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Remember our discussion the other day on 1980s New Zealand band THE KIWI ANIMAL?

Here’s a 9-minute 2002 film on that band’s Brent Hayward, called “Love Is A Painkiller: The Life and Times of Brent Hayward” you should check out.

It’s devoted more to the man’s film and performance art work and to his outsized personality than it is to his bands (among whom also number Shoes This High, Smelly Feet and Fats White), and is an insightful look at the sorts of gifted artistic characters nurtured in New Zealand over the last three decades.

Huge thanks to Orlando Stewart, who made this film as a student in 2002, and to Brendon Ross, who connected me with him.

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Outstanding panic from Minneapolis. Our correspondents inform us, alas, that the band may have already packed it in.

Update 4/9/15: Just got a timely note from Brendan Wells from the band – “We’re currently writing new songs and may play shows again soon. The tape we released will be a 12" on Fashionable Idiots and we’ve already approved test pressings.”

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dynamitehemorrhage:

Probably best to sit on my usual hyperbole and let this 66-minute set of gnarl do the talking for me, don’t you think? Welcome to the 56th episode of Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio. Super psyched beyond belief that you could make it.

Stream or direct-download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #56 here.

Stream the show on Mixcloud here.

Subscribe to the show via iTunes here.

Track listing:

  • THE SHIFTERS – Creggan Shops
  • THE CONEHEADS – People Punks
  • SAUNA YOUTH – Transmitters
  • MIL MASCARAS – Mushroom
  • THE COOLIES – Mix of All Good Things
  • FREE KITTEN – One-Forty Five
  • FREEDOM FIVE – To Save My Soul
  • THE PAGANS – I Juvenile
  • THE INSULTS – Stiff Love
  • MnMs – Knock Knock Knock
  • GIORGIO MURDERER – Lazer Lord
  • THE MEKONS – Where Were You
  • PINK SECTION – Shopping
  • WIRE – Map Ref. 41n 93w
  • AN EXPERIMENT ON THE BIRD IN THE AIR PUMP – Smear
  • HUMAN SWITCHBOARD – San Francisco Nights
  • PRIMITIVE PARTS – TV Wheels
  • JIM NOTHING – Raleigh Arena
  • HALF SOUR – Lunchroom Punch
  • SHUNKAN – Our Names
  • BLACK TAMBOURINE – Throw Aggi Off The Bridge
  • GAUNT – Jim Motherfucker

Some past shows:

Dynamite Hemorrhage #55    (playlist)

Dynamite Hemorrhage #54    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #53    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #52    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #51    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #50    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #49    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #48    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #47    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #46    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #45    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #44    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #43   (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #42    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #41    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #40   (playlist)

New show on the way later this week. Here’s the most recent edition if you haven’t streamed or downloaded it yet.

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(Note: this is an unpublished piece I wrote in 2007 for a Canadian magazine called ACHE that never saw the light of day. With their permission, I’m posting it here, as I did on my old Detailed Twang blog in 2008. The actual written piece was also to contain an interview I did with Julie Cooper of The Kiwi Animal, but I seem to have misplaced that).

We are currently in the midst of an extended revival and belated celebration of lost outsider folk music of the 1970s, defined by obscurity more than anything else, with simplicity & pureness of sound running a close second. Examples of said 70s folk artists include the excellent VASHTI BUNYAN, LINDA PERHACS and SIBYLLE BAIER. It may be many years before the lost acoustic children of the 1980s are accorded the same due respect, yet the magical, often experimental New Zealand duo THE KIWI ANIMAL deserve their just psychic rewards posthaste. It’s probably a decent time to be paying them as well, as there’s an oft-delayed CD retrospective set to come out “soon” – current rumors place it this year, in 2008 – on a German label called Pehr. This set encompasses both of the band’s LPs: 1984’s minimal, beautifully weird “Music Media” and the following year’s sinister, ten-song acoustic concept piece “Mercy”. Completists, of whom there will surely be more of once this music sees a wider release, will be shattered to learn that the band’s 1983 7”EP “Wartime” & assorted cassette-only live tracks won’t be on the CD, but I’m certain that this is due only to the 80-minute space limitation of the storage media itself. These fragile and wonderful sounds weren’t asked to be “file(d) under New Acoustic Music” on the back of their first album for nothing.

