Tumgik
#freo groove
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Freo Groove - Musicians of Fremantle
Kevin Parker is pounding along the coast, between the sea and the great shattered ruin of the old South Freo Power Station, his mind buzzing with musical possibilities. He's always said you can make great music from anywhere - that place isn't a big deal. But the front man of successful psychedelic band Tame Impala recognises that Fremantle has shaped his musical journey: from his first exploratory jams with future band-mates to the modest weatherboard in South Fremantle that he's converted into a recording studio. 
`I used to say that I could be anywhere in the world, and I still like to believe that, because I don't believe that the quality or the style of the music that someone makes is dependent on where they are. However, there are many things that seep into your music and one of them is where you live. 
`Making the last album, Currents, I was stuck, sitting in the studio and my four walls. I got to a spot where I just wasn't feeling it and the music wasn't very evocative. I got my iPhone and headphones and walked along the beach down to the power station in Coogee. I couldn't believe how much the music opened up and spoke to me, made me feel all kinds of things again. 'A lot of the songs on Currents have passages that were directly inspired by the power house and doing laps of it. It is scary and confronting, but such a beautiful thing. I had one of the songs I was working on at the time on repeat and I wrote a lot of the lyrics down on South Beach. I suddenly remembered the value of being somewhere serene and beautiful and getting inspired in that way. I don't like to think of it as a necessity because music can be written for the purposes of escape. But so much of Currents was mentally conceived between here and the power station all along the coast.'
Gravity
He grew up in Perth, got drum lessons while in high school, and played rhythm guitar with his father, Jerry, playing lead. He went on to play music with Dom Simper, whom he met in high school. The two formed The Dee Dee Dums, the precursor to Tame Impala. Somewhere around the age of twelve, he began fooling around with cassette recorders; bouncing tracks and layering sounds, building a creative methodology that still endures, although the technology is worlds apart. His Fremantle musical story began when he was about twenty and he met the guys from the band Mink Mussel Creek. 
`I was in a different band at the time, but I started hanging out and jamming with them. I was living in Subiaco then. I would leave Subiaco on Friday evening and go back on Sunday night. It was like a time warp, like another world. We would have a lot of fun and get up to mischief and make music. I thought it was amazing because it was like being in a parallel universe. It was just this black hole of the weekend when I'd be around Freo. 'It was just such an intoxicating environment, the absolute tunnel vision of the music. It was the centre of how we lived our lives. Everything was based around that. Going out for them was going out and playing a show, and we would start drinking and getting stoned in the afternoon. At some point in the night the show would happen. The show was just part of the evening. That was kind of what our lives revolved around and I just felt such a sense of belonging. A newfound identity.' 
It was an intense period of short-lived bands thrown together as fluid musical experiments, with several bands running at once comprising different line-ups of the same core set of musicians. Often, he'd play two gigs a night - one with his old band, The Dee Dee Dums, and then just stay on stage for Mink Mussel Creek. There were gigs at The Swan Basement, The Railway Hotel, Mojos, and the Newport, but the Norfolk Basement - and its bar manager -provided the opportunity for Kevin to take his work to a new level.
'The Norfolk became our second home, because we met Jodie [Regan] and she fell in love with Mink Mussel Creek. She was the bar manager downstairs, and we just thought she was great. She was enchanted by us young, scruffy stoners, who were obsessed with music and didn't have any kind of ego about it. She was like, "Hey, I'll manage you" and we thought, Hey, we've got a manager! We'd go down there during the day and rehearse. The bar wouldn't open until later and I ended up doing a lot of recording down there. They had microphones and mic stands. So I could just go down there for as long as I wanted, which was a dream because up to then I had nowhere to record drums. `The first gig we ever played under the name Tame Impala was at Mojos. It was like a new and exciting time for me because it was just another step of me consolidating what I wanted musically. `There weren't a lot of people, but that didn't matter. Until I first started hanging out with those guys - hanging out in Fremantle - would care a lot more about the audience: how many and how much they were into it. After, it was, well, "they are there or they are not". Our attitude was, we are doing what we are doing because we love doing it. We're not out for approval or validation.' 
A Fremantle share house provided a base for a while. Then as Tame Impala enjoyed wider success, Kevin was based in Paris before moving back to South Fremantle. 
'I think it was a no-brainer. I had a lot of friends here. I bought a house and lived there for a while and then tore all the walls down and turned the entire thing into a studio and then I bought another house and moved there.'
Complexity
Kevin Parker's approach to making his own music is intense and solitary, although he has had long-standing working relationships with different local musicians. He composes in isolation and works with others to create the live performance. 
'Tame Impala on the albums is just one person. It is just me multi-tracking; so basically, me recording wherever I am. 'Because I make music alone and it has got so many different parts to it, there is never a verbal conversation about it. When a band plays music, they are constantly having to talk about it to communicate it. So just from that process, just talking about it out loud, you work out what you like and you don't like. When that entire conversation stays in your head, it is just a thinking process, and you never really work out what you like and don't like and what strategies you like. It just happens. I don't have a framework. I have been doing it for that long it is something that kind of comes naturally. 'I potter in the studio even when I have other things to do. I might record a song or I just go around going, "hullo, what is this?" Unplug this...plug this in. Find a better way to record - kind of like a mad scientist. A cross between a mad scientist and an old lady in the garden pottering around. Somehow songs come out of that. `I make things more complex than they need to be. I would love my music to be simpler. I call my music "kitchen sink music". I just throw everything at it. I will think of a keyboard line - put it in. Think of a guitar line - put it in. Two different vocal melodies - put them in. As I get older I am trying to develop a musical discipline.' 
Following the phenomenal commercial success of Tame Impala, Kevin's instincts and production skills, honed over countless hours and through endless musical experiments, are in high demand. As well as working with local bands, including Koi Child and Pond, he's been approached to produce a number of American artists in Los Angeles. 
