making so far, Gibson collaborating with now-Seoul-based programmer Marc Flury on its creation and the pair coming together under the umbrella of Drool, Thumper is pitched as a “rhythm violence” game. “You are a space beetle,” says its website. “Your goal: kill Crakhed!” Some further explanation is offered – “You control a space beetle while careening towards a confrontation with an insane giant head from the future” – but, really, all most people have to go on is the electrifying trailer that came out in February, which you can see below. (And just imagine it in VR, without throwing up on yourself.)”

LISTEN

Marriages — Salome

Marriages might just be Sargent House’s best kept secret. The LA trio formed from the ashes of Red Sparowes and released the tremendous EP Kitsune in 2012, with a centrepiece in the song “Ten Tiny Fingers” that for my money is some of the best shoegaze since Loveless. The group’s forthcoming debut album due out in April 7 has been made available for streaming on Soundcloud and it’s one of my frontrunners for album of the year thus far. Though there’s no one song as compelling as “Ten Tiny Fingers” — at least on the first few listens, the nine-track collection showcases Emma Ruth Rundle’s compelling vocal range, as well the band’s penchant for heartwrenching dreamy melodies fit for astral travel. Pre-orders are up on Bandcamp now.

Failure — Hot Traveler

Failure’s reunion trail has been an unorthodox one. Never that big in their heyday of the early-to-mid-90s, the trio announced their reunion with barely any fanfare in late 2013 before playing a few one-off shows in early 2014 before joining Tool on the road and heading out on their own US headline jaunt. Two new songs emerged from that first 12-month period — “Come Crashing” and “The Focus”, but details on a new album were scant at best. Two weeks ago at SXSW, the trio debuted a third new cut this, “Hot Traveler,” an awkwardly titled pop-tinged number that harkens back to the major-key elements that close 1996’s Fantastic Planet. (By the way — that record has finally been given the vinyl treatment.) Now, with their first international dates, they’ve finally locked in details on album number four: The Heart is a Monster, due for release on June 30 via INresidence. I can’t wait.

WATCH

KEN mode — Blessed

Winnipeg’s finest return with this video for “Blessed,” the first cut from their forthcoming Steve Albini-recorded LP. If this track is anything to go by, the trio have taken an Albini-esque turn, forgoing their explosive hardcore tendencies for a disconcerting brand of noise rock where the vocals are distant and not so much shouted or sung but spat with vitriol, while guitars bathe in a swampy and chaotic fuzz. The new LP comes out on June 16 through Seasons of Mist and is available for pre-order on Bandcamp.

A Place to Bury Strangers — What We Don’t See

It’s a shoegazing kind of noiseweek. Brooklyn’s loudest debuted the second video from their latest recordTransfixiation, giving the jaunty and unstable “What We Don’t See” an equally unstable visual treatment, where a macro-lens captures the kinetic fluctuations of their equipment in response to tremendous sound. We see drumsticks and paper and stompboxes and keys vibrating in time with the whining guitar lane and the rhythmic crescendos in a sly display of subtlety from the loudest band in New York.

Nothing live at Saint Vitus

HQ footage of the unlikely Relapse Records signees at Brooklyn’s best metal venue.

Interview: Dave Cutbush

Thursday, April 2nd, 2015

In preparation for our fifth anniversary show at The Bakery in Perth (tonight!), we thought it would be neat to hear from life is noise’s head honcho about the the past, present and future of the company and the way the gig game has changed in his 20+ years of promoting shows. Enjoy.

Matthew Tomich: Before you started life is noise, you were the music director of RTRFM. What made you decide to leave that position and start your own company?

Dave Cutbush: I think I’d just done as much as I could’ve done at RTR and I wanted something different. I’d been there for six years and whilst it was a great job and there was a lot of opportunity in the early years to develop the position and develop what the station was doing, I found at the end it was becoming quite repetitive and I was ready for a new challenge. And as part of the role as Music Director at RTR, I did a lot of the events management and coordinating the fundraising events for the station. That went from being like one or two events to being a full calendar of 12 events. So in a way, on top of the other roles I had at the station, I was working as a promoter anyway. I was putting on lots of gigs for a long time and I’ve done that my whole life – my whole working life, I’ve put on shows. I suppose when I was entering the end of my tenure at RTR as Music Director, I thought: what am I going to do? And the obvious decision was to get back into promoting. I’d done a fair bit of promoting in the ‘90s both in terms of Perth shows for Perth bands and also touring stuff, but I thought at the end, well, it was the logical thing to do. So I thought, well, I’ll start up a business and when I was having a drink with a friend one night and I was throwing around a few names and the name life is noise came up and I thought, OK, I’ll do that. Also, at the same time I got an opportunity to go and teach at TAFE.

