TOUR NEWS: Bluejuice, Deep Sea Arcade

Bluejuice will be returning to town later this year, as part of a massive national tour of university campuses.

The boys with a penchant for neon will be playing Wollongong Uni on August 11, as part of a big tour to lauch new single ‘Recession.’ They will be joined by Deep Sea Arcade and The Preachers on the 14-date tour through August, with the UOW date at the Unibar coming early on in the piece.

Bluejuice were last in town on their own ‘Company’ album launch tour in April, playing Waves Nightclub with Loon Lake and The Cairos; check out our photo gallery and review from the gig.

Check out the new remix of Bluejuice’s new single, ‘Recession,’ here.

Bluejuice, ‘Recession’ remix tour
w/ Deep Sea Arcade, The Preachers
UOW Unibar, August 11 

GALLERY: S Club, Big Brovaz @ UOW End Of Session Party

Photography by Sara Outeiro

REVIEW: UOW Band Comp, Heat 3

Words by Sally McMullen

Despite the intriguing line-up of 21st Century Happiness, Thomas Covenant, Shit Sandwich, The Maze and At The Gallows, the night began a little slow; only a small number were on hand as 21st Century Happiness took the stage. The metal and industrial trio began with a powerful, melodic riff that lasted for minutes before crescendoing into a heavy breakdown. Musically, the band were extremely tight, guitarist Danny King and bassist Chris Harbin had great on-stage chemistry, and the percussion of Carlos formed the backbone of the tracks. The rare vocal appearances in the instrumental tracks were shared between Danny and Chris. Although individually they were often drowned out by the overpowering instruments or sometimes even the chatter of the crowd, their powerful tracks grabbed the attention of an small crowd.

Once Thomas Covenant appeared onstage, it was clear that they could not have been a further contrast from their predecessors. With a pop-punk melodic intro, crashing into a fast paced adrenaline fuelled riff, the crowd was immediately drawn to the vibrancy and enthusiasm of the four. Declan, lead singer and guitarist, owned the stage; as he gyrated his hips towards the microphone, eyes rolling back into his skull, one could not help think of him as a fair haired version of The Vines’ Craig Nicholls. Taking influence from 60s pop and punk, the band had a great onstage presence, bouncing off each other’s energy and filling the UniBar with raucous noise that left the crowd mesmerised.

Following on were the much anticipated Shit Sandwich, one of the night’s highlights with their comedy style performance bringing in a large percentage of the crowd. Unsurprisingly, the majority of the songs were indeed about ‘number twos,’ some of the most memorable being ‘How to be shit’ and ‘Girls shit too.’ With a comedic wit similar to Tenacious D, Shit Sandwich had the crowd guffawing throughout the entire set, helping lighten the atmosphere and draw a good reaction from a previously passive crowd. Drawing on rockabilly and surf rock sounds, with an equal balance of humour and talent, Shit Sandwich were a welcome surprise that added some needed comedic relief to the band comp.

Next up were The Maze. The set began with a synth track, before settling into the energetic pop-rock style traditionally associated with the group. Zachary Gervaise’s voice made leaps and bounds that had every pair of eyes and ears in the house drawn to the stage from beginning to end. Despite some minor technical glitches, the band performed extremely well and lived up to their local reputation. Throwing in a cover of ‘Baby One More Time’, an instant crowd pleaser, the audience were singing and dancing along.

Last but not least were metalcore band, At The Gallows. Despite a restless crowd, At The Gallows’ hardcore sound was a refreshing twist after hours of mainly indie-rock and pop. Taking obvious inspiration from bands such as Parkway Drive and Bring Me The Horizon, with heavy guitar riffs and classic hardcore breakdowns, At The Gallows performed with passion and intensity. Lead singer Brad did not stop moving, leaping and rolling across the stage from start to finish, even jumping off the stage onto the dancefloor in an attempt to spark up the crowd. Considering the band consists of only 16 and 17 year olds, and were missing a vocalist tonight, they have a great dynamic for such a young group and put in an impressive performance.

It was Thomas Covenant whose feisty performance came out on top, with Shit Sandwich as runner up. Both bands will continue onto the next round to compete against the other finalists for the National Band Comp prize. With the fourth and final heat just around the corner, we can expect another impressive night from Tommy M and the Mastersounds, Beaten Bodies, Emris, We Are Them and Sherekhan next Tuesday night!

