Showing posts with label Glen Colley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glen Colley. Show all posts

Saturday, June 27, 2020

Peter G Gleeson: Author at OriginalRock.net

Early in June I got chatting to a writer for OriginalRock.net and, after I found my own back-catalogue from the late 90s/early 00s, I wrote to Original Rock myself to see if he would be able to use my work.

He sent me a couple of records, I wrote them up, and now I can claim to be an author on that site!

My first review was posted yesterday for the fantastic new album by Remo Drive and I'm just listening on BandCamp to the back-catalogue for the second review, Ten Foot Wizard's forthcoming album "Get Out Of Your Mind".

Back in the 1990s I was writing about music I was sent and gigs I was either invited to or just turned up at, and the only outlet was my Geocities platform. When whomever discontinued that platform pulled that plug I was willing to let that all go by the by as a closed chapter of my life.

Well Amanda Easton, All But Gentlemen, and Glen Colley's various projects all helped me to keep my eye and ear in during the ensuing period, but the guys at Original Rock obviously saw something in both my old stuff and my new stuff and, well, you can see the results for yourself.

I'll maintain my presence here, of course. My next project is already in the making. But my main outlet, under my actual name, will be over at Original Rock! Stay tuned for more Variosities!
PG (Jacky) Gleeson
27/06/2020


Sunday, June 7, 2020

Look what I found at http://www.geocities.ws/p_terg/ (Post 2.0)

While chatting online with a fellow reviewer, I decided to see if my stuff from the 1990s was still online.

When it was announced that Geocities would stop hosting free websites I was willing to let it all go.

But since then, many people, including oocities, reocities, and geocities-ws have mirrored content that was (and I'm paraphrasing here) culturally significant!

Which is lucky for me because I have had a look back and there's a helluva lot of material there!

Here are the categories (some of the links in the page are no longer viable):
  • Alternative - music that, before 1991, would only have been played on college, community, or pirate radio. 
  • Pop & other - Jazz (be it traditional or new-styled), Nouveau-pop, World music, ‘Pop’ of the traditional ‘three-minute’ variety, as well as anything that isn't quite Alternative but probably could be... 
  • Compilations - one of the best ways to get your music in more faces, sometimes at less cost than your own CD. And then there’s sampler CDs from organisations whose sole aim is to promote new music.
  • Live - my comment on live gigs at various levels around Sydney from 9 August 1995, including Brian May at Sydney’s old Capitol Theatre; Wave AidAmanda Easton: the lady who got me back into this; and the band that caused my tinnitus, Screaming Jets, in December 2000.
  • Country -  a selection of country and western releases I have reviewed since starting this writing thing! You might note a significant gap between the most recent and the ones before that... take a look at the Mary Schneider review to find out why!
  • The Directory has since gone the way of dead websites. It was a huge list, too big for the Geocities servers to handle, containing every artist reviewed on the site. I really have to make that work again.
  • Loud - speaks for itself, really. My favourite form of music.
  • MP3s - Planned as a review of all artists A-Z on the mp3.com.au website, an ambitious project that never got past A in the writing but Hero Puppy in the pre-planning. None of the links appear to be viable any more.
  • Your Reviews - I invited punters, friends, and colleagues to write and contribute their own reviews. I met Cindy on the Yahoo poker-tables and she became the North American arm of the site; Glen, a friend of my brother-in-law’s, was the basis of Trophy Wives ,  Honest John, Salty, and 3 On The Tree; and Mick is a mate of Glen’s who still loves it quite loud!
  • Press - only a couple of these links remain viable; the Dan and Mick Carter ones have died, as have the Alta Vista, Anzwers, Google, Hot Bot, Lycos, MSN, and Yahoo! links as they existed at the time. I have recently even referenced the Country Goss article while chatting with a Swedish-metal guitarist.
I hope to be able to revive this aspect of my life again ... if not for these pages then elsewhere (see also https://peterg-gleeson.blogspot.com/2011/12/music-reviews-website.html)


Sunday, September 11, 2016

Salty - 100 Fallen Stars

SALTY– 100 Fallen Stars. Independent album through http://saltymusic.bandcamp.com/

Based in the southern NSW coastal town of Gerringong, Salty comprises multi-instrumentalist singer-songwriters Alan Moore, Sean (The Pun) Batman, Rob (The Comfortable Chair) Spence, and Glen (Honest John, Trophy Wives, 3 on the Tree, Phlegm Fatale) Colley.