MT: Really?

DC: I got offered a full-time job teaching at TAFE, teaching radio. So I could’ve gone either way, and it probably would’ve been a more sensible thing to go and teach radio at TAFE. But I decided I love putting on shows, so that’s what I did.

MT: So – what were some of the tours you did in the 90s? Because I think I remember you told me you brought Tortoise out to Australia for the first time in like ’98, is that right?
DC: Yeah. Well, not to Australia– I didn’t do any national tours in the ‘90s, but I did Perth legs of Australian tours and bits and pieces like that. I worked a lot with Spunk Records so I did a lot of their touring for artists like Joe Pernice and Smog and Trans Am and Tortoise and stuff like that. I did a few east coast things, brought over a few east coast bands, and because I was doing lots of managing of bands and venues and working in the Perth music industry, I did a lot of big Perth shows and that kind of thing in the ‘90s as well. But in terms of national touring, that’s only really come up in the last few years.

MT: And you’ve been promoting shows since you were a teenager, right? You started when you were 16 or 17?

DC: Yeah – I was in bands when I was a kid so me and my friends put on shows in the ‘80s, just like silly kind of things when I think of them now, when we were underage, and stuff like that. So it’s kind of something that I’ve done all of my adult life, on and off. It’s really weird to think that that’s almost like a different person who did that. It’s not me but it is me.

MT: So over the course of your career in the industry, what have been the most significant changes you’ve observed in the touring market both in Perth and the whole of Australia?

DC: There’s just a lot more on. I’ve been thinking about this a lot recently with this Perth Venue Action stuff about the way that things have changed over the last 20, 30 years, and I just think there’s obviously more competition for the entertainment dollar these days so there’s more going on in every kind of pursuit. We’re all sort of trying to get people’s entertainment dollar, whether that’s sport or it’s gaming or music or whatever people might do. I think if you go back 20, 30 years, there were less options. Now there’s a lot to do. And if you think about what’s happening in Perth, Perth’s changed a lot over the years. It’s gone from a small backwoods outpost to a city that has a lot more touring and a lot more events and just a lot more happening. I think, nationally, it’s pretty much the same – the change is similar from city to city – it’s just everything’s more complicated. And then when you think of actually how you market a gig, that’s very different. Back in the day – I hate that expression, but back in the day – you used to put an ad in X-Press and get an interview in RTR and put up a couple of posters and that was your promoting a gig or marketing a gig. Now, it’s vastly more complex. Social media, internet, everything that happens, you’ve got to try to hit people in a number of different ways, and the simplicity of just having a really good band and trying to get people to your gig by doing a full page in X-Press, that sort of thing — those days are gone. You’ve got to be much more sophisticated and it’s much more complicated with how to market your events. But generally, if you’ve got a good act that’s popular, people will come.

MT: Did you prefer it when it was a lot simpler to do in the 90s, when the promo was something you’d spend a couple of days worrying about?

DC: I think you were worried about it more than a couple of days but it was more simple. But it was more sort of hands-on, going out and flyering things. And I did that for many years, and only up until really recently, I used to always go out in Perth and put my own posters up and that kind of thing. No, I don’t think it was better then. It was just different. I like what happens now. I’m not one of those people that dwells in the past. I’ve never been like that. I like what’s happening now in terms of music and in terms of the way the world’s evolved. I like 2015 and beyond.

MT: The kind of stuff you present has always been really niche – how do you balance that risk and passion for that interesting, esoteric stuff with the financial realities of running a business?