GALLERY: Yacht Club DJs, Hunting Grounds, Moonbase Commander @ Unibar

Photography by Jack Cowling (JAK Photography)

REVIEW: Yacht Club DJs, Hunting Grounds, Moonbase Commander @ Unibar

Words by Regan Kerr

The Los Angeles Raiders were an NFL team that existed from 1982-1994, after the Oakland Raiders were moved from Oakland to Los Angeles. How Guy from Yacht Club DJs managed to find one of their caps will remain a mystery to me forever; it’s OK though, it’ll sit right alongside the other mystery of where he managed to find his Michael Jackson t-shirt…with Michael Jackson still looking pretty black. One thing I did know for sure though was that two of the hippest party starters in Australia tonight brought their A-game to Wollongong

It was a rainy Thursday night as I arrived at the UniBar with my party accomplices. Super keen for a night of filthy mash ups from Yacht Club, we arrived to find a very empty venue. Moonbase Commander had just come on stage, spinning his chilled beats to a crowd of only about 50 people, all seated.

“Where the hell is everyone?”, “Did we get the right night?”, “Should we just change into singlets and snapbacks and head to 151?” were the questions on all our minds, but after consulting the tour poster to confirm we had indeed got the right night, we headed on in. Inside only confirmed our suspicions that there simply wasn’t very many people here, surprising considering the sold out nature of many venues on the They Mostly Come At Night tour. Back in 2009,  support act Hunting Grounds (formerly known as Howl) won Unearthed High, and have since gone on to receive regular airplay on JJJ, so it was just a little bit disappointing that only about 120 people turned out the whole night to see two hardworking Aussie acts.

Moonbase Commander’s set finished with little recognition from the crowd, and the nights disappointment was further compounded by this reviewer missing happy hour by five minutes.  Hunting Grounds came onstage, their six members lined up onstage and kicked the evening up a notch or two; raucous garage punk filled the UniBar, backed by their signature thumping beats and the perfect amount of synth. The lack of attendance wasn’t lost on the Ballarat rockers, prompting their ironic declartion to the standing crowd of three that “There is a whole lot of fucking rock and roll here tonight!” but no one felt offended; rather it was as if the crowd shared the frustration that more people weren’t here to witness an energetic and entertaining set from the band. Instruments were swapped, three members shared a drum kit and a raucous cover of the Beastie Boys “Sabotage” ended an hour-long set. “White guys are just so good at rapping,” quipped vocalist Lachlan Morrish, “The Beastie Boys, and uhh… 360?”. The boys then ripped into a cracking rendition of new single “In Colour”, featuring spilled beer, crowd vocals and a special dedication to the drunk guy in front of the stage who threw his wonderfully uncoordinated forearms around all set.

Yacht Club came onstage just shy of 10:30 to an empty dancefloor, which was surely a rarity for them. “This will be a lot better if you get up and dance. This isn’t a set you sit down and watch,” the duo instructed before opening with the hook from Dr Dre’s “The Next Episode”. What happened next was one of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen at a gig: everyone, literally everyone, stood up, walked down the front and danced. By the time they actually started playing their new mixtape, there was not a single person anywhere but the dancefloor. No one outside, no one sitting down, no one at the bar. Perhaps there wasn’t the volume of people anyone expected, but everyone had came to party.

For the next hour, Gaz and Guy spun, scratched and messed with their own mixtape, while dropping in party favourites to the delight of the crowd. Hunting Grounds were in amongst it, getting loose in the crowd and throwing down some rad dance moves, which always adds to the vibe of a gig. Comparisons to Girl Talk are probably unavoidable, and whilst lacking in the polished production and seamless transitions of Girl Talk, Yacht Club are just straight up fun. Not limiting themselves to chart pop music, the sheer depth of knowledge of music is evident as the boys dropped in songs from across genres spanning at least thirty years, as well as theme songs and advertising jingles. Ludacris’ ‘Move Bitch’ layered over the top of the Seachange title music? Yeah, it works (Fatboy Slim’s ‘Praise You’ mashed with ‘Sunshine of Your Love’ is still growing on me though). Full credit has to go to the boys for keeping it so entertaining all night, considering how depressing it must have been to come to a near empty UniBar after selling out many of their other national venues. Seriously, even Hobart sold out- once again, questions need to be asked of venues and promoters- but that’s another dead horse to be flogged another day. For now though, it was just a shame to know a lot of people missed top notch sets by two of Ballarat’s finest exports.

UOW band comp heats announced

The heats for the annual University of Wollongong band competition have been announced, with a swag of the region’s most promising young bands set to take part in four heats starting tonight.

