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Showing posts with label husky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label husky. Show all posts

Friday, January 20, 2012

Husky interview


After a string of festival gigs over the past few months, Melbourne band Husky are closing out their Summer playing the national St Jerome's Laneway Festival. Heidi Pett spoke to frontman Husky Gawenda about his literary influences and thoughts on triple j Unearthed:

“I’d say we’re about songs.” It’s a deceptively simple explanation from Husky Gawenda when asked to define his band and their music. Variously described as indie folk and harmonic pop, favourably compared to the likes of Fleet Foxes and Boy & Bear, Husky have certain a knack for creating gentle melodies that nonetheless stay with you all day. Single History’s Door received extensive radio play on both triple j and Sydney’s FBi, as well as some recent lovin’ in the Bobbysix End Of Year Reviews, and with good reason: it’s an almost perfectly-crafted modern folk offering, sparking all sorts of comparisons with such a range of artists it leaves Gawenda faintly bemused. “I’m always so surprised by how people describe us and the different bands we’re compared to. I don’t always agree or hear the influence and sometimes it’s somebody whose music I’ve never actually heard, but I don’t think there’s any point being precious about it. People will listen to music and want to categorise it. It’s human nature.”

“I can say whatever I want about the songs I write and the sort of music we play, but in the end it doesn’t matter what I think. It matters what you think, it matters what the people who come to our shows think.” It’s an almost postmodern attitude - the death of the author/songwriter in favour of the audience’s interpretation. When I mention this, Husky laughs and admits “Well my father’s a writer and my mother’s an English teacher, so literature and writing was a big part of my upbringing and part of my life as far back as I remember. I grew up reading the classics, novel-wise. Most of the 20th century classics, as well as 19th century English and Russian literature, and a bunch of poets - Dylan Thomas, Wordsworth, those sort of guys. There are musicians as well, who are as much poets as they are songwriters; Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan, even Paul Simon.” These early literary influences certainly come through in his music, expressed through a strong lyrical component to the songs on debut long-player Forever So.

Recorded in a backyard bungalow in Melbourne’s northern suburbs which the band spent late nights soundproofing themselves with the aid of Youtube tutorials, it was an album Husky says, “we really wanted time and space to record”. Well, that and the fact that before scoring a spot at Pushover Festival thanks to a triple j Unearthed competition, Gawenda admits they were fairly unknown and thus hadn’t the cash to hire a studio and producer. “We wanted the luxury to be able to record songs that we won’t necessarily use. To take the time to write, develop and arrange the album. If we went into a studio and were paying by the hour we wouldn’t be able to do that. It was a mixture of getting the sound we wanted, and just not having the money to record in a proper studio.”


Looking back on their success over the last year, it seems Husky won’t be running into the same problems again. “I think what Unearthed does for bands like us is incredible. It does exactly what it’s supposed to, which is to bring bands to the attention of the public that otherwise nobody would hear of. That’s the beauty of the platform that triple j has, they can pick bands out of near obscurity, and put them on the radio.” Since the release of Forever So in late October, Husky spent some time touring before the busy summer festival season, where they’ve found the crowds, “really embracing and responsive”. Husky notes that the festival circuit is an equally important way for emerging bands to establish themselves. “You get exposed to people who might not know you that well or might not otherwise have come to your show. They discover you for the first time and you get to meet all these people that you otherwise wouldn’t have met. I think festivals are great for all bands, but especially for newish bands like us.”

Having seen them at Woodford Folk Festival over the New Year, I can attest to the fact that they put on a charming live performance which has certainly added to a fan base that has grown exponentially over the past year. Offering something a little different from the current crop of fingerpicking, harmonising folk acts, they’ve attracted praise from high places - triple j’s Richard Kingsmill, for instance, described them as “pure class.” This is something which Husky attributes in part to the varying musical backgrounds within the band. “I think the jazz training that they’ve done over the years have influenced them and it's certainly added to their ability as musicians,” he says of bandmates Evan Tweedie, Luke Collins and cousin Gideon Preiss.

Despite spending a lot of time together growing up in quite a creative family, Husky says he and Gideon, “didn’t really formally play music together until about three years ago. We spent a lot of time listening to music and going to gigs together, but he was on a different path for those early years. He was playing in a lot  of jazz bands and I was kind of just writing songs. Then, about three years ago, we decided to get together and have a play and see how that went.” It seems things have panned out fairly well so far, and Husky agrees. “Even from the beginning it felt right, and it’s never stopped feeling like that.”