DC: God, that’s a good question. Throughout my life, occasionally I’ve dabbled with things that are more populist in terms of music and I’ve really felt soulless doing it. Whether that be working as a booking agent or working in the media, especially at RTR, or as a promoter trying to do things because they’re popular, it just doesn’t sit well. My heart’s not in it, so I feel like I don’t give it my all if I’m doing something like that. So generally, I think it’s better for me personally to do something that I like and support music that I actually personally enjoy. Without going into examples, there were examples of things that I did back in the day like supporting artists or putting on gigs for artists that I wasn’t really into that much, and I just felt – I don’t know. I’m not really big on compromise anyway but I felt unclean or my soul wasn’t in it, my heart wasn’t in it. So I stopped doing that a long time ago, but that doesn’t really answer your question. It’s difficult to put on shows for marginal or niche acts, there’s no doubt. But in a way, if you’re buying an act or entering into a deal with an act that’s more niche, they’re going to be cheaper, whereas if you’re going for more mainstream acts, they’re going to be more expensive. So in effect, it really ends up being pretty similar, broadly speaking. As long as you do the right budget and you’ve done the math, you shouldn’t lose too much money because you really shouldn’t be spending that much money to start with. I’ve made stacks of mistakes, and I’ve made good pickups and good decisions as well, but it’s a risky business. Being a promoter is risky. And whether you’re a big scale promoter or a small scale promoter or in the middle, which I suppose I am, you’re going to make bad decisions and you’re going to make good decisions. It’s about trying to work out ways of getting by and not being too risky. I suppose that’s part of the excitement of it. It’s sort of like gambling. Some things work, some things don’t, but we’re still here and we’re doing OK.

MT: Do you feel like you have a better intuition for what works now than you did five years ago?

DC: Oh, absolutely. When I started life is noise, I thought I knew everything. And when you think you know everything, you really find out how little you do know. I learnt some really big lessons early on, in the first half a dozen shows we did, and I made huge mistakes. And I learnt a lot from those mistakes and from bigger things we did that weren’t as successful as I thought they were going to be. I think I know a lot more now, but I suppose I’m very careful in thinking I know everything. I’m learning something new every day in terms of how to put on tours and run shows and do things. And we did a lot of different things – obviously when we started we did Beaufort Street Festival, we did that for a couple of years and that was very different from touring. We did Slanted and Enchanted and This is Nowhere as well which were a couple of little mini Perth festival things. We’ve done a few different things over the years and we’ve got some big plans for the future in terms of stuff that’s not necessarily just touring Australia but maybe taking a few bands into Asia as well which is a pretty exciting prospect.

MT: What are you must proud of that you’ve presented?
DC: I don’t think I’m necessarily more proud of one thing over another. Some of the things that haven’t been financially successful I’ve been really proud of. I think This is Nowhere was amazing and everyone had a great time, but it wasn’t financially successful. But it was a good platform in a way to do more touring and that changed the shape of the business. We started to get into national touring as a consequence of doing This is Nowhere because we did Tortoise and Grails nationally at the same time as doing that festival. So I think that was a really important turning point, that part of the business. Obviously starting up Beaufort Street Festival – which was incredibly difficult – was a great thing to do, to start that up. Personally, what I enjoy most – which is probably better than saying what I’m most proud of – is going to shows. And I’m in a very privileged circumstance where I can go see a band I really like five or six nights in a row and tour around the country and be friends with them and I love that. I love seeing music that I love night after night after night. It’s work and it’s not easy but it’s very enjoyable when you see a band that you love like Sleep or whoever play night after night. It’s great. But I’m sort of proud of everything.

MT: Are you still able to take your promoter hat off and appreciate stuff as a fan?

DC: Oh, absolutely. 100%. In the back of my mind when I’m watching a show that life is noise is putting on, I’m still thinking: is everything cool? Is the band safe? Is the crowd having fun? Does it sound great? And production things and every part of the show. But absolutely I can sit back there and watch. I stress as well – you don’t know if things are going to go right – but I very much am a fan when I’m watching a band that I love, whether we’re doing the show or somebody else is. It’s always much less stressful when somebody else is doing the show. Going and seeing Mogwai at Perth Festival was great because it’s not my show and I can just unwind and watch a band that I love. But it’s a different feeling when you put on a show. I mentioned Sleep and Sleep’s a good example. Doing that tour and watching, night after a night, a band that I love – and I’m part of the process of putting on that show – I feel pretty good about it.

