Saturday 14 September 2013

5-9 September 2013 (Days 248-252) – Sick Again (incorp: The Miseducation of otis.youth Part 3)

I woke up on Thursday morning feeling quite ill.  Whilst part of me would like to have thought that this may have been caused by the thought that Australia was going to, of its own free will, elect a new Government led by, of all people Tony Abbott, I knew that I had merely caught “M”’s malady.

As “M” herself was still ill, we ended up spending the next five days in bed, although we did venture out to get some groceries and vote (fortunately our polling booth is about 100 metres away en route to the supermarket). It also meant that I played no music whatsoever and could not get around to playing more music related DVDs.  We did see a number of DVDs we’d recently bought or had loaned to us including the sensational Iranian film A Separation and Hitchcock’s Rebecca and Notorious so it wasn’t a dead loss.  Plus we watched all four matches in the first week of the AFL Finals which were all magnificent contests.  Port Adelaide’s shock win over the hated Collingwood provided the only warmth during Saturday night’s dismal election night when long held fears turned to a predictable and uncomfortable reality.
And so this is as good a time as any to look at the next stage of my musical development:

The Miseducation of otis.youth Part 3
My years as a student at the University of Melbourne proved to be very productive.  I managed to obtain a degree with honours, training in my future career, a prize, an early introduction to my current employer, more friends, mastery in the art of playing pinball, a record collecting habit and a thirst for music that has never left me.

The early 80’s were a great period for Melbourne in terms of live music.  By the start of the decade, Melbourne’s great range of mostly inner suburban pub and club venues had become established and flourished throughout the decade.  These included small pub venues such as the Tote, The Punters Club and The Club in Fitzroy and Collingwood; larger ones including the Corner Hotel and Central Club Hotel in Richmond, The Seaview Ballroom, The Prince Of Wales Hotel and The Esplanade Hotel in St. Kilda and the neighbouring Middle Park Hotel and larger beer barns in outer suburbs such as Tarmac Hotel in Laverton, Bombay Rock in Preston, The Croxton Park Hotel in Thornbury, The Village Green Hotel in Mulgrave, the Mentone Hotel in Mentone and one in Mordialloc whose name escapes me.  The largest venues short of concert venues would have been The Venue on The Upper Esplanade St. Kilda until its closure whereupon the slack was taken up by The Palace on the Lower Esplanade.  To this was added all three of the Melbourne’s Universities at the time – LaTrobe University, Monash University and the University of Melbourne.  Each of these had student unions that would put on union nights during the year, effectively pub gigs.  Occasionally, they would land a major overseas act although today the only ones I can remember were Gary Glitter (!) and Snakefinger.  The unions would also put on bands during lunchtimes, some good, other not so and many I’ve forgotten. 
It was also at Uni that I met one of my longstanding collaborators in musical archaeology who I shall call BJ. Initially we shared tutorials in a couple of subjects we studied in common, but we bonded over our love of music.  It is another friendship that exists to this very day but these days our ability to influence each other has been greatly diminished owing to his moving a considerable distance away from Melbourne.  (Hence, the lack of references to date in this blog.) Indeed, throughout the 80s and 90s and indeed right up until my relationship with “M” began, BJ was my musical consigliere and the person most likely to have accompanied me to a gig.   

