Touched by the hand of GOD

GOD visited Melbourne in 1987. Au Go Go Records was a shop and record label located amongst the red brick warehouses, abandoned factories and cobblestone lanes of Abbotsford.  

Proprietor, Bruce Milne was one of the first to be touched by the hand of GOD. It was an experience that changed his life, a “golden moment”, recounts Milne. 

Milne was handed a demo cassette of  My Pal, a song by a young punk band with a precocious nameGOD 

500 copies of the 7” vinyl first-press sold out quickly followed by 1500 more 

It wasn’t only Milne who was touched by this golden musical moment; GOD have been described as possibly the greatest Australian band you have never heard, and  My Pal is considered one of the classic punk rock songs in Australian music history.  

It may also surprise you to know that many rock gurus think of it as the unofficial rock anthem of Melbourne.  

What is it about My Pal that makes it so great?  I’m rocking along Citylink on my way to the airport when I enquire of my passenger and music advisor, a conservatorium trained jazz guitarist – who just happens to be my son… 

My Pal, by GOD, have you heard them?.. of course you haven’ttell me what you think, I want your considered opinion.”  

I switch the sound system to my iPhone and crank up the volume and lose myself to the song. 

“Aussie pub punk…messy, raw, nice riff and driving bass…I like itI really like how the outro returns to the intro,” he smiles, who are they again?” 

Musically,  My Pal  has an under-produced soundyou might expect of punk but that’s where expectations end.  

It intros with a distinctive catchy, chiming riff that revolves around a circular five-note melody; the song is carried by messy, energetic drums and a driving bass, a three-cord progression overlaid with angst-ridden vocals.  

The lyrics are barely decipherable but the chorus is raw and emotive: 

“You’re my only friend / you don’t even like me.” 

Joel Silbersher, GOD’s lead singer/guitarist/songwriter has been compared to Nirvana’s, Kurt Cobain, who followed some years laterwhile others liken his vocal style to Motorhead’s, Lemmy Kilmister.  

The combination, deliver an unexplainable energy, a mojo that resonates. Dave Laing, Record label owner sums up the appeal. 

“For indie kids it’s an indie song, for punk kids it’s a punk song, for rock’n’roll people it’s a rock’n’roll song. It can be a pop song if you want it to be. It just seems to appeal to everybody in the alternative kind of world. It just covers all those bases.” 

The real surprise is that Silbersher and his band: Matty Whittle, Tim Hemensley and Sean Greenway were just 15 and 16 years old when they recorded  My Pal 

Not surprising perhaps, when you consider they were playing in bands since they were 10.  

In the space of three-years, GOD made a raucous appearance on the music TV show Countdown, released two albums and played approximately, seventy live gigs. 

However, the huge success of the single My Pal became overpowering for the band,  dominating their other material and audience interest. While for a time, it fell out of favour with GOD, it  remains an enduring Australian punk classic, feted and covered.

Silbersher and Whittle are still active in the industry but tragically, Hemensley and Greenway could not cling to the GOD-like immortality of  My Pal; both dying from heroin overdoses.   

As a touch of bitter irony, My Pal featured on the soundtrack to Underbellythe TV series of the infamous Melbourne gangland wars, for control of the drug trade and racketeering. 

GOD: live on Countdown

What Kind of Man, Florence + The Machine

The new single from the third F+TM studio album is anthemic, as you might expect from the resounding voice of Florence Welch. However, jamming guitar riffs anchored by an amped and booming baseline and brass section, kick in to drive the Machine down a somewhat different road. Florence, has been quoted as saying her musical influences for this record, along with others, have been Bowie, Neil Young and Nick Cave. Recorded in LA, the city sky inspired the album name, How Big How Blue How Beautiful, which was a descrition Florence texted to a friend. The sound fused with a pained, powerful and at times, disturbing Vincent Haycock, directed video will leave you unsettled…but wanting to play it again. The album is due for release 2 Jun…I’m pre-ordering.

Father John Misty, Fear Fun… who’s afraid of good music?

“I got into my van with enough mushrooms to choke a horse and started driving down the coast with nowhere to go. After a few weeks, I was writing a novel, which is where I finally found my narrative voice…”  and it seems, the inspiration for  J. Tillman‘s latest incarnation, Father John Misty and album, Fear Fun.

It’s that sort of ‘Saturday-morning-door-open-to-a-refreshing-spring-day’ kind of listening. Psychedelic Indy folk melodies that float in on the vivid stream of  Tillman’s voice.  Refreshing, country rock and folk roots wrapped up in an Indy composition. Apart from the creative catalyst of his Hunter S. Thompson-esque road trip, Tillman’s inspiration sounds familiar to my demographic. Sourced deep within the heart of the 70s singer songwriters, his dreamy voice has babbled from a spring on Rocky Mountain Highgurgling on past the Crazy Horse and the homestead scents of fresh American Pieto arrive as a confluence of streams into a blue-green lake of Indy incarnation.

And as for the visuals and the sound mix,  OysterHuman sums it up with his top rating comment on the KCRW video:

“Johnny Knoxville on vocals, Frank Zappa on drums, Rivers Cuomo on guitar, and gay Kurt Cobain on bass. haha”

Fear Fun is a great listen, one that is starting to wear grooves in my iTunes library.  

BTW:  I included two videos, the KCRW live recording and the official video featuring the rising star of actress and comedian, Aubrey Plaza. She owns the  bipolar, sultry-slacker look…I can’t wait for a duet with Natalie Portman.

So all that said, WHERE’s my F*&%!G MUSHIES!? I too am in need of beat poet inspiration and a narrative voice…enjoy.

Father John Misty – Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings (KCRW)

Father John Misty – Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings (OFFICIAL VIDEO)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtOToiIDNRA&feature=share&list=ALYL4kY05133qD1yF7uiA7MRJfi5mAIO3q