MT: The 5th anniversary show is going to be one of the last shows at the Bakery before it closes this year – what are some of your favourite memories of that venue?

DC: Lots and lots of memories. Some really good dance music gigs, selling out Seekae there a couple of times, doing Slanted and Enchanted there was great. Seeing things like Jon Hopkins and that. Lots of good rock stuff, like the first Russian Circles time they came to Perth when it was chockers there and a really good lineup there as well of local bands that was fantastic. And not just my shows but other shows as well, I’ve loved being there. It hasn’t always been the easiest place to put on a show because of the nature of the organisation but it’s a great place and a great space and I think Perth is going to miss that venue, and I will personally, but I’m looking forward to having one last show there. I kind of thought New Year’s Eve would be the last show we have there but it’s nice to have Easter Thursday there as well because it’s a holiday the next day and people can have a big night.

MT: What drew you to the six acts that you’ve got performing at that show?

DC: I wanted a bit of variety and I wanted things that I like. Drowning Horse I love and they don’t play very often, mainly because their drummer lives in Melbourne, so we’re flying him out to Perth to play that show. They recently recorded a new record which sounds incredible and hopefully it will be released later this year so I’m looking forward to seeing those guys play because it doesn’t happen very often. Mt. Mountain I see every time they play in Perth because they’re just such a great band. They’re also in the midst of recording new stuff and hopefully taking it to the world because I think they’re a world class outfit and really should do very well when they get the new record out. Puck are just a really simple three-piece band that play noisy music and are well worth seeing. I enjoy playing their music on my radio show and it’s good for them to play live at this gig as well. Fait could be very successful as well. Elise Higgins used to come and help us out at life is noise a few years back and she told me that she had this post-rock project, and I was like, oh god, not another bloody post-rock project, I don’t need to listen to more post-rock – which I love – but I’ve just heard so much. And I listened to it and I thought, this is pretty good. Then I saw them play at their first gig and they were fucking incredible. I was really blown away at how the band translated that from Elise’s vision. Kaan played New Year’s Eve at the Bakery and were completely explosive and almost stole the show. They were great so it’ll be good to see them. They’re kind of heavy so it’ll be good to have one other heavy band to go with Drowning Horse. Chris Cobilis is a nut and I just love everything he’s done since I first saw the Tigers at the Grosvenor in the 1990s and his solo stuff is great as well. And Wil Bixler, I just wanted to have some dance music on the bill. He’s going to play a lot of jungle and I really like jungle, so he’ll play that and some gangster stuff, and that’ll be an interesting way to break it up from all this rock music as well. It’s kind of a diverse bill. There’s some heavy stuff and some rock stuff and some weird noise and other bits of pieces. Maybe it plots the history of the last five years of the music that life is noise has brought out, a bit of all sorts of things. I think it’ll be a good night to just come down and have a drink. I might buy a couple of drinks for people, or maybe they’ll buy them for me. But it’ll be fun.

MT: You mentioned before that you work with a lot of niche acts, and trying to balance that with financial constraints is always a struggle. If you could tour a band and not have to worry about money at all – if you could just bring a band to an Australian audience – who would that be?

DC: Wow. There’s a few but I’m sort of thinking about touring them anyway. I love Year of No Light but there’s six guys in the band and it’s super niche. So without completely losing a stack of cash, I’d love to do that. But it’s possible that that might happen. But someone’s going to have to lose money and it’s not going to be me. It’s always the bigger, the more bodies. There are stacks of bands that I’d like to bring out but the ones with six, seven, eight members make it more difficult. But some of those bands are more popular. When there’s a will there’s a way, I think for most of them, but some bands are just unfortunately too niche or just not popular enough to get a crowd to go and see them. And when you’re risking tens of thousands of dollars, it’s unfortunate you can’t do it. I can’t think of too many off the top of my head that are impossible at the moment, but certainly there are a few that are far more marginal. And unfortunately that means that I think a lot of our tours — and I’ve been talking about this for a while — but I think a lot of our tours will actually not come to Perth just because it’s just so expensive to get people here, and especially when you’ve got five, six people or more in the touring party, it becomes very difficult. But we’re looking to do some bigger and weirder and different things. I suppose in the last couple of years we’ve done lots of stoner stuff and metal and rock and we will this year as well, but I think from 2016 and beyond, the nature of the business is going to be a bit more varied. So whilst we will still do a lot of that kind of thing, and I hope we can continue to tour acts like Sleep and Russian Circles and Deafheaven and those kind of heavier acts that we’ve been touring – High on Fire and Earth, etcetera – I think 2016 onwards we’ll start diversifying a bit more and doing all sorts of things. I tend to get bored just doing one style of music, and whilst we’ve been pretty varied over the last couple of years, it’s all been heavier sort of things, so we’ll continue doing that, but we’ll do some other stuff as well. Maybe some world music. Maybe some jazz. Maybe some dance music, some indie rock. Who knows. But it will always be on the weirder end of the spectrum.

