Q & A with Peter Hume of Evermore

You’ve got to admire Evermore’s Peter Hume. He was up late entertaining crowds at the launch of the band’s new album Truth of the World: Welcome to the Show, yet the next morning at 9 am he was calling me for a chat. He might have been little sleepy, but he was happy to talk about his ambitious new recording.

You had your album launch in Sydney last night. How did that go?
Really well, really well. It was the first time we’ve had basically the whole thing together, the whole show, all our screens and all new songs, it was cool. It was great to see, I think a few people were surprised.

Is it hard fronting up for interviews first thing in the morning after a big night like that?
This is the first one so you’ll have to bear with me a little bit.

I’ve heard so many music critics say that the concept album is dead, yet your new album Truth of the World: Welcome to the Show definitely falls into the concept album category. What made you decide to record this epic piece of music?
I think we’ve always loved ambitious music, and we’ve especially always loved albums we’ve grown up on like Pink Floyd and The Who. We’ve never just thought it was about three-and-a-half minute songs. Our very first record, Dreams, was going to be a concept album. We just really didn’t have the experience to finish it. We wanted to make an album that really excited us, and that really stretched us as songwriters. And it seemed like a good idea, especially when you’ve got multiple songwriters in the band to have a story or a structure that you can all contribute to.

You’ve had such success with radio-friendly singles in the past. Did you ever worry about alienating your audience by producing something so different?
Not really. I suppose you don’t think about that at the time. I suppose we were just really getting into music again. We’d moved down to Melbourne, and we’d built our own studio, and Jon was producing the record, and it was just the three of us hanging out. We were just having a lot of fun. I hope that gets across in the album. I don’t think that so far it’s alienated anybody, but we’ll wait and see.

You mentioned that your brother Jon produced the album this time around. It was the first time that you haven’t worked with producers outside the band. What was it like having him on that side of things?
Oh, great. Jon’s always done a lot of the production for the last three records. We do a lot of it in Australia, or in New Zealand for the first record, and then we’d finish it off in America with a name producer. I think every album we’ve wanted Jon to produce, but this is the first time they’ve let us! I suppose it’s sort of a big thing, especially when you’re younger, to go “Yeah, you can produce the whole thing.” They’re all kind of worrying how it’ll turn out. But we were confident. We know his abilities.

You offered the first single from the album as a free download. When so many musicians are against free music online, what made you decide to just give the single away?
We really just wanted to get it out there. We really wanted people to hear our new sound, and as many people as possible, not necessarily people who had ever thought of buying an Evermore single.

How important is the internet as a promotional tool these days?
The internet is huge. We’ve got a really good online community on our website, and on our MySpace and things like that. We used that from really early on. It’s probably the best way to find out about new music. I think that’s how most people find out about new music, through MySpace and things like that.

I can’t imagine ever working with my sisters. What’s it like being in a band with your brothers?
It’s pretty easy actually, because you’ve got that experience behind you. There’s a lot of room for forgiveness. People always ask us that, and I don’t really know because I haven’t had any other experience. I think all bands are slightly kind of claustrophobic. They’re full on things because you’re hanging out with each other all the time. So being family doesn’t seem to be that much of a stretch.

You left New Zealand to pursue your music career in Australia. Was that a hard decision?
I don’t think we made the decision at the time. We couldn’t afford to fly back! We got offered some shows in Australia and we were just like “Well we’re just going to live in Australia, sleep on people’s floors, and see what happens.” I think maybe if we’d had heaps of money we would have gone backwards and forwards for a while. But I think we really fell in love with living here and I don’t think we’re moving for the moment.

You guys have enjoyed such success with your music. What keeps you grounded?
I suppose being a band with your brothers keeps you pretty grounded, because they’ve known you since you were a toddler. I think that would probably be a big grounding experience.

When are you planning on getting out and touring this album?
Really soon hopefully. I think we’re going to be announcing a tour in the next couple of weeks. It’s a kind of multimedia show we’re playing. The giant screens from the video clips are coming along with us. It’ll be a lot of fun.

And finally, do you have a message for your Australian fans out there?
We look forward to seeing you all on the road!

