It’s the calm before the storm
We haven’t had a propper article on here now for almost three weeks, but don’t worry, we haven’t dissapeared. We will be back very soon, much larger.
Get. Excited.
Free gig?! Free CD!?
Adelle are coming back to Canberra! On Friday the 13th (Freaky friday!) they’re hitting Woden Youth Centre with locals Pleased To Jive You, Astrochem and Yoko Oh No.
Here at PostOp, we like Adelle. We also like you. So we spoke to Adelle and came up with $28 (+ think of the memories!) worth of prizes!
2 lucky winners will receive:
Free entry to Adelle’s show on the 13th of Feb
A free copy of Adelle’s recently released “Hello Sane Age Sins”, an epic 10 track album.
To win, all you need to do is answer the following question:
What are you most afraid of happening on Friday the 13th?
To enter, head over to our forums: Mission #1 Forums!
Selling out: the Joys and Horrors of Alternative Music, As Opposed to Mainstream.
“Every song that’s played on the radio sucks.” “Every song by an amateur indy garage band sucks.” “Everyone sounds the same.” “All the independent bands sound the same, and all pop music on the radio sounds the same.” “That band were good, then they got popular and sold out.”
Everyone seems to think that the undiscovered band they uncovered on an obscure myspace is the second coming. Or that quirky little band that plays a youth centre every few months will be world famous some day, and they’re the one who’s supported them from early on; they’ll always be a real fan! And then when that band gets a bit bigger, they’ll despise all those “new fans.” Where were they at the beginning? And now my favourite band’s getting played on commercial radio? Those sell outs! They were only good when they played in their garage and let me come watch.
Alternative music and indy music are more popular than ever. With the internet, easy bootlegs and free media, finding music is easier than ever. Artists can get popular from myspace, CD’s don’t sell as much, word of mouth from gigs is more important than ever. But is alternative music better than mainstream music?
Generally with independent alternative artists, they’ll make their own music. They’re not selling a product or an image, they’re selling art; music. Unlike the Britney Spears’ or the Katy Perry’s, we have people writing their own songs, creating their own compositions, doing things themselves. Without money and studio restrictions, creativity blossoms, and with all the cheap yet advanced technology currently available, we have people recording themselves in their home studios, mixing and mastering, playing numerous instruments and putting out their own demo’s. They can experiment and try new things without wasting money on studio’s and producers. They can create something interesting and new and get known for that.
But the big point is that, just because something is “mainstream” or famous or big or shown on VH1 DOESN’T MEAN IT’S BAD. Sure, there’s a whole lot of crap on continuous rotation, but there’s a whole lot of terrible, derivative indy bands who rip off their favourite artists and regurgitate chord progressions with terrible vocals. But just because a band has become popular, doesn’t mean that they’ve “sold out” or are no longer any good. In fact, in their eyes, they’ve been accomplishing what they most likely set out to do.
There are artists, of course, who sit on both sides of the fence. John Frusicante (guitarist of the Red Hot Chili Peppers) releases solo records in between tours and albums with RHCP. He records them quickly, independently and releases them for those who are interested. He doesn’t really promote the music, make music videos, or go on tours, he just makes it and puts it out there. Some will like his work with RHCP better, others will think his solo work is more honest and outstanding, either way; it’s there for those who want it.
Imogen Heap is another who springs to mind. She writes and composes her own music, produces and mixes it herself at her home studio. She makes experimental electronic/pop music. Always pushing the envelope and creating new, creative sounds. Yet, she still sells her music out to popular TV shows (Heroes, The OC, Ghost Whisperer). Does that make her any less of an artist (some would say musical genius)?
It’s all mixed up. Sure, there are bands that clearly just do things for the money, and don’t care about what they’re putting out, as long as it keeps them in the public eye and keeps their letterbox filled with pay checks. But the two aren’t mutually exclusive. You can make good music, filled with artistic integrity, and still make money for yourself. There’s nothing wrong with that. But there is something wrong with generalising thousands of artists as “bad” or “sell outs” just because they happen to be popular with a radio/TV audience.
The more obscure something is and the less people know about it doesn’t make it better. There’s good and bad on both sides. There always will be. To dismiss all mainstream music, or to dismiss all alternative music, would just mean you’re missing out. Find what you like, enjoy it, let it make you happy.