Come buy Cutter a beer (or maybe he’ll buy you one) at The Bakery tonight for our fifth anniversary with Drowning Horse, Mt. Mountain, Fait, Puck, Kaan, Chris Cobilis and DJ Wil Bixler. Tickers on sale through lifeisnoise.com. See you there.

Music Feeds LIVE: Microwave Jenny Streaming this Thursday

Thursday, April 2nd, 2015

Whack the settings on high and punch in 30:00 because loved up Aussie husband/wife duo Microwave Jenny are set to bring half an hour of fresh pop-folk live to your screens with a Music Feeds studio stream this Thursday.

Before heading around the country for a huge Australian tour, Tessa and Brendon will be swinging by our studio to say hey, play us some of their delightfully melodic and charming guitar jams and let us know all about their exciting new EP.

Catch the duo live Thursday April 2nd after 12:00pm AEST right here and make sure to check them out on their upcoming The Six Song EP national tour, hitting the major cities and plenty of regional towns from next week, deets below!

Listen: Microwave Jenny – Shine Like New

Microwave Jenny & The Six Song EP Tour
*With special guest Tegan Wiseman
Ticket’s available here

Friday April 10th 2015: The Spotted Cow – Toowoomba (QLD)*

Saturday April 11th 2015: The Milk Factory – Brisbane (QLD)*

Wednesday April 15th 2015: The Gasometer – Collingwood (VIC)*

Thursday April 16th 2015: Babushka Bar – Ballarat (VIC)*

Saturday April 18th 2015: Baby Black Café – Bacchus Marsh (VIC)*

Thursday April 23rd 2015: Newtown Social Club – Newtown (NSW)*

Saturday April 25th 2015: 5 Church Street – Bellingen (NSW)*

Sunday April 26th 2015: Flow Bar – Old Bar (NSW)

Thursday April 30th 2015: Lizottes – Newcastle (NSW)*

Saturday May 2nd 2015: Front Bar & Gallery – Canberra (ACT)*

Sunday May 3rd 2015: Birdhouse Bar – Wagga Wagga (NSW)*

Friday May 8th 2015: The Wheatsheaf – Adelaide (SA)

Saturday May 9th 2015: Prince of Wales Bandroom – Bunbury (WA)

Sunday May 10th 2015: Ellington Jazz Club – Perth (WA)

The post Music Feeds LIVE: Microwave Jenny Streaming this Thursday appeared first on Music Feeds.

Music Feeds LIVE: Microwave Jenny Streaming this Thursday

Thursday, April 2nd, 2015

Whack the settings on high and punch in 30:00 because loved up Aussie husband/wife duo Microwave Jenny are set to bring half an hour of fresh pop-folk live to your screens with a Music Feeds studio stream this Thursday.

Before heading around the country for a huge Australian tour, Tessa and Brendon will be swinging by our studio to say hey, play us some of their delightfully melodic and charming guitar jams and let us know all about their exciting new EP.

Catch the duo live Thursday April 2nd after 12:00pm AEST right here and make sure to check them out on their upcoming The Six Song EP national tour, hitting the major cities and plenty of regional towns from next week, deets below!