It was at Uni that my collection began to really grow.  BJ was one influence as we swapped tapes of albums from our respective collections.  The campus record shop also was a source although their range of stock wasn’t a great one.  But Uni played an indirect role in my collecting activities. In the latter years of my study, I took to taking the train to Flinders Street Station into town and then walking the 2-3 kms it took down and around Swanston Street to get to the campus. I mean “down and around” as I’d devised a walking route that took me past most of the key record shops in Melbourne at the time, including Missing Link Records (then at the start of the Port Phillip Arcade in Flinders Lane), the Allans record shop in Collins Street, the Brashs store around the corner in Elizabeth Street, the record bar at the Myer flagship store in Bourke Street, the Batman Record Library in Elizabeth Street and Collector’s Corner, a second hand shop that at varying times operated out of at least  three different locations in Swanston Street. (There also was Au Go Go records but, for the life of me, I cannot remember where it was located.)  I didn’t necessarily visit all of these shops on the one walk; I divide them up in my mind and would ensure that I popped into each at least twice a week during my trips to and from the train station.  There were two reasons for doing this.  First a number of these shops were either second hand shops or contained a reasonable amount of second hand stock that was forever changing.  These locations also tendered to specialise in the sort of underground or non commercial music in which I’d been developing an interest.  The chain stores (i.e Allans, Brashs and Myer) essentially stocked only Top 40 stuff and tendered to be quite ruthless in discounting stock when demand for the items ceased.  In this pre internet era, you were never quite sure when a Brashs or Allan’s record sale was going to start. It was imperative to get in on the opening day – indeed the opening hour – as single item discounted stock as well as the biggest bargains tendered to be snapped up then and usually this included the sort of stuff in which I’d developed an interest.  Even better, some of the cheapest items were for really obscure stuff that I could purchase for, say, a dollar and thus explore practically for free.
So what was fuelling my musical explorations?  At decade’s start I’d continued to watch or listen to Nightmoves and Billy Pinnell’s Album Show.  Countdown too but this was more out of habit than anything else.  BJ joined this elite group but his taste was groping in the same direction as mine so all we could do was encourage each other with the discoveries we’d made on our own.  But a couple of other sources came to the party and it was University which played a major role.

Among the things our student union fees paid for was a “leisure library” (The Rowden White Library to give it its proper name).  On the whole, this library holds (it still exists today) material that is largely unconnected to the subjects taught at the Uni though although the quantity of political tracts held there would naturally apply to political science or international relations students.  Indeed, signs throughout the library area proclaimed that it did not exist for the purpose of study.  For the most part, or at least what I remember today, it held material relating to politics, socially aware stuff that uni students are mostly likely to protest about and popular culture.  This translated into newspapers, books, magazines, and records.  I’ve described the music library in a previous listing so won’t repeat it.  But it’s significance lay in that its catalogue eschewed top 40 material in favour largely of underground music (I don’t think the term “alternative” had been invented at this stage), punk, new wave, blues, jazz and classical.  I never bothered with requesting the classical albums for listening as I’ve never had an affinity for it, but for the most part, I was willing to the play the role of a musical explorer, prepared to go in and give just about anything else a listen.  It was here that I first seriously listened to jazz, succumbing to Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk and the strange world that was Sun Ra.  (Most of my other jazz discoveries at the time came from studying the music credits to Woody Allen films.)  I also started to distinguish between the blues, essentially understanding the difference between the electrified Chicago blues (and developing a love of Muddy Waters) and the acoustic delta blues of the deep South. 
But what I really obtained there was the detailed knowledge of the key rock texts from the era, more or less as they were released or only a few years old.  This meant, in no particular order, the New York and Cleveland punk scenes of the late 70s - it was here that I heard the bulk of Patti Smith’s early albums for the first time, the first two Talking Heads albums and Remain In Light, anything by The Ramones, Television, Per Ubu, etc;  the British punk scene from the same time and the post punks that followed – The Clash, The Sex Pistols, Wire, Buzzcocks, Magazine,  Siousixee And The Banshees, XTC, The Slits, Joy Division, The Au Pairs, early Simple Minds, as well as the more interesting mainstream rock acts that started to emerge such as The Pretenders and Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers.  Once I heard something I really liked, and the opportunity presented itself, I would ask to hear these albums unless, of course, something else was playing that took my interest.

I always took reading matter into the listening room for these sessions and it was from this that I supplemented my growing knowledge.  If I could get my hands on them I would read the latest copies of NME or The Face to arrive in Australia or Rolling Stone from the United States.  (I don’t think the library had a subscription to Creem.)  I didn’t get much out of The Face given that I’ve never thought that there is or should be a conscious connection between music, style and fashion, but NME and American Rolling Stone were almost like bibles.   Indeed the library had bound annual volume of Rolling Stone going all the way back to the first edition as well as the then current copy of The Rolling Stone Record Guide and I would note what they thought was good, see if the library held items, and then sample them.  It was via this method that my love of iconic American artists such as The Velvet Underground, Modern Lovers/Jonathon Richman, Big Star/Alex Chilton, Randy Newman, Ry Cooder, Dr. John and many others originated.
This reading habit has never really left me since although I moved on from the NME after I left Uni and Rolling Stone once they started an Australian edition.  For the most part, I’ve always preferred the US edition, especially for the investigative and feature articles that were invariably dropped from the Australian Edition.  Eventually, I lost interest in the US edition, especially when they started writing reviews of new albums without actually mentioning important information such as track names and whether it was any view. 