Image used with permission from Warner Music Australia

Q & A with C.W. Stoneking

With his most recent album called Jungle Blues, local bluesman C.W. Stoneking seems like the perfect headliner for this week’s Earth Hour concert at Melbourne Zoo. But before he joins the big cats and crocodiles, C.W. took a little time out to chat to Oz Music Scene.

You’re playing the Earth Hour concert at Melbourne Zoo this weekend. Why did you want to be a part of it?
To be honest with you I didn’t really know about it until they asked me to do it. In my isolation in the suburbs with my children, making music, I had no idea. I’d never even heard of it before.

How important are events like this in raising awareness of environmental issues?
I think it sounds pretty good. It’s good for people to get together and do something. People’s attention spans might run out I guess, which is why they only make them a day-long event, or an hour-long event in this case maybe. But it’s interesting.

What are some of the things you do in your own life to make the world a little greener?
I don’t know what I do. My garden isn’t very green. Everything I do there makes it more brown.

One of the really cool things about the event is that it’s all acoustic. What do you like about playing in that stripped back mode?
I sort of came up playing acoustic when I got my start. Some of the bands I’ve had, we even used to do shows with no microphones. But I like it pretty good. I like having electricity as well, because it helps you rock out some more. I’ve got a drummer now, so you need to get on top of all that noise that they make. But also acoustic is good as well.

Your sound draws heavily from the music of the 20s and the 30s. What’s so appealing to you about that classic musical era?
There’s a lot of things for me that are appealing about it. They had good style back then. You could see it in everything they did really. It’s in the music as well. You compare a good-looking building back then to something that they come up with now. There’s just bits and pieces that don’t need to be there, you know? I’m talking from a visual standpoint. People overdo things a bit now. They had some good ways to do it, so I try to follow in that vein a bit when I make my music as well.

Was it ever difficult to get a foot in the door because your music was so different to what’s on the radio?
No, not really. I wouldn’t say that because I guess when I was starting out I wasn’t really trying to get ahead of myself in terms of getting some sort of deal that was going to shoot me straight to the top. I was more interested in just developing my sound. And once I’d kind of done that and put out my last record, or the record before last, I guess I’d just spent my time well because people liked the record. And then it was easier for me because I was different I guess. I had a whole stretch of ground all to myself.

You played the Port Fairy Folk Festival this month and you’re doing the East Coast Blues and Roots festival in April. What do you enjoy about those festival shows?
You play to pretty big crowds. Usually a lot of people want to buy your record. But I guess one of the best things for me, as a person who usually never goes out unless I’m on tour, is that I get to see some other music. I guess that would be one of the best things for me. As far as doing shows goes, I generally prefer doing my own shows in an enclosed space. The festival energy is more … there’s a lot of things going on.

It must have been something special growing up in an Aboriginal community in the Northern Territory. How did your upbringing make you the person you are today?
I guess I spent a lot of the time playing, instead of thinking about buying stuff or hanging around the shops. So maybe that was how it helped me. Except now I spend lots of time hanging around the shops. But I still get the chance to play a few when I’m writing songs, things like that.

And finally, do you have a message for your local fans?
I would like to say hello to them, and that I hope they’re enjoying my record. I hope to get a new one to them before too long.

C.W. Stoneking plays Melbourne Zoo for Earth Hour this Saturday, May 28. Tickets are still available from the venue.

Image source: Craig Bender @ Wikimedia Commons

John Farnham Ready for a Comeback Record

It doesn’t seem like too long ago that John Farnham was bidding us farewell on his The Last Time tour. But in true rock star style, it seems it wasn’t the last time at all. Not by a long shot.

Following his triumphant return at the Sound Relief concert comes news that Farnsy is heading back to the studio. And he might even be bringing Coldplay with him.

“I am pretty confident we will have a new studio album out from John Farnham this year,” his longtime manager Dennis Handlin told The Daily Telegraph. He also hinted that Coldplay might pen one of the tracks on the long awaited recording.

It’s been four years since Farnsy gave us a studio album. Judging by the reception at Sound Relief, it seems that’s been four years too long!