Listen: Microwave Jenny – Shine Like New

Microwave Jenny & The Six Song EP Tour
*With special guest Tegan Wiseman
Ticket’s available here

Friday April 10th 2015: The Spotted Cow – Toowoomba (QLD)*

Saturday April 11th 2015: The Milk Factory – Brisbane (QLD)*

Wednesday April 15th 2015: The Gasometer – Collingwood (VIC)*

Thursday April 16th 2015: Babushka Bar – Ballarat (VIC)*

Saturday April 18th 2015: Baby Black Café – Bacchus Marsh (VIC)*

Thursday April 23rd 2015: Newtown Social Club – Newtown (NSW)*

Saturday April 25th 2015: 5 Church Street – Bellingen (NSW)*

Sunday April 26th 2015: Flow Bar – Old Bar (NSW)

Thursday April 30th 2015: Lizottes – Newcastle (NSW)*

Saturday May 2nd 2015: Front Bar & Gallery – Canberra (ACT)*

Sunday May 3rd 2015: Birdhouse Bar – Wagga Wagga (NSW)*

Friday May 8th 2015: The Wheatsheaf – Adelaide (SA)

Saturday May 9th 2015: Prince of Wales Bandroom – Bunbury (WA)

Sunday May 10th 2015: Ellington Jazz Club – Perth (WA)

The post Music Feeds LIVE: Microwave Jenny Streaming this Thursday appeared first on Music Feeds.

Music Feeds LIVE: Asta Streaming This Thursday

Wednesday, April 1st, 2015

Devilishly talented Tasmanian singer song-writer Asta is back with some long-awaited new music in the form of bouncy latest single Dynamite, which she’s currently in the midst of touring around the country and will be bringing straight to you via a Music Feeds live stream this Thursday.

After taking out the Triple J Unearthed High competition in 2012, Asta has since moved base to Sydney, bunkered down in the studio and returned with a slick new sound. Featuring Aussie rapper Allday, Dynamite is brimming with catchy pop hooks over Asta’s characteristic soulful belts, and is sure to set the Music Feeds Studio alight.

To catch a live stream of Dynamite and a handful of other gems before she finishes up her single launch tour at Sydney’s Newtown Social Club (which you can grab tix for here), tune in right here on this page after 2:00pm AEDT this Thursday, 2nd April as Asta swings by to perform live at Music Feeds Studio.

Listen: Asta Ft. Allday – Dynamite

https://soundcloud.com/astamusic/dynamite-feat-allday

Asta Dynamite Tour
Tickets available here

Thursday 26th March – Hobart, TAS
Tasmanian International Arts Tour

Friday 27th March – Melbourne, VIC
Northcote Social Club

Saturday 28th March – Kernot, VIC
The Hills Are Alive

Thursday 2nd April – Sydney, NSW
Newtown Social Club

The post Music Feeds LIVE: Asta Streaming This Thursday appeared first on Music Feeds.

Music Feeds LIVE: Asta Streaming This Thursday

Wednesday, April 1st, 2015

Devilishly talented Tasmanian singer song-writer Asta is back with some long-awaited new music in the form of bouncy latest single Dynamite, which she’s currently in the midst of touring around the country and will be bringing straight to you via a Music Feeds live stream this Thursday.

After taking out the Triple J Unearthed High competition in 2012, Asta has since moved base to Sydney, bunkered down in the studio and returned with a slick new sound. Featuring Aussie rapper Allday, Dynamite is brimming with catchy pop hooks over Asta’s characteristic soulful belts, and is sure to set the Music Feeds Studio alight.

To catch a live stream of Dynamite and a handful of other gems before she finishes up her single launch tour at Sydney’s Newtown Social Club (which you can grab tix for here), tune in right here on this page after 2:00pm AEDT this Thursday, 2nd April as Asta swings by to perform live at Music Feeds Studio.

Listen: Asta Ft. Allday – Dynamite

https://soundcloud.com/astamusic/dynamite-feat-allday

Asta Dynamite Tour
Tickets available here

Thursday 26th March – Hobart, TAS
Tasmanian International Arts Tour

Friday 27th March – Melbourne, VIC
Northcote Social Club

Saturday 28th March – Kernot, VIC
The Hills Are Alive

Thursday 2nd April – Sydney, NSW
Newtown Social Club

The post Music Feeds LIVE: Asta Streaming This Thursday appeared first on Music Feeds.