But I digress.  Supplementing these new sources were two radio developments.  The first was the introduction of commercial FM radio into Australia when EON-FM commenced operation in Melbourne in the middle of 1980.  This station no longer exists, having changed identity into the conservative commercial rock station MMM, but EON-FM in its early years was an absolute revelation.  It paid no attention to the basic rules of commercial radio; Top 40 tracks were barely played and there were no limitations as to the length of songs played.  More often than not, if a major act released a new album that the station liked, it would be the key album tracks that were played in preference to the single (for example, Comfortably Numb instead of Another Brick In The World Part 2).  The only times I’ve ever heard, the full live version of Lynyrd Skynrd’s Freebird on commercial radio, for example, was on EON. The same applies to iconic epic tracks such as Kashmir, Down By The River and Cowgirl In The Sand among many others. It also championed new Australian acts such as Mark Gillespie who couldn’t get airplay even on the public access FM stations.   But none of this surprised me.  In fact I expected it given that Billy Pinnell was its first program manager and Lee Simon, the host of Nightmoves, was one of their DJ’s.   Sadly, and dare I say it inevitably, this programming approach wasn’t commercially successful forcing their eventual mutation into MMM. 
And it was also whilst I was a student at Uni that I became aware of community access radio and Melbourne rock radio’s true beating heart, 3RRR.  It started broadcasting in 1976 as an educational station out of RMIT (the Royal Melbourne Institute Of Technology, located just a few blocks shy of the University of Melbourne) but gradually the students gained control over the station and its playlist.  The link with RMIT was severed and the station continues largely on the basis of subscribers; today it claims to have the largest per capita listener supporter broadcaster in the world.  It’s hold over the Melbourne audience was such that it took a long time before the Government run “youth” station JJJ debuted here and even today its influence effectively neutralises any major impact the Sydney based JJJ manages over the tastes of this city.

This is because 3RRR became, and remains today, Melbourne’s greatest supporter of music on the fringes be that underground/alternative, metal, Americana, etc and young Australian talent.  In fact, if any of the music it actively promoted started to gain popularity and garner airplay on commercial radio, it would be swiftly dropped from the playlist so that other acts could get a go.  A number of their DJs proved to be influential in guiding me towards this new music, none more so than Bohdan X who had the plumb Friday evening gig.  Probably the closest anyone in Australia came in expressing extreme opinions on new music along the lines of British journalists Tony Parsons and Julie Burchill (Bohdan himself is also British), he like the station played the best of the new material released each week until well into the 1990s.  To listen to his show was to become informed about what was bubbling under the surface. It was largely through 3RRR that I starting discovering the Australian independent scene and the connections between early punk bands such as The Saints, Radio Birdman and The Celibate Rifles with the great Detroit bands such as The Stooges and The MC5.
And it was largely through 3RRR that the penny finally dropped with me regarding the music industry and its workings.  Prior to starting at Uni, I’d had unconsciously linked Top 40 music, radio airplay and television exposure.  It was a chicken and egg reasoning; only the best quality music got played on the radio and TV and the music charted because people heard the songs on the radio and saw them performed on TV which reinforced its status as the best music available.  I’d already experienced the mystery of why I didn’t hear something as inspirational as The Saints (I’m) Stranded on the radio.  I was to go through another similar experience in 1979 when I heard Midnight Oil’s Back On The Borderline and Cold Cold Change and couldn’t figure out why these hadn’t charted, Peter Garrett’s voice notwithstanding.  But it was the sheer volume of stuff I heard on 3RRR and at Uni that never charted and was never mentioned on Countdown that made me realise that the best stuff wasn’t necessarily that which was being promoted on radio, TV and in record stores such as Brashs.

By the time I left Uni, I finally understood what was meant by hype and realised that the “best music” was effectively a matter of individual taste and to rely on commercial entities such as commercial radio, TV, media and record companies for guidance was not the way to go.  I had to learn how to judge music on its merits and according to my developing tastes.  The next few decades were to see me expanding my knowledge and finding what I liked in the face of a record/media industry that was attempting not only to divert my interest and money into "music" they didn’t necessarily like or understand  but thought I'd like or understand whilst simultaneously trying to change how I was going to consume it.

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