The Who Help Victorian Bushfire Victims

They couldn’t be in Oz to perform at the Sound Relief concert, but The Who are still committed to giving to the Victorian Bushfire Appeal. $25 from new tickets sold for their Grand Prix concert in Melbourne on Sunday will go to the relief fund. The tickets will include the show and entry to the Grand Prix.

“The entire music community has shown incredible support for the Bushfire Appeal,” said concert promoter Andrew McManus said in a statement. “It’s the responsibility of all of us to do everything we can to help heal these terrible tragedies. The Who could not be here to take part in the Sound Relief Concerts but we sincerely hope this new ticket initiative will add some well-needed funds to the Appeal.”

Tickets are available online at ticket.com.au/donate, or by calling Ticketek on 132 849 and quoting the word “Donate.” Tickets will also be available at the Albert park track on the day when the work “Donate” is quoted.

Image source: PR Photos

Music Community Unites for Sound Relief

45, 000 Sydneysiders and 80, 000 Melburnians crammed into their respective cricket grounds for yesterday’s massive Sound Relief concerts.

Crowds at both shows were treated to some extra special performances. Coldplay originally promised an acoustic set, but their electric numbers proved anything but ordinary with the surprise addition of John Farnham to the line-up. The Aussie music veteran joined Coldplay for “Fix You” and “You’re The Voice,” a song Coldplay lead singer Chris Martin called the “national anthem.”

Having living legend Barry Gibb close the show was exciting enough, but to have Olivia Newton-John join him for the Kenny Rogers Dolly Parton classic “Islands in the Stream” was something else. They might not admit it freely, but I’m convinced everyone has a soft spot for that song.

Melbourne didn’t miss out either, with some amazing reformations and international stars. One of the biggest was Midnight Oil, who closed the show.

Their 50-minute set included hit after hit, “Read About It,” “Beds Are Burning” and “Blue Sky Mining” among them.

“You are such a good crowd for such an important event,” Peter Garrett told the enthusiastic crowd.

Initial reports said Kylie wouldn’t sing, but she did anyway, wowing crowds with this beautiful acoustic rendition of “I Still Call Australia Home.” This is another of those songs eligible for the title of honorary anthem – it gets to me every time. This video is preceded by a moving minute’s silence in remembrance of the victims.

Kings of Leon wouldn’t play “Sex on Fire” lest it offend the bushfire victims, yet their mammoth hit “Use Somebody” was well received. From the pop tunes of Gabriella Cilmi to the laidback sounds of Jack Johnson, and the country-tinged duets of Kasey Chambers and Shane Nicholson, it was a concert that delivered something for everybody.

Wolfmother and Jet worked double-time, appearing at both Sydney and Melbourne shows. But they didn’t mind, with Wolfmother singer Andrew Stockdale adding that the event was one of the most significant in Australian music history.

“It just shows what this country does – it gets behind people when they’re down and out,” he told The Sunday Telegraph.

Organisers expect the event to raise more than $5 million for the Victorian Bushfire Appeal and Queensland flood victims.

Australian Idol Auditions Start Soon!

Could you be the next Wes Carr? The team from Australian Idol is on the lookout for the next big thing!

Auditions for this year’s reality talent show kick off next Sunday in Darwin. It’ll then travel all around the country, including this year’s new cities of Mackay and Bathurst. I wonder what talent we’ll unearth there!

Just like last year, the 2009 victor will receive a $200,000 artist development fund to hone their craft. Check out all the dates below, and head to the Australian Idol website for the rest of the details!

22 March 2009 – Crowne Plaza, Darwin
24 March 2009 – Shangri-La Hotel, Cairns
26 March 2009 – CQ University, Mackay
29 March 2009 – Tamworth Regional Entertainment Centre
1 April 2009 – Bathurst Memorial Entertainment Centre
5 April 2009 – Newcastle Jockey Club, Broadmeadow
8 April 2009 – University of Wollongong Conference and Functions Centre
19 April 2009 – Perth Convention Exhibition Centre
21 April 2009 – Hotel Grand Chancellor, Hobart
26 April 2009 – Adelaide Convention Centre
28 April 2009 – The Albury Convention Centre
1-3 May 2009 – Flemington Event Centre, Melbourne
9 & 10 May 2009 – Suncorp Piazza, Brisbane
16-18 May 2009 – Australian Technology Park, Sydney

Image source: Anne Tieppo/Wikimedia Commons

David Campbell @ Mingara Recreation Club, 11 March 2009

As I get older, it takes a little bit more to entice me to a midweek gig. It takes a performer who doesn’t just sing but entertains, one who leaves a part of themselves on the stage, and one who is a whole lot of fun. It takes a performer like David Campbell.