Let’s take a step back for a second and think about what the 80s represented in terms of New Zealand and its place in the larger world of independent rock music. This small two-island country garnered an obsessive amount of “indie cachet” during the decade – I knew of Americans at the time who would have given a left arm for the complete discography of Flying Nun records; later in the decade, the rough & homemade Xpressway label burrowed an even deeper level of allegiance to the country and its seemingly endless supply of strange & unique bands.

A partial role call would include larger acts like THE CLEAN,THE CHILLS and THE VERLAINES – all pretty much on the fuzzed-out, alterna-pop side of the spectrum – to more difficult-to-peg acts ranging from all of BILL DIREEN’s projects to THE GORDONS, THE BATS and even smaller-scale bedroom geniuses like SHOES THIS HIGH, SCORCHED EARTH POLICY and MARIE & THE ATOM. This lowest level was the milieu in which The Kiwi Animal worked during their career – 1982-1986 – while still touching a fair share of their countrymen & -women thanks to a well-timed video of their lovely 1st-album track “Blue Morning”. They arose from the aforementioned Shoes This High – in a matter of speaking. Brent Hayward, one half of the duo that formed the core of The Kiwi Animal, was the vocalist for that fantastic art/punk act, who left behind a criminally underpressed single that was very much akin to a spastic Pere Ubu or a de-bluesed “Safe As Milk”-era Captain Beefheart. Hayward struck out on his own, after that act imploded, and released a small handful of 45s under the appetizing moniker of SMELLY FEET; I’ve not heard them but intend to, as I’m sure you will as well.

When Hayward, then in Auckland, met theater performer and local artist-around-town Julie Cooper, a bond was sealed, a pact was made, and in 1982 The Kiwi Animal arose. Both played guitar, and both sang, sometimes in unison but more often taking turns or signing entirely different but complementary vocal lines at the same time. I’m unfortunately unable to comment on the band’s work the first eighteen months of their existence, having mistakenly spent my time in America as a teenager during those years, while also not having sufficient current adulthood resources to procure a copy of their debut single “Wartime”. But here’s what Gregor Kessler wrote about it online:

“….their first output, the purely acoustic Wartime five-track 7" EP, released on their Brent and Julie Records label, oscillated between near-classic minor-key folk territory (in the achingly beautiful “Flying (Again!)” or the sinister “Back to the Moon” which, in all its purity, gains a menacing touch through the floating chord changes that convert dissonance into sinister hypnosis) and Smelly Feet-like sparse and angular song sketches like “Private Stanley.” Julie’s input and especially her crystal-clear voice had added a breathtaking gentleness, and at the same time intensity, to Brent’s formerly often harsh musical ventures. The combination of their voices and guitars in songs such as “Jokers & Clownes” make the back of your neck tingle time and again…..”

I can imagine, because that’s what happened to me the first time I heard their debut album “Music Media” a couple of years ago. I immediately decided I needed to spread the word about their majesty, in hopes that others could approximate the same sensations. This twelve-song set could be easily, and somewhat mistakenly, summarized as a lovely acoustic folk record with a not-too-well-hidden experimental streak. The strange echoes, baroque instrumentation and the uplifting, pitch-perfect clarity of Julie Cooper’s vocals have many parallels with Barbara Manning’s late 80s LP “Lately I Keep Scissors”, especially on ghostly, hypnotic tracks like “Just How Close”. Her voice has this ethereal but not corny quality that drifts way, way beyond “pretty” – it’s an accented aural massage, one that you can’t imagine ever shifting out of pitch or yelling, screaming or cursing.

When Cooper is not singing, Hayward is sing/shout/talking over their folk-cum-acoustic rock music, like on the pulse-quickening political murder tale “Assassin” or the pseudo-pornographic “Performance Peace”. The two sing together on the opening “Union Song”, which puts one in the mood for an album’s worth of reflective protest/troubadour music that never follows. These different moods slot in very well between Cooper’s more spectral (the incredible “Time of the Leaves”) and sometimes buoyant tracks (“Every Word is a Prayer”), making this a carefully crafted, multi-varied, every-track-a-winner LP, the likes of which I’m sure you’ll agree are exceptionally rare. It’s a fairly quick learn that the album is not all sweetness and light by any means – there’s a somewhat nasty undercurrent to some of the tracks, carefully camouflaged by the sparse instrumentation and lovely vocals. Something sinister and jarring is hiding within the grooves, only peeking its head out in strange couplets about stiff penises, government cover-ups and tired, frustrated clock-punchers.