‘I like that I have two lives as a producer. One is doing my friends' stuff in Freo, the other is iconic artists that I've always dreamed of working with. I am suddenly in the same room. It's kind of two extremes.' 
As for another Tame Impala album, Kevin will only say that there's some paint on the canvas, but he doesn't know what the final result will be. 
‘The change in styles is one of the only things you can bet on. I don't think I would bother doing the same thing again. That is one of the only rules I put on myself. It has to be different and has to have evolved in some way.'
- Freo Groove - Musicians of Fremantle by Bill Lawrie & Claire Moodie. 
Photo by Jeff Atkinson. 
Published by UWA Publishing.
35 notes · View notes
leanpick · 3 years
Text
Freo ponder how to help struggling Walters
Freo ponder how to help struggling Walters
Fremantle coach Justin Longmuir is determined to find a way to get Michael Walters back into the groove but switching the veteran into his preferred midfielder role is proving to be an almighty squeeze. Walters was an All-Australian in 2019 during a year in which he alternated between the midfield and forward line. That sparkling campaign yielded him 40 goals and an average of 21.8 possessions…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
footyplusau · 8 years
Text
Fremantle Dockers in the mix for finals return in 2017, says Matthew Pavlich
Retired Fremantle champion Matthew Pavlich has backed his former club to rebound strongly after last year’s disastrous season in which the Dockers crashed to lose their first 10 games.
After claiming the minor premiership two years ago, the Dockers plummeted with a bullet in 2016, winning just four matches on their way to holding up 16th spot in the ladder. They’ve also had some off-season dramas – Shane Yarran leaving the club after getting caught up in two separate assault charges, Michael Johnson’s involvement in late night incident in a kebab shop and Harley Bennell’s calf injury curse.
Play Video Don’t Play
Swans outlast neighbours in the wet
Play Video Don’t Play
Previous slide Next slide
AFLW plays of round 5
AFLW plays of round 5
GWS open their account, Vescio takes a screamer, Alicia Eva shows Freo a clean pair of heals and Brisbane and Adelaide are the AFLW’s best teams.
Swans outlast neighbours in the wet
Play Video Don’t Play
Swans outlast neighbours in the wet
Swans outlast neighbours in the wet
Sydney slogged their way to a 12-point JLT Series pre-season victory over GWS in torrential rain at Blacktown.
AFLW plays of the round
Play Video Don’t Play
AFLW plays of the round
AFLW plays of the round
Kaitlyn Ashmore kicks a goal of the year contender, the Pies get their first win and Tayla Harris takes down two in a huge collision.
Suns sneak past Bombers, Kangaroos down Hawks
Play Video Don’t Play
Suns sneak past Bombers, Kangaroos down …
Suns sneak past Bombers, Kangaroos down Hawks
The Gold Coast fight back from 24-nil down to defeat Essendon in Mackay by three points, while a strong effort from North Melbourne saw them beat Hawthorn by 11.
Melbourne and West Coast enjoy big wins
Play Video Don’t Play
Melbourne and West Coast enjoy big wins
Melbourne and West Coast enjoy big wins
Melbourne and West Coast have enjoyed 50+ point wins over Carlton and Fremantle respectively in the pre-season competition.
Richmond take pre-season victory over Crows
Play Video Don’t Play
Richmond take pre-season victory over …
Richmond take pre-season victory over Crows
The Tigers have made a winning start to their year with victory over the Adelaide Crows in the pre-season competition 92-73.
Sam Mitchell’s first game for West Coast
Play Video Don’t Play
Sam Mitchell’s first game for West Coast
Sam Mitchell’s first game for West Coast
The derby in Geraldton has sold out! It will be the first time people can see Sam Mitchell play in the blue and gold. Vision: Today Perth News.
AFLW plays of round 5
GWS open their account, Vescio takes a screamer, Alicia Eva shows Freo a clean pair of heals and Brisbane and Adelaide are the AFLW’s best teams.
“I think Fremantle will have a good year. I think they’re building their form over the pre-season phase,” said Pavlich, a six-time All-Australian.
“Clearly against West Coast (in the JLT series) they were off, but they were pretty strong against Collingwood on the weekend, winning a lot of the key performance indicators.
Retired Docker Matthew Pavlich. Photo: AFL Media/Getty Images
“They fit in the realm of teams that could finish in the eight, and be around that mark.”
Pavlich is taking a glass-half-full approach to their off-season concerns.
“My sense, from what I’ve heard, is that it’s actually brought the guys pretty close together. It’s galvanised them. They’ve had a really strong pre-season. They’ve got a relatively small injury list. And they are primed for a much better season than last year,” he said.
Pavlich moves into a new role as an objective media commentator but, as a recently-retired player, he is acutely aware of his close links to his former club.
“It’s like long-term girlfriends, me and the football club at the moment – we need some time apart,” Pavlich joked.
The big plus for the Dockers is the return of 2015 Brownlow medallist Nat Fyfe, returning to the field with the added title of captain.
Pavlich has already had discussions with Fyfe about what he can expect.
“It’s really exciting for him. Disappointed for David (Mundy) but the vote was really close by all reports. Nathan will prosper from having both Aaron Sandilands (and) David Mundy in the leadership group,” Pavlich said.
“I’m really excited for him. Like all young captains it will take a bit of time for him to find his groove, and he’ll learn pretty rapidly. I’m excited for him and the team.
“We’ve had a few conversations. He knows the phone’s on if he ever wants to have a chat.”
The post Fremantle Dockers in the mix for finals return in 2017, says Matthew Pavlich appeared first on Footy Plus.
from Footy Plus http://ift.tt/2n4fQKL via http://footyplus.net
0 notes