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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!ariel.ucs.unimelb.EDU.AU!ucsvc.ucs.unimelb.edu.au!brt.deakin.edu.au!dougcc
- Newsgroups: aus.music
- Subject: Re: The Big Day Out in Melbourne
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.232422.8281@brt.deakin.edu.au>
- From: dougcc@brt.deakin.edu.au (Douglas Miller)
- Date: 26 Jan 93 23:24:22 EST
- Organization: C&CS, Deakin University
- Lines: 75
-
- As a venue, the Showgrounds were pretty drab and uninspiring. The giant
- inflatable gorillas and dinasaurs didn't really succeed in transforming it.
- The layout of the arenas, grandstands, and stalls was too convoluted.
- There were too many bottlenecks for the large numbers of people constantly
- moving from one part to another.
-
- The alcohol/dry segregation was pretty much a farce. There were was only
- *one* place were you could get armbands to prove you were overage, and it
- was completely swamped for the first half of the day, with no queuing
- organised. The segregation was both under-enforced (plenty of beer was
- being drunk in "dry" areas) and over-enforced. Being 33 years old, I was
- rather hoping I wouldn't have to spend an inordinate amount of time getting
- an armband to prove that I was older than 18. No such luck at at the first
- place I tried; the security man was quite sure I needed your actual
- coloured armband to prove my adultness. Later I went in via a differnet
- entrance with no problems.
-
- Having got those whinges off my chest, I have to say that the organisation
- was adequate where it counted. The sound was fairly good overall, and acts
- kept pretty close to the (necessarily) tight timetable.
-
- Carter USM were better than I thought they would be --- they put a lot into
- their singing and guitar playing, so it didn't seem to matter that the rest
- of the music was pre-recorded/sequenced. Jimbob's "I want to introduce the
- band" segment was great too.
-
- I hadn't seen the Meanies perform before, and was impressed. A lot of fun
- to watch, and some good songs.
-
- I didn't like Helmet. I don't know whether it was the songs or the
- performance, but they seemed like a band "afraid to rock". All I heard was
- furious riffing that never quite managed to connect.
-
- This is Serious Mum made some serious headgear for the occassion: helium
- filled constructions approx 1mx3m. Being now 5m tall, TISM nearly didn't
- fit on the (second biggest) stage --- they should have probably demanded a
- slot on the main stage! Their set overlapped with Sonic Youth, so
- naturally Ron Hitler-Barassi exhorted us to "Go and see Sonic Youth! Go
- now! Over there on stage 1. Go to Sonic Youth! They're from New York.
- We're only from Glen Waverley". Good point, I thought.
-
- Sonic Youth did mostly Goo and Dirty material. It was a great performance;
- they were definitely playing on the edge, taking risks with the songs.
- Inevitably, they fall flat some of the time, but this doesn't matter when
- they manage to pull off electrifying performances (like they did with Kool
- Thing and Disappearer).
-
- Mudhoney played a rescheduled set after problems with mislaid equipment
- cases. They seemed pissed off and played a short set noticably short on
- crowd-pleasers.
-
- Now I know why Iggy Pop calls it the "Raw Power Tour '93". "Recent
- material?" I don't think so. The songs I can remember were: "Loose", "I
- Wanna be Your Dog", "TV Eye", "Search and Destroy", "Raw Power", "No Fun",
- "Real Wild Child", "The Passenger". Even the two newies sounded like
- Stooges songs. He sounded great, he's still got a torso like a twenty year
- old athlete, and he bled for us. What more could you ask?
-
- Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy put on a dynamic show: dancing, rapping,
- metal-grinding, live drums with bass/jazz guitar. And good lyrics, well
- presented. Oh, and Michael Franti (sp?) admitted that he does watch
- televison sometimes.
-
- Not Drowning, Waving seemed below par. They also did about five new songs
- that didn't impress on a first listen. However I was intrigued by Helen
- Mountford's new toy --- an electric Cello. "Is Nick on yet?" asked David
- Bridie. "He's from Caulfield; half this band are from Frankston." I
- suppose I should have a look then, I thought, and left the 50 people at NDW
- to join the 10000 people watching the last few songs of Nick from
- Caulfield. Good performances of "Tupelo" and "The Weeping Song", a couple
- of others, and it was all over bar the encore singalong of "Black Betty"
- fading in the distance as I started the long walk to the Showgrounds exit.
- I resisted the temptation to hang around for the Painters and Dockers
- wind-down spot.
-
-