Interview by Heidi Pett. For more information on the St Jerome's Laneway Festival, click here.


Friday, December 30, 2011

Bobbysix.com's End of Year Review 2011 - Heidi Pett


We're just a couple of days away from the big announcement of Bobbysix.com's overall winner of best album, film, gig and song of 2011. Before that, Deputy Editor Heidi Pett talks us through her favourite things from this year:

You’ll note that these lists have not been numbered. That’s because I’ve been known to take days sweating over my Triple J Hottest 100 votes (should I vote for my personal favourite on the album, or the most popular single, propelling a worthy artist to a higher rank? Is that selling out? What about that little-known band who I love but that will never make it in, is that wasting my vote? And if I do that, will Art vs fucking Science achieve a better result than they would have if I’d voted for, say, The Grates instead?) etc, etc, until oblivion. And that’s an anonymous vote which doesn’t even have to be ordered. So in the interests of my continuing to exist as a functioning member of society, here are my top picks of 2011, in no particular order.

10 Albums/EPs
Bon Iver - BON IVER (pictured, above)
Crystal Theatre - BELLES WILL RING
Forever So - HUSKY
Carry On - PATRICK JAMES
The Josephine March - THE JOSEPHINE MARCH
Absence - SNOWMAN
Milk Annual - CAITLIN PARK
I Want That You Are Always Happy - THE MIDDLE EAST
Helplessness Blues - FLEET FOXES
Secret Rituals - THE GRATES

10 Songs 
History’s Door - HUSKY
Last Night I Heard Everything In Slow Motion - OLIVER TANK
Rose Coloured Glasses - THE JOSEPHINE MARCH
Falling Away - BIG SCARY
Wishingbone -WINTER PEOPLE
Warriors With Wild Hearts - CAITLIN PARK
Paper Thin - FLUME
Please You - PATRICK JAMES
Hector Myola - TIN SPARROW
Holocene - BON IVER

10 Music Videos 
Bizness - TUNE-YARDS
Aroused - TOM VEK
Awkward - SAN CISCO
Little Frog - SUI ZHEN
Somebody That I Used To Know (feat. Kimbra) - GOTYE
Cameo Lover - KIMBRA



Featherstone - PAPER KITES
Fat Monk - RAT vs POSSUM
Holocene - BON IVER
Defeatist - CAMERAS

5 Gigs 
FLORENCE + THE MACHINE - Seymour Centre, Sydney
THE GRATES - The Metro, Sydney
SEEKER LOVER KEEPER - St Stephen’s Church, Sydney
PATRICK JAMES - Hibernian House, Sydney
HOWLING BELLS - The Standard, Sydney

5 Books
Eating Animals - JONATHAN SAFRAN FOER
All That I Am - ANNA FUNDER
Tall Man - CHLOE HOOPER
You’ll Be Sorry When I’m Dead - MARIEKE HARDY
Penguin Plays Rough - VARIOUS

5 Festivals
Woodford Folk Festival
TiNA/Emerging Young Writers Festival
Jaipur Literature Festival
The Human Rights Arts and Film Festival
Changing Lanes Festival

10 Blogs/Websites
I spend a fairly embarrassing amount of time jaunting around the internet, getting inspired by people who are making and doing things. Often I’ll read the entire archives of a blog and then forget to bookmark it for later reference, so here are a few that I actually remember:


2011 in words 
I started volunteering with FBi Radio in June and have finally found that community of beautiful, creative, interesting and interested people that I’ve been looking for in Sydney. Because, you know, I was starting to think this town was full of wankers and everybody was too cool for everything. These people give up their time and their skills out of love and passion and a desire to create, and it’s the best bullshit filter I’ve ever come across. What feels like forever ago, I spent two months sharing a backpack with my best friend as we travelled around India. Trains that were 19 hours late, colour and dust and beauty and heartbreak, escaping Darjeeling in the back of an army jeep, making dinosaur noises at leering men on train platforms, packing more books than clothes, dark green eyes and a hand on the small of my back. And the fact that when we got home we were too embarrassed to reach for the handles on the train, as we reeked of filthy Delhi bathrooms and four days of unwashed transit.