I raved about David when I caught his Swing Sessions tour, but I knew this show would be a little different. His latest album explores another time, swapping classic crooning for the swinging tunes of the sixties. But the philosophy remains the same. David continues to deliver songs that stand the test of time because they’re just that good.

The songs give David a solid foundation, but it’s what he brings that makes them exceptional. He’s a rare performer, one that does all he can to truly entertain. He swivels his hips to make the girls scream, easily tells amusing anecdotes between songs, wears some of the most outrageous outfits I’ve ever seen on a straight man, and sings like a dream.

He was here to promote his new album Good Lovin’, but that doesn’t mean his other songs were forgotten. He loves to swing, and he delivered highlights of his Swing Sessions albums with gusto. And then he went further back to deliver some Johnny O’Keefe classics from the musical “Shout.” It didn’t matter which decade the songs came from; we knew them all and enthusiastically sang and clapped along.

Songs like “Just a Gigolo” and “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” were irreverent, while tender moments like “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes” and the breathtaking “Mr Bojangles” nearly reduced me to tears.

I cannot say enough good things about David Campbell. Seeing him live is a special experience indeed. His Good Lovin’ tour is travelling all around the country at the moment. See it. You will not be disappointed.

Image source: own photo

Q & A with Alex Lindsey Jones

Alex Lindsey Jones is a Sydney singer-songwriter on the rise. His debut album If She Knew is the ideal showcase for his unique voice and instantly accessible pop-rock tunes. I caught up with this hot new up-and-comer today to chat about unkind British audiences, his prolific songwriting skills, and his unlikely friendship with Craig McLachlan.

I read that you spent a lot of time as a kid raiding your parents’ record collection. What were your favourite albums as a kid?
I most definitely did. They didn’t have a lot of good stuff in there, but I managed to find a lot of Elvis, a lot of Beach Boys, and even The Beatles, and that was pretty gold stuff to discover as a kid. Eventually my tastes evolved and The Beach Boys turned into Huey Lewis and The News and Elvis turned into Bruce Springsteen, and so on, but that was a great place to start. That real American rock and roll stuff, apart from The Beatles, was really what caught on so that’s really influenced my stuff up until this day.

How important was your parents’ musical influence on your career?
I guess because my earliest musical memories were directly affected by their tastes and what they had lying around the house, they were fairly important.

You began writing songs at such a young age. Did you ever have any other career ambitions, or was music always it for you?
It probably sounds a little boring, but music was always the only thing I could see myself doing. It was a borderline obsession when I was a kid. It was the only thing I could talk about, think about. I’d constantly lock myself away in my room with my guitar and write songs. I think between 16 and 18 I’d written a couple of hundred songs, maybe a little bit more. That might sound like a lot, but I can tell you they weren’t all good ones! It was definitely just one of those things. I just couldn’t say no.

I remember the first time I actually had the courage to play one of my songs to someone and sing in front of them, and they told me I was awful. They said, “You were awful, you stink!” But I just couldn’t take no for an answer. So I just kept going and here I am now.

So I guess perseverance pays off!
Yeah, although it’s funny. It’s such a personal thing what people like musically. There’s almost no right or wrong, no good or bad. It’s just what connects and what doesn’t.

You moved to the UK and played with the band Falling Down for a few years. What did you learn working in the British music scene?
That was a real learning curve, especially playing this sort of hybrid Aussie-American-classic rock stuff which had never been particularly popular over there. We played a lot, we played over 100 shows in the couple of years we were together. But we were virtually booed off every stage we ever went on! It was tough but what I learnt was just not to give up and not to quit. We got quite a thick skin from the fact that we didn’t go down so well. But hey, they kept giving us gigs so we can’t have been that bad!