The heats will run every Tuesday night from tonight (April 24) to May 15, with the repechage and final set for August. 2011 runners-up Tommy M & The Mastersounds are in the mix again this year, alongside My Little Underground, Emris, Beaten Bodies and more. See below for the full lineups and information.

Each heat begins at 7pm, and entry is free. Bands will be competing for prizes from Main Street Studios, Laww Media and Haworth’s Music.

HEAT 1 – April 24
Sylvain – Shady Nook – Paul and Dave – The Omissions

HEAT 2 – May 1
My Little Underground – Fiend – Go Away Everyone – Jack Dawson – Form One Planet

HEAT 3 – May 8
21st Century Happiness – Thomas Covenant – Shit Sandwich – MANorex6 – ShereKhan

HEAT 4 – May 15
Tommy M and the Mastersounds – Beaten Bodies – Emris – The Maze – We Are Them

TOUR NEWS: Husky

Recent signees to iconic label Sub Pop, Aussie folk act Husky have added a Wollongong date to their upcoming ‘The Woods’ tour in May.

The tour, to celebrate new single ‘The Woods’ (see the new video below), will see the band stop into Wollongong Unibar on May 2. They will be joined by locals Yardvark and Jack R Reilly.

Tickets are on sale now through the usual outlets, starting at $12. See the Facebook event for more info.

GALLERY: Tumbleweed, Sydney Girls Choir, Kaleidoscope @ Unibar

Photography by,

Jack Cowling, 30/03/2012

GALLERY: Ball Park Music, Nantes, Cub Scouts @ Unibar

Photography by Jack Cowling, 29/03/2012

(click here to see our review of the show)

REVIEW: Ball Park Music, Nantes, Cub Scouts @ Unibar

If you haven’t heard of Ball Park Music or seen how they have taken Australia by storm in the last 12 months, it’s probably time to crawl out from under that rock you’ve been hiding under.  After enchanting Wollongong last year while supporting Boy and Bear, the Brisbane band brought their 180° degree to Wollongong Unibar on Thursday night, and proved exactly why they have been selling out venues all across Australia.

Up first were Cub Scouts, who captivated the audience with their charming, melodic indie-pop. Clean vocals, catchy tunes and the interesting but highly effective choice of having two keyboardists, this is definitely a band to watch out for.

Next to grace the stage was Sydney four-piece Nantes. After the sweet tunes of Cub Scouts, Nantes’ grunge-tinged rock sounded almost odd to the ears, but as the band warmed up, their sound became more appealing. Vocally they may not be the most amazing band, but the addition of backing chants and tight, unique instrumentals were enough to draw a bigger crowd. As the set progressed and the familiar opening drumbeats of ‘Fly’ echoed throughout Unibar, I was a converted fan.

The band of the moment, Ball Park Music, opened their set with a bang on ‘Literally Baby’ and the momentum and excitement was on an all time high from there. Lead singer Sam Cromack is ridiculously charismatic and one of the better front-mans I have seen this year, getting the crowd as involved as possible. The harmonies with bassist Jennifer Boyce were pitch perfect as they launched into more songs. A huge kudos to Miss Boyce too, who bravely shaved off her lustrous locks to raise money for the Leukemia Foundation.

Ball Park Music are known for their infectious and catchy tunes, with epic choruses and great and hilarious lyrics (seriously what other band can get a crowd of young adults singing the line ‘I haven’t had a friend in years, I only have sex with myself!’ so enthusiastically?) The band also look like they are just having the time of their life on stage, with this vibe being reflected on the crowd, with loud cheers and the sporadic attempt at crowd-surfing thrown in. The band also previewed two new songs for happy fans, with ‘Pot of Gold’ starting slow and building up to the explosive type choruses Ball Park are so good at delivering to us.

Personally, a highlight was hearing ‘Happy Healthy Citizen of the Developed World Blues’ live – simply, it was just an amazing experience and the build up to the song was incredible. Hit songs ‘It’s Nice To Be Alive,’ ‘All I want Is You,’ and ‘iFly’ went off as expected, and before we knew it, the night was unfortunately drawing to a close. Coming back for an encore performance of The Kinks’ ‘All Day and All Of The Night’ Ball Park Music enthralled the audience for one last time, before leaving to thunderous cheers and applause. All in all, the quality of live music on display really did prove it’s nice to be alive.

(click here to see our photo gallery from the show)