Heidi Pett - Deputy Editor
As well as being a fine writer, Heidi is an award-winning radio producer and presenter. She takes photographs through a plastic lens, drinks wine, listens to folk songs with gratuitous swears and can more often than not be found with her head buried in a book.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Bobbysix.com's End of Year Review 2011 - Bobby Townsend


Over the next few days, all of Bobbysix's contributors will be sharing their highlights of 2011, culminating in the announcement of our overall album/song/movie/gig of the year later this week. Today, Editor Bobby gets the ball rolling: 

Top 10 albums
1. A Creature I Don’t Know - LAURA MARLING
Marling's most expansive record and also her most accessible, it proves her to be one of the most honest, intelligent and breathtakingly talented artists in music today.
2.
Twerps - TWERPS
Twerps is the sound of a band growing up and finding their sound. This is an album that could soundtrack long summer days spent falling out of love.

3. Bad As Me - TOM WAITS
Existing fans will love it, while newbies will find this the ideal place to begin their Tom Waits collection.
4. Ceremonials - FLORENCE + THE MACHINE
The art-pop of Ceremonials exudes impressive confidence from a woman on top of her game, while retaining enough of a dark edge to keep it interesting.
5. Vows - KIMBRA
Vows is a soulful, textured, vibrant triumph of a debut which immediately establishes Kimbra as a unique and genuinely exciting new artist
6. In Your Room - CAMERAS
The most refreshing thing is that, rather than front-loading the big singles, as so many albums do nowadays, it ebbs and flows like a set-list and feels very much like a musical journey.
7. Veronica Falls - VERONICA FALLS
A beguiling, intriguing coming together of dark and light, it is really rather wonderful. Melancholy never seemed so much fun.
8. Milk Annual - CAITLIN PARK
The delightful truth is that the nuanced, beautiful and outstanding Milk Annual is actually a unique sounding record. And you can't say that very often these days.
9. Smoking in Heaven - KITTY, DAISY & LEWIS
If the rubbish that litters commercial radio station playlists had one-hundredth of the honesty, heart and soul that this record does, the music world would be a much more satisfying place.
10. Yuck -YUCK
This album doesn't sound derivative in the slightest, but rather is a fresh and exciting post-grunge offering with a DIY ethic.

Top 10 songs
1. Defeatist - CAMERAS 

  

2. History’s Door - HUSKY
3. Cameo Lover - KIMBRA
4. Who Are You? - TWERPS
5. Walk Like Thunder - KIMYA DAWSON
6. Even Though I’m a Woman - SEEKER LOVER KEEPER  
7. Found Love in a Graveyard - VERONICA FALLS
8. Back in the Crowd - TOM WAITS
9. Endless Summer - THE JEZABELS
10. Covered By Snow - DEAD LETTER CHORUS

Top 10 gigs
1. FLORENCE + THE MACHINE - Seymour Centre, Sydney
So magical was the atmosphere in room during this perfect occasion that to step back into the real world felt painfully mundane. This was a wonderful and unforgettable night.
2. DAVID FORD - The Empire Bar, Belfast
At the midway point, Ford ran down the street in order to play a song at Duke Special and Phil Jupitus’ gig. They passed him on the way and came to read some poems at The Empire Bar.
3. KIMBRA - The Metro, Sydney
Her effervescence was complimented by her band as finger-clicking, red-suited male backing singers boogied in the background. She even managed a mid-set costume change. 
4.SEEKER LOVER KEEPER - St Stephen’s Church, Sydney
A night in a warmly-lit church watching three talented and charming musicians can be aptly summed-up in a single word. Lovely.
5. THE GRATES - The Metro, Sydney
With the combination of infectious pop, post-grunge and a singer that owns the room with her lust for life, tonight once again proved that to see The Grates live is to best understand them.
6. CAMERAS - Changing Lanes Festival, Sydney
While their atmospheric sound is best suited to playing in the dark, they still gave one of the performances - if not the performance - of the day (pictured, left)
7 SIMONE FELICE - The Vanguard, Sydney
His voice was beautiful, ethereal, transfixing and when he bowed at the end of the gig he did so with the awkward charm of a five-year-old having performed in the school nativity play.
8. KIMYA DAWSON & AESOP ROCK - Manning Bar, Sydney
It was a rare joy to see two such different artists sharing a stage and creating an evening of such eclecticism.
9. THE JEZABELS - Homebake Festival, Sydney
Singer Hayley Mary has something of the Kate Bush about her in terms of her vocal and the band's pop songs were powerful and engaging.
10. HOWLING BELLS - The Standard, Sydney
Simply, they sound like a proper band, with clean, strong guitar driven indie songs and an excellent vocalist in Juanita Stein.