This darker undercurrent comes full circle on 1985’s “Mercy”, a record almost completely taken over vocally by Hayward, though still very much a Cooper/Hayward production. Patrick Waller, who played a bit of viola and cello on the first album, is also given equal billing on this one as being a full-fledged member of The Kiwi Animal, and he plays on nearly all of the tracks. It is a record that perhaps lacks the instant gratification and classic status of “Music Media”, but its rewards are returned in proverbial spades with repeated listens. Only one track truly sounds like something that could be plopped back onto “Music Media”, and that’s the opening “Flesh and Time”, perhaps not coincidentally only one of two songs that feature Brent & Julie and no one else. The experimental nature of this LP at times reminds me of soundtrack work rather than out-and-out folk music. I hear the sorts of sounds in “Conversation Piece” and its companion “Fag Piece” that could have scored bleak, wintry tales like those in Krzysztof Kieslowski’s incredible 10-part “Decalogue”. Haywood works some anger loose into these songs, some of which appears to be remotely political in nature, and yet it’s a sort of gently seething anger, on a slow boil rather than a big bang of released tension. As mentioned previously, one also gets the feeling that there might have even been a “concept” at play behind the record, but it’s certainly not easy to put a finger on. Pluck just about any single track from the record and you’re left with stark, minimalist folk music, full of warmth & depth, and bursting with strange & wonderful feelings of all kinds. Peter, Paul & Mary this most definitely ain’t. I can only hope that when the 80s folk revival steamrolls through your town in a few years, you’ll remember to give your thanks & prayers for the glories of The Kiwi Animal, and tell that bandwagon that they arrived just a little too late at your house.

** Much – no, check that – all of the “history” portion of this article was swiped from a great online piece/interview on & with Brent & Julie, written by one Gregor Kessler, who was the man behind the CD reissue. It has since disappeared from the web.

*** Check out this small 2006 factoid from Julie Cooper’s blog.

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Hot podcast alert. Glen Galloway, a longtime friend of the ‘Hemorrhage, just created the first of what we hope’ll be a long string of podcasts devoted to bent noise, ear-carving psych and general obscuro musical tomfoolery from many eras.

It’s called “SYPHON ME PLASMA”, and episode 001 is an hour of “early syphoning”, as the host tells it. Glen, a renaissance man who’s not only a strong family man, a man of of faith, and one who shreds the waves when he’s not doing his shredding on guitar, may be previously known to you as a prime mover over the years in Octagrape, Truman’s Water, Soul-Junk and probably a few more sub-underground projects. He’s got that trustworthy DJ voice that makes you feel like you’re in the hands of Walter Cronkite, and all will be well in the world.

He says he’s broadcasting from “the far side of Neptune”, but I’m pretty sure that’s just a hifalutin way of saying “San Diego”. I could be wrong. Anyway, check out the podcast by clicking the play button up there; he’s made it available for download as well (see that little arrow in the upper right-hand corner? That’s it).

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https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/197566326/stream?client_id=3cQaPshpEeLqMsNFAUw1Q?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

Probably best to sit on my usual hyperbole and let this 66-minute set of gnarl do the talking for me, don’t you think? Welcome to the 56th episode of Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio. Super psyched beyond belief that you could make it.

Stream or direct-download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #56 here.

Stream the show on Mixcloud here.

Subscribe to the show via iTunes here.