But it was definitely a very interesting period of my life. It’s not the first place I’m going to go back when I’m doing my world tour, hopefully sooner rather than later!

What made you come back to Australia?
After a couple of years abroad I was so homesick. Sydney is just the greatest place as far as I’m concerned. I really, really missed home and wanted to get back to the sun, and the good food that we’re used to, and all that sort of stuff.

And I just thought that it was fitting to record my debut album in Sydney. It was getting to that point where it was like “I’ve got to make an album, it’s now or never.” They say that you’ve got your whole life to make your first album, and I kind of took that literally! It took four years to make it. But it had to be done in Sydney. I’m quite proud that I could do it with local players and producers, and do it all ourselves in our own backyard.

Now you had more than 100 songs to choose from when recording your debut album If She Knew. That’s pretty prolific – what inspires you?

It’s just one of those things. I don’t know if I can really sum it up or put it in a nutshell. Who really knows where the inspiration comes from? The way it works with me, any time I’ve tried to force myself to write a song, when I think I haven’t written a song in a while and I should write a song, it backfires. It doesn’t work. I end up either not writing anything or I write something really awful and I throw it out straight after it’s finished.

What I find is that occasionally I’m just overcome with inspiration for whatever song it is, and I have to grab my guitar no matter what I’m doing. I might be sitting on the bus and I’ll pull out a bit of paper if I’ve got one and I’ll start jotting down a lyric. Or I’ll start humming a tune and I can’t get it out of my head and I’ll have to remember it until I get home. It just hits you in the oddest places, the inspiration. And who knows where it comes from? I can’t really explain it.

Is it challenging to narrow the songs down when you’ve got so many?
It is hard, because sometimes you’ve got to let go of the ones that you do for yourself. Sometimes I’ll write a song and I’ll think, “That’s exactly what I want to say. That’s exactly the kind of song that I want to write.” But I don’t really think people will get into it, it’s not the kind of thing that people will like as much as I do. So you’ve definitely got to cut out a lot of material that you’ve written for yourself.

But it helps when you’ve got people that are coming to see you regularly, your friends, and I guess you could call them fans, they do let you know when they particularly like a song. So in that sense it’s easy to pick out the real gems, because they’re the ones that people ask you to play, or tell you after the show that they’re really good songs.

You funded the album yourself. How important is it to you to remain independent?
It’s becoming more and more important. When I was first starting to put the album together and get into it, it was one of those things that was very hard, to be independent. It’s not like it was 15 or 20 years ago when getting a record deal was really important, and probably a lot easier as well. There’s a lot of pressure on independent artists. They’ve got to look after the business side of things as well.

But now as I get further into my career, I’ve just realised there’s so many bonuses to being independent, and making the decisions yourself. And I guess I’m quite proud of the fact that we’re doing it all ourselves, and not relying on anyone else to call the shots.

I believe Craig McLachlan’s a big fan, and he makes a cameo in the video for your new single “Your Love is Amazing.” How important has his support been?
His support has been tremendous. Craig McLachlan is easily the nicest guy you will ever meet. He’s just wonderful, a real sweetheart. We had a chance meeting and ended up talking about music, and as it turned out we liked a lot of the same bands and had a lot of the same influences from when we were growing up with music. So we really hit it off in that sense. After hearing my album he loved it and wanted to help out any way he could. And as it turned out we were about to film the video for my first single, “Your Love is Amazing,” and Craig offered to do a little guest spot for us. He even rearranged his TV shooting schedule to come out and do this few second cameo. He’s just a real great guy, really supportive. I’ve really appreciated all his help, and he’s shared a few war stories with me, which has been really fantastic. He’s just a great guy.

And people don’t realise he’s probably the most talented musician I’ve ever met as well. The guy plays virtually every instrument under the sun. I’ve even got one of his lesser-known albums, and he literally plays everything on it. This cat is just so talented, but musically he doesn’t get that credit. But people don’t realise that.

People just remember “Mona” and that’s it!

They do, and it’s a real shame because he had a lot more to offer. But I guess the fact that people know who he is is great for him. And he does a little bit of music, a little bit of TV, a little bit here and there.