Top 10 Films
1. Submarine
2. Bill Cunningham New York
3. Snowtown
4. Midnight in Paris
5. We Need To Talk About Kevin
6. Black Swan
7. Senna
8. Drive
9. Rise of the Planet of the Apes
10. The Guard

Top 5 TV Shows
1. 24 Hours in A&E
2. Match of the Day
3. Boardwalk Empire
4. At The Movies
5. Q & A

Top 5 radio shows/podcasts
1. Kermode and Mayo’s Film Reviews - BBC Radio 5Live
2. Guardian Football Weekly Podcast
3. Arvos - FBi Radio
4. Desert Island Disks - BBC Radio 4
5. The Allnighter - FBi Radio

Favourite interview of the year
There were a few actually. It was a joy to chat to Florence Welch, even though it was at 7am and I hadn’t been to bed from the night before. I also enjoyed doing a face-to-face with Juanita Stein from Howling Bells. Our interview would lead to me drunkenly teaching her how to use the DJ decks at Sydney’s World Bar the next night. Speaking to Britany Nola was very interesting. I always enjoy interviewing models, as they have so much to say and are rarely afforded the opportunity. Her words about human rights and tolerance were inspiring. However, my favourite interview was with Laura Marling. I adore her work - firmly believing her to be the best lyricist of her generation - and I enjoyed catching up with her, as we first spoke over three years ago, when she was a shy 18-year-old. Though she is now a pretty big deal, it was lovely to discover that she remains as unassuming, polite and friendly as she was back then.

Highlight of the year.
Being able to attend the first Brighton & Hove Albion game at The American Express Community Stadium was an incredibly emotional end to a 14-year journey and something I will never forget. However, my actual highlight came at Sydney’s Metro Theatre in September. I was attempting to woo an especially beautiful lady when a young man came up to me and said “Excuse me, I just wanted to say I love your blog.” It is the only time in my life I have appeared cool and his timing was excellent.

2011 in words
Regina Spektor once told me that, "Man plans and God laughs." She could very well have been talking about my 2011. A fucked up fruitcake of a year, starting in the snow of England, ending in the heat of Australia, via Scotland, Northern Ireland and Eastern Europe. An era ending. Stolen moments in Budapest. A head resting on my chest in Sydney. Tourbus hilarity on the motorways of Britain. New friends on both sides of the world. A crack in everything. That's how the light gets in.  

Prediction for 2012
Our new website is going to blow your fucking minds. Watch this space.





Bobby is the Editor of Bobbysix.com. He has written for publications and websites including CNN, Drum Media, Inpress, BBM, Time Off, Rip It Up and The Argus. He has also appeared on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC 7. He splits his time between Australia and England.

Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Husky - Forever So


Melbourne four-piece Husky's debut album was born after excellently-named singer/guitarist Husky Gawenda and his cousin (keyboardist Gideon Priess) pulled together as much old recording gear they could lay their hands on and holed themselves up for the summer in Gawenda's rustic Northcote bungalow. Mixed in LA with Noah Georgeson (Joanna Newsom, The Strokes, Devendra Banhart), Forever So certainly retains the dreamy, organic charm of a record crafted in the hazy country sunshine.

The record sees the Triple J Unearthed winners deliver plaintive pianos and sweeping acoustic guitars aimed at both warming and melting hearts. The jewel in the crown is, of course, the wonderful History's Door. With its rolling drums and harmonies, it is a pretty much faultless composition which manages to be anthemic while never feeling remotely overblown. It's one of those sitting-on-shoulders-at-a-festival kind of songs, which is something for anyone heading to next year's Laneway to look forward to.

Next up, The Woods further shows Husky's ability to deliver folk that is pretty yet rousing and, clocking in at barely over three-minutes, this frantic fairytale manages to be swirling and interesting yet impressively concise. The romantic reminiscence of Hunter is a good example of how there is something Angus Stone-like about Gawenda. His delivery has a soft, tender quality that is so swoonsome it would make even the manliest man feel a little weak at the knees.