Track listing:

  • THE SHIFTERS – Creggan Shops
  • THE CONEHEADS – People Punks
  • SAUNA YOUTH – Transmitters
  • MIL MASCARAS – Mushroom
  • THE COOLIES – Mix of All Good Things
  • FREE KITTEN – One-Forty Five
  • FREEDOM FIVE – To Save My Soul
  • THE PAGANS – I Juvenile
  • THE INSULTS – Stiff Love
  • MnMs – Knock Knock Knock
  • GIORGIO MURDERER – Lazer Lord
  • THE MEKONS – Where Were You
  • PINK SECTION – Shopping
  • WIRE – Map Ref. 41n 93w
  • AN EXPERIMENT ON THE BIRD IN THE AIR PUMP – Smear
  • HUMAN SWITCHBOARD – San Francisco Nights
  • PRIMITIVE PARTS – TV Wheels
  • JIM NOTHING – Raleigh Arena
  • HALF SOUR – Lunchroom Punch
  • SHUNKAN – Our Names
  • BLACK TAMBOURINE – Throw Aggi Off The Bridge
  • GAUNT – Jim Motherfucker

Some past shows:

Dynamite Hemorrhage #55    (playlist)

Dynamite Hemorrhage #54    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #53    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #52    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #51    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #50    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #49    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #48    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #47    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #46    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #45    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #44    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #43   (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #42    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #41    (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #40   (playlist)

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(Originally written on my Agony Shorthand blog, May 2003)

UNION CARBIDE PRODUCTIONS : “IN THE AIR TONIGHT”

I’d like to pay tribute this afternoon to one of the most over-the-top, raw, animalistic rock and roll LPs of all time, the godhead 1987 monster “In The Air Tonight” from Sweden’s UNION CARBIDE PRODUCTIONS. You know that band Soundtrack Of Our Lives that’s been getting so much ink of late? The one you heard & said in your best 12-year-old girl voice: “whatever”? Turns out that two of those guys were in the mighty UCP, & at one point had three UCP alumni among their ranks.

None other than Rolling Stone had this description of UCP in a TSOOL puff piece: “Union Carbide Productions were Sweden’s majestic combined answer to the Stooges, Black Flag and the early freaked-out Pink Floyd, a Next Big Thing doomed by missed opportunities and inner turmoil”. That’s a good enough description as any, but what they’re not telling you is what a quantum leap in quality it is traveling backward through the band’s history until you get to their incredible debut.

“In The Air Tonight” is one of those legendary records with a rep that keeps growing. When it came out it was a bolt from the blue for those of us who’d never found a Swedish band to dig (I hadn’t heard the amazing late 70s punk from Sweden yet), and it was hailed in pretty much all corners who dared to listen. Even Lydia Lunch weighed in with a typically hyperbolic, all-caps review in Forced Exposure that had all the right adjectives: heavy, killer, bloody, blistering, raw, and of course, “over-indulgent fuck inspiring”. Whatever.

From Mikael Funke’s history of the band on UCP’s website: “Here were five guys from Gothenburg who dressed either as slobs or in suits, wore their hair long and uncombed or shaven to the skin. The music was loud, vibrant and – unlike most bands – full of groove and energy. UCP fused the Detroit Sound of The Stooges and MC5 with the weirdness of The Fugs and Captain Beefheart. They let the Stones, Doors and other great sixties acts shine through their songs long before Primal Scream. UCP was the band that did everything right in the wrong time”

This record was also given the full worship in UGLY THINGS magazine #16 in 1998, a perplexing turn for the paisley and romulan scenes, but minor complaints notwithstanding, one that spoke volumes of Mr. Stax’s commitment to high-quality, high-decibel rock and roll. You read this reminiscing about the band now and it appears that everyone seems to think if it had only been 1994 instead of 1987 these guys would have been huge. I don’t think so – we’re talking about defiantly non-commercial heavy punk rock, with sprawling textures, sandpaper vocals and what sounds like fifty guitars roaring at once.

The closing 10-minute “Down On The Beach” recalls Husker Du’s “Reocurring Dreams” with Steve Mackay’s maniac sax on “LA Blues” – not a recipe for Nirvana-style success, but a fantastic listen for the rest of us. My personal take is that their quality plummeted precipitously on the next two records (both were just okay, even though one had a song called – gasp – “San Francisco Boogie”), and by the time of the 90s hit I’d stopped paying attention. But get this: the band’s been reuniting in Sweden from time to time, and there’s talk of a box set & worldwide reissues of “In The Air Tonight” on CD (you can find it on CD now, just not as easily as you should). Sounds like a project for Revenant, & definitely worthy of joining their lineup.