Thursday, June 30, 2011

Alec Bathgate - Gold Lamé (1996)

Alec Bathgate - Gold Lamé




Alec Bathgate and Chris Knox were attached at the hip for a while: together, they made some of the best and most influential music to come out of New Zealand, well, ever (the Enemy, Tall Dwarfs, Toy Love). Here, Bathgate ventures out on his own for his first full-length solo release, and his immense influence on the Tall Dwarfs' sound becomes retrospectively clear. "Train to Skaville" is a Leonard Dillon cover and rocks, "Carl's Arrows" reminds us that we're listening to a New Zealand record, the title track (pronounced lah-'may) sounds much happier than its subject matter (selling out musically), "Happy Head" and "Happy Hound" pace their respective sides of the album well, it's impossible to hate "Love, Love, Love," and my personal favorite, "Win Your Love" is bittersweet, and my personal favorite can be heard by clicking the "preview!" button below.


preview!


download!

New Zealand Family Tree



I use "Family Tree" mostly as a pun: notice how incestuous NZ's post-punk scene was in the 70s-90s. From NoiZe (see what I did there?) to 4-track maniacs, as early as the Enemy and as late as King Loser, as celebrated as the Chills and as forgotten as the Phromes, this chart should give you at least an idea how connected the scene was to itself. If you're just tuning into the New Zealand rock scene, the scene is important because before these guys bands from NZ mostly played covers. There wasn't much original stuff unless it was rehashed garage rock (check out: Wild Things, it's not that bad). The sound they created was truly unique, one of the few instances that I believe merit the use of the word unique. The music is at times desolate and reminiscent of a sparesely-populated, often overcast but still beautiful periphery, and at other times charmingly silly and of the don't-take-yourself-too-seriously-school, which gives the scene a wonderful balance.

Stuff I want to draw attention to: Alastair Galbraith spent ten years recording with the father of Xpressway Records Bruce Russell as A Handful of Dust. Peter Gutteridge seems to be the forgotten member of the Clean even though he was in the Chills AND Snapper. Alec Bathgate's solo work is incredible (seriously, that might be my next post). The 3-D's were named after its three members: Denise, David, and Dominic. Wayne Elsey was somehow decapitated on a train (sounds like a drinking-related accident to me) and that's why they stopped being the Doublehappys and became the Straitjacket Fits. Ross Humphries was in the band that was Flying Nun's first release (The Pin Group), but he was also in the Terminals, the Great Unwashed with the Kilgour bros, and the Gordons/Bailter Space, all amazing bands (especially the Gordons in my opinion). The dotted lines on the chart don't mean anything different than a regular line, they are only dotted to prevent the lines from getting cluttered.

NOTE: I forgot to draw a line connecting Shayne Carter and Wayne Elsey to their terrific high school band, Bored Games. The Family Tree is imperfect. I might redraw it and include colors to indicate years of activity, would anyone be interested in that? Crickets, I'm sure.

better quality version of the chart

Friday, June 10, 2011

Haunted House - Untitled or Self-Titled EP - 2004

(no image yet)

Found this CD (aren't CD's beginning to feel outdated?) at the radio station, came cardboard-wrapped with only the words HAUNTED HOUSE literally crafted out of obnoxious glued-down glitter that drizzled onto my jeans when I handled it. Can't find any information about this anywhere. Almost certainly self-released noise pop.

preview

hh

-A