With indie-folk songs that are totally accessible and sweet while for the most part avoiding being predictable or twee, there is certainly enough about Forever So to suggest that everything is in place for Husky to really make an impact. Don't be surprised if 2012 is a big year for this likeable quartet.

Review by Bobby Townsend. It first appeared in Sydney's Drum Media.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Gotye adds third and final Perth date.


Whenever we post a story about Wally de Backer - or Gotye to you and me - Bobbysix.com almost goes into meltdown with the traffic we receive. You guys just can't get enough of him, so it seems. Therefore the Western Australians amongst you will be pleased to know that he has announced a third show at the Belvoir Theatre, Perth on Monday 12 December. It will feature his ten-piece orchestra and be the last date announced on his acclaimed, sold-out string of Aussie dates this year. Rising Melbourne outfit Husky will be the support on all three Perth dates.

Having performed at CMJ, Gotye is currently playing sold-out shows across in the UK and Europe. You might have to beg for a ticket, sneak in, buy one off a shifty bloke in a shellsuit top and Reebok Classics or get your ebay on, but, if you can get access to the venues, Gotye will be doing his thing in these places:

Monday October 31 – Communion, London UK (SOLD OUT)
Tuesday November 1 - Kings College, London UK (SOLD OUT)
Friday November 4 – Melkweg, Amsterdam Holland (SOLD OUT)
Saturday November 5 – Franzz Club, Berlin Germany (SOLD OUT)
Sunday November 6 – Gebaude 9, Cologne Germany (SOLD OUT)
Tuesday November 8 - La Maroquinerie, Paris France

Saturday 26th November – Foreshore Festival Canberra (Tickets onsale now)
Saturday, 3rd December – Homebake Festival, The Domain, Sydney
Friday, 9th December – Belvoir Theatre, Perth (SOLD OUT)
Saturday, 10th December – Belvoir Theatre, Perth (SOLD OUT)
Monday, 12th December – Belvoir Theatre, Perth (NEW SHOW ) (Tickets on sale Friday 4th November from Ticketmaster)
Sunday, 18th December - Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens (Tickets onsale now)


Full ticketing information at www.gotye.com

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Kimbra at The Metro, Sydney


KIMBRA 
HUSKY 
FIRE SANTA ROSA FIRE!
The Metro, 16/09/11

After Adelaide's female-fronted Fire Santa Rosa Fire! had created an impressive sound with giant bass meeting snarling guitars and synths, Husky's acoustic songs were dreamy to the point that they weren't quite as attention-grabbing as they needed to be. That is, until their final offering and radio favourite, History's Door, showed just how good a tune these guys can write. With its rumbling drums and lovely melody, it was the first standout song of the evening.

There would be many more standout moments to follow though, as Kimbra arrived on stage in a fantastic ruffled dress and set about bringing the party to The Metro. Starting with album opener, Settle Down, it was instantly clear that her show was going to be a whole lotta fun. Fun in music can be a tricky thing, as often it can come across as contrived and insincere but, as the New Zealander bounced around stage with abandon, it was obvious that she was genuinely having the best time ever. Her effervescence was complimented by her band as finger-clicking, red-suited male backing singers boogied in the background. She even managed a mid-set costume change. Looking feisty in off-the-shoulder red, she sent the female-heavy crowd into a frenzy with more tracks from Vows, most notably the disco-pop of Cameo Lover, which is surely one of the year's best singles.

Of course, Kimbra hasn't caused such a stir simply because she has a good time on stage. She oozes talent too. Her songs are expertly put together and they translated perfectly to the live arena. And then, of course, there's the voice. Holy smoke, what a voice. When this woman opens up her lungs and lets go it is absolutely breathtaking. Like poor old Amy Winehouse, it just doesn't seem possible that such a powerful and extraordinarily soulful sound could come from her thin frame. The constant comparisons to Nina Simone help nobody (how could anyone live up to such expectations?) but there is absolutely no doubt that she is a quite phenomenal vocalist. Judging by this excellent display, Kimbra is going to be a big star. Let's just hope that she can become one while remaining as interesting and diverse as she is at the moment.

Review by Bobby Townsend. It originally appeared in Sydney's Drum Media. Oh, and please excuse the terrible photo. The nasty security man made me ditch my camera before I got a decent shot. Boo.