Christmas Time & Canberra in 2009
Christmas is here. And gosh, did it ever creep up and surprise me! I had no idea it was coming. No one warned me. I was completely unprepared. With the New Year also fast approaching the music scene has taken an oath of silence. Bands seem to be recruiting up primarily to figure out plans for the future.
Who knows what 2009 will bring? New music, new shows, new bands, new tours, new merchandise. While all this things have “new” tagged to their front, it’s really just more of the same. Every year we’d see new things like this, sometimes from bands we love, others from bands we couldn’t care less about. What will make 2009 more special than ’08 or ’07?
There seems to me a majority agreement that the Canberra music scene is subpar. There’s not enough venues, not enough talented bands, not enough willing audience, etc. Hopefully things will change in 2009. There was an interesting little article in the newspaper recently about this very topic. The Canberra Musicians Club was formed recently as a not-for-profit group who are starting to run gigs all over the place, from backyards and homes to hired venues. They’re trying to help promote and support the Canberra music industry, particularly to prevent the talent from cutting their teeth here at home and then moving on to greener pastures (Melbourne, Sydney, etc).
These promotion organisations are becoming more common around the capital. PostOp Productions provide a similar service; promoting shows, organising gigs, taking photos and just overall helping out. Hard ACT to Follow is another new project in the ACT, who are putting together a hard core rock/metal compilation of Canberra music to help showcase talent. MitACT were doing a similar project called 2620 where they planned to record 26 different songs by 26 different artists over 20 days, hoping to showcase the ability of Canberra musicians to create spontaneous quality works in a single day. FM 104.7 have a ‘home grown’ segment on their show, with the purpose of playing pure Australian made music (Monday nights at 10). There’s also countless other independent promotion companies all around Canberra that are easily found on MySpace and always willing to help. All these companies believe in Canberra and the music scene, they believe in the talent we have, and they want to help.
If you’re a Canberra musician having trouble getting gigs or finding places to perform, get out there and start asking! There’s help coming from all directions, but you still need to promote yourself. Others won’t do the hard work for you. Make sure your band is ready, make sure you rehearse, make sure you’re inviting everyone you know to come to yours gigs.
So, 2009 looks like it will be filled with tonnes of bands playing all around the city, as well as tonnes of promoters and helpers getting in there to support the music. With everyone working as hard as it seems they plan, ’09 should definitely be a step in the right direction for the Canberra music industry and the vast talent of musicians in the capital.
Now all we need is an audience.
PC4PCFest!
PostOP & Mission#1 are bringing life back to the myspace generation, and you don’t even have to pay for it. Click on the link to win free entry thanks to the Mission #1 Forums.

Chasing Storms This Friday
Adelle
Adelle released their debut album “When Your Vices Aren’t Vices” independently in the later half of 2006 after recording and mixing it themselves. The disc was a rampant success running rife though alternative/indie circles.
Adelle spent 2007 in hot pursuit of their audible accomplishments touring east coast Australia tri-monthly. Upon returning home from the “She’s The Inventor” tour, their final and most exhaustive tour of the year (spanning a whole month) they were ready for their next studio effort.
In the months to come they combined their unusual yet innovative flair for song writing with audio engineer/producer Guy Cooper’s (Serotonin Productions – Transport, A Secret Death, The Combovers) aptitude for distinctive tone. What ensued was a 10 track epic conspiring in the culmination of the ‘Hello Sane Age Sins’album.
“Hello Sane Age Sins” LP is a rendering of raw sound with cunningly astute production, the songs have groove with thrashings of rock and moments of calm, the lyrics are clever yet sharp with shades of malevolence. To me this disc is an anti-movement, awe-inspiring insubordination, like dancing in the underworld, defiance personified.
Adelle hit Woden Youth Centre this Friday, November 28th with Pleased To Jive You, Slovac and Tell Me Bluntly. Check out the bands myspace at http://www.myspace.com/adellegroup and click on the following link to download a free sample song from the soon to be released album “Hello Sane Age Sins” http://www.thoughtcoercion.org/carddownload_mp3s/Vella_Lavella.mp3


