Twenty years on, Dead Moon lives again on Aussie silver screens
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- By The Barman
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A screenshot from “20 Years in The Crypt: Embedded With Dead Moon”.
Dead Moon is a revered name in Australia. They also had a firm following in Europe and across the underbelly of the USA. Now, a new documentary on Dead Moon will have exclusive screenings in Australia in March and April.
“20 Years in The Crypt: Embedded With Dead Moon” delivers two-hours of live footage and candid off-stage vision, shot in 2001 and edited down from 180 hours of footage.
It’s the work of US filmmakers Jason Axel Summers and Kate Fix, who also brought you the “Unknown Passage” documentary about Dead Moon and, more recently, “I Should Have Been Dead Years Ago”“I Should Have Been Dead Years Ago”, the doco about Australian underground rock'n'roller Stuart Gray (aka Stu Spasm, of Lubricated Goat).
First one to quit the Marrickville moshpit is a lawn bowler
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They were a first-time band for many underage gig-goers in the 1990s so there’s a certain irony in Melbourne hardcore exponents Nursery Crimes paying a visit to Sydney with a show at Marrickville Bowling Club on April 26.
It will be a night of old and new with O.G. support in the form of Herbal Lunatics (Ben Brown singing songs of his old band, The Hellmen) and Fun Again! (members of Bored! and Massappeal), with Northern Beaches upstarts The Darrans and newcomers Bugg Music opening proceedings.
Nursery Crimes were Australian pioneers of all age shows in the ‘90s and many who saw them back in the day now have kids of their own. The good news is that U18s are good to be at the Bowlo if accompanied by a (responsible) adult.
In their first life, Nursery Crimes were support-of-choice for international tourists like L7, Henry Rollins, Faith No More and Fugazi. They released two full length albums before breaking up the first time in 1994 and have reformed a handfull of times since 2006. This will be their first Sydney gig in 15 years and tickets are on sale here.
Ups and Downs mark anniversary tour with vinyl variant
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In the 1980s, they were at the forefront of Australia’s own version of the Paisley Underground. Now, jangle-pop veterans Ups and Downs are celebrating the 40th anniversary live shows with The Crystal Set that we told you about with a vinyl anthology, “Stained Glass Memories”, in March 2025.
The album is available for pre-order in coloured wax and can be had here.
The Sydney show is sold-out (you can be on a waitlist via the link below) and Brisbane and Melbourne are going the same way.
Ups and Downs and special guest
The Crystal Set
MAR
8 - Marrickville Bowling Club, Sydney - waitlist
14 - Brightside, Brisbane - tix
22 - Brunswick Ballroom, Melbourne - tix
Formed in Brisbane in the early 1980s, Ups and Downs quickly became known for their jangly guitars, melodic hooks, soaring harmonies and introspective lyrics, cementing their place in the hearts of indie music fans.
Jet setting with Seiji from Guitar Wolf
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- By Matt Ryan
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Photo by @alltoz696
Japanese madmen Guitar Wolf are bringing their brand of high energy rock ‘n’ roll to Australia for the umpteenth time. Inspired by ‘50s rock ‘n’ roll and ‘70s punk, Guitar Wolf always put on a balls-to-the-wall show, with energy and intensity that no-one can match MATT RYAN spoke with Guitar Wolf mastermind SEIJI via email on the eve of the tour.
I-94: I saw you guys at the Gaso in Collingwood back in 2023, and you’re coming back. I take it you must love coming here to come back so often and quickly?
Seiji: Of course! Australia is paradise for Japanese people, and I love the rock that was born from this country.
Screaming Tribesman and his band hit NSW this week
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Screaming Tribesmen leader Mick Medew and musical and life partner Ursula are touring their second album, “In The Zone”, and will play with their band, The Mick Medew and Ursula 4, in Newcastle and Sydney in February, presented by The I-94 Bar.
The Mick Medew and Ursula 4 plays the Stag and Hunter with East Coast Low and Jupiter 5 on Friday, February 14 and Sydney’s Marrickville Bowling Club with The Dark Clouds and Jupiter 5 on Saturday, February 15. Tickets for Sydney are here and you can pre-book for Newcastle here.