I hear that you’ll be doing some Sydney shows soon before kicking off a national tour. What can we expect from your live performances?
The initial live shows around Sydney are acoustic showcases, so it’s going to be quite interesting. The songs are going to be different slightly. Not so different as to be unrecogniseable, but they’re going to be a lot more striped back. They’re a lot more emotive and soulful. So it’s going to be interesting. People are going to get to see these songs in a really naked form and I guess hear where they originally started, because all these songs were just written on the acoustic guitar way back when. We spent years recording this album and polishing it up and adding these little frills in the studio, so it’s going to be nice to strip it back and just let the songs play themselves and live on their own. We’ll see how they go.

And finally, do you have a message for your local fans?
To all three of them [laughs], thanks for the support and make sure you keep coming to see us.

Sydneysiders can do just that next month when Alex Lindsey Jones plays two special acoustic showcases. Catch him at the Old Manly Boatshed on April 15 and the Sandringham Hotel on April 23. If She Knew is available digitally through iTunes.

Image used with permission from AAA Entertainment

Breast Cancer Charity CD is All Woman

Warner Music Australia will think pink in April, releasing a compilation album to support breast cancer research. All Woman will hit shelves on Friday April 17 in partnership with the National Breast Cancer Foundation.

It’s a double-CD packed with girl power anthems from our own Delta Goodrem, Jenny Morris, Natalie Bassingthwaite, Katie Noonan, Tina Arena, Gabriella Cilmi, Olivia Newton-John, and Marcia Hines. Their tracks sit comfortably alongside international feminist icons including Tori Amos, Whitney Houston, Dionne Warwick, and k.d. lang.

“We are very pleased to be partnering with the National Breast Cancer Foundation this Mother’s Day, with the launch of All Woman, a fabulous compilation featuring the very best female artists from around the world. More than 13,600 new cases of breast cancer will be diagnosed this year in Australia. We hope that by partnering with the NBCF we can raise more money to help fund essential research.” Sarah Rouhan, Vice President Commercial Marketing at Warner said today.

$1 from every CD will benefit the National Breast Cancer Foundation. Warner Music Australia has pledged at least $25, 000 to the cause, regardless of how many CDs are sold. Let’s help them top that! This sounds like a fantastic mother’s day gift, or a present for yourself!

Here’s the complete track listing!

CD 1

  1. Whitney Houston – I’m Every Woman
  2. All Saints – Pure Shores
  3. Joss Stone – Super Duper Love
  4. En Vogue – Don’t Let Go
  5. Delta – In This Life
  6. Estelle – Pretty Please
  7. Alicia Keys – No One
  8. Faith Hill – Breathe
  9. Corrine Bailey Rae – Girls Put Your Records On
  10. Natalie Merchant – Carnival
  11. Colbie Caillat – Bubbly
  12. Des’ree – Feel So High
  13. Dionne Warwick – I Say A Little Prayer For You
  14. Lorraine Ellison – Stay With Me
  15. Rickie Lee Jones – Chuck E’s in Love
  16. k.d. lang – Constant Craving
  17. Jenny Morris – She Has to Be Loved
  18. Randy Crawford – One Day I’ll Fly Away
  19. Laura Branigan – Gloria

CD 2

  1. Gabriella Cilmi – Sweet About Me
  2. Christina Aguilera – Beautiful
  3. Natalie Bassingthwaighte – Alive
  4. Katie Noonan – Time to Begin
  5. Jewel – You Were Meant for Me
  6. Tina Arena – Sorrento Moon
  7. Brandy – Have You Ever
  8. Donna Lewis – I Love You Always Forever
  9. Tori Amos – Cornflake Girl
  10. Sixpence None The Richer – Kiss Me
  11. Alannah Myles – Love Is
  12. Gloria Gaynor – I Will Survive
  13. Aretha Franklin – You Make Me Feel Like A Natural Woman
  14. Marcia Hines – You
  15. Olivia Newton John – Let Me Be There
  16. Candi Stanton – Young Hearts Run Free
  17. Linda Ronstadt (featuring Aaron Neville) – Don’t Know Much
  18. Sister Sledge – We Are Family
  19. Maria Muldaur – Midnight at the Oasis

Image source: Alice Wycklendt @ Stock.xchng