Ash Naylor pilots his Spaceship to Brisbane
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He has a rock and roll pedigree that’s the envy of any guitarist and it’s Brisbane’s turn to see his talents close-up when Ash Naylor and his band play two select shows in February.
“Soundtracks Vol 2” is Naylor’s second solo long-player and he’s bringing his band Ashley Naylor Spaceship to Junk Bar in New Farm on February 15 and Banshees Bar and Artspace in Ipswich from 2pm on February 16.
Naylor’s cv includes The Stems, The Church, Paul Kelly, Even and the RocKwiz Orkestra and he’s one of the country’s most in-demand rock guitarists.
He also carries a torch for the jangle-pop and psychedelic sounds of the 1960s and '70s. “Soundtracks Vol 2” reflects a host of influences ranging from Jim Hendrix to Peter Frampton and Spiritualised. It’s been foreshadowed by singles “A Blue Sky” and “Donovan Dreams”.
Tickets for Junk Bar are here while Ipswich punters can pre-book a Banshees spot here.
Top Tens for 2024: Chris Virtue of the Virtual Unreality radio show on Sydney's 2RRR
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A Virtual Unreal Top 10
A little quieter for me in 2024. It’s getting harder to get me off the mountain or am I just getting old?
1. Birdman Five-0
Birdman at 50? I first saw them in Melbourne in 1977 at La Trobe uni. My mates hated them. I loved them.
I nearly didn’t go to this one because I’ve seen them so many times, but when I was told that these were to be their last gigs, I pulled the finger out and got a ticket to the last show. In a word, fantastic, but they always are. Deniz and Dave play so well together, Rob remains one of my favourite frontmen and everyone else does their bit.
Hard Ons were great in support. Glad I went.
2. Murray Engleheart’s Birdman book
What a book! I loved every word of it and it told me so much that I didn’t know, including stuff about myself. His retelling of how the band came together is a sublime piece writing. You’re practically watching these guys get into each other’s orbits and once they did, forming a band was inevitable.
These are complex people and Murray deals with the tensions and frustrations within the band very fairly. Everyone gets a good run. An extremely satisfying read.
"Don't Cry No Tears"because Broham is back with a debut album
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A rocking Sydney country band with a serious underground heritage, Broham, is back on the boards after a year’s break and will launch their debut album, “Buckle Rash”, with a free show at The Golden Barley in Enmore on Saturday, February 22.
The no-support-three-sets show runs from 8-11pm.
“Buckle Rash” is 15 tracs on CD and was produced by Golden Guitar nominee Michael Carpenter at The House Studio, and mastered by Rick O’Neill at Turtle Rock.
Broham is the country vehicle for former Vanilla Chainsaws frontman Simon Chainsaw aka Krysler Broham.
Krysler and his band used the lay-off to good effect, finishing the long-player, working in new drummer Frank Rosetti and pumping out four video singles in 2024, all of which are viewable here.
“Buckle Rash” might have a country heart but its soul belongs to the sounds of inner-city Sydney circa the 1980s, and one of its prime cuts is a rolled gold cover of the X classic “Don’t Cry No Tears” which you view after the READ MORE fold.
Two chances only to catch the jangle pop of The Grooveyard
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Members went on to Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls, the Lime Spiders, Hell To Pay, the Screaming Tribesmen and The Bambalams, but The Grooveyard was the one that got away in the febrile Sydney inner city scene of the 1980s. Next weekend's I-94 Bar presented reformation shows in Canberra and Sydney are some of the most keenly anticiopated of the year so far and supports have been announced.
Local heroes Il Bruto are on the undercard at Smiths Alternative in Canberra on Friday, February 7 and are an obvious choice with a set list reprising many of the songs that influenced Australia's underground scene, while at Sydney's Marrickville Bowling Club on Saturday, February 8 supports will be powerpop supremos The On and Ons and Van Ruin.
- Top Tens for 2024: Ned Alphabet, Sydney songwriter, vocalist and guitarist for Balkan Grill, guitarist for Majestic XI
- The D4 add supports to their Oz dates
- The Runaways' Cherie Currie on final sweep through Australia
- Out of an Igloo and Into The Zone, Mick Medew 's passion for rock and roll continues to burn
- The MC5 book verdict? It done kicked 'em out
- The On and Ons urge you to Come On In because the powerpop water is fine
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