As a live event, I managed to score an invitation to a special-guests-only show of theirs at Rose Valley in February engineered by Mark (3 on the Tree) Harris and featuring members of Honest John, Trophy Wives, the Jimmy Nicholls, and very special mystery guest Brendan “Karma County/Dead Marines” Gallagher. Salty were second-last on the show and did a brilliant job for a very laid-back and ultra-casual event. They are obviously very well-known south of Kiama, north of Berry, and east of Gerringong, and the crowd was dancing through originals and covers alike. I managed to almost-live tweet their penultimate number, a cover of They Might Be Giants’ 1990 cover of The Four Lads’ 1958 hit “Istanbul (not Constantinople)”.

I was quite surprised to find 100 Fallen Stars to be a full 10-track album. Neither of Glen’s or Mark’s former iterations managed that many titles on a single release so for $10 through the bandcamp site you’re getting value for money. And the pedigree keeps impressing with Syd Green in the line-up/list and the recorded/produced by-line. Syd is best known for his drumming prowess behind 1990s powerhouse Killing Time/Mantissa, but his post-90s work is just as remarkable. 

My interest was well and truly piqued when Glen made the announcement that this new collective was in the studio, and with whom. They certainly know how to mix it up, with some extended 4:00+ ballads alongside some short-and-sharp sub-2:00s pop and ska.

1.       Leaving It Behind (Colley) 4:40
Glen and the Gretsch through the twin-reverb, backed vocally by Alan and Sean then suddenly BANG- the whole band joins in. And with the chorus adding depth at the end, I am taken away from everything I expected from the band and delivered somewhere entirely, and happily different.

2.       Man Alive (Colley) 2:57
I remember this one from the February gig. Upbeat, rocky; reminiscent of No Van Gogh in its poppiness but rough, raw, distorted, and fun with its bee-bop-a-loo-bop chorus.

3.       Shire Ska (Batman) 3:04
Pork pie hats. The Specials. The 1980s. Listening to Jono & Dano on Triple J of a Sunday afternoon instead of doing my homework. And that thin and punchy bass. And that … is that a kazoo? Do I like? No, I love!

4.       Lonely & Blue (Batman) 1:59
The title may suggest something slow and sad. Expect nothing like it! Rockin’ blues, more like Continued the upbeat vibe established in the Shire, like those short-and-sharp tracks the Beatles put on their earlier albums, with a little electric-slide guitar to shake it up. This track genuinely made me happy!

5.       That’s what (Spence) 1:25
One that sticks with you, thanks to that catchy bass riff. I came home that night wanting to pick up my own bass and start playing it. Imagine Fred (B52s) Schneider “singing” a ska number and that’s what you get with That’s What.

6.       Recense (Batman) 4:53
A Wonderwallesque ballad that had me thinking of the sing-along part of the Almost Famous road-trip. Alan contributes some nicely placed harmonies and Glen slides a David Gates/Bread riff to round the track out.

7.       Saving All My Happiness (Spence) 3:02
This brings out the banjo, which they used at the February gig and utilises the same effect as Mumford and Son found with their success a few years back. Rob stands in a class with Broderick Smith, Sue Foley, and Chris Wolstenholme as singer songwriters with some truly inspiring ideas and Happiness and Fidelity stand among anything these artists have created and delivered.  

8.       Long Line (Colley) 2:07
The banjo/folky feel continued with Long Line (again, nothing like the Angels’ when they took theirs) which finishes almost as soon as it starts. This is classic Glen at his poppy best, taking me back to a Trophy Wives gig at Cronulla 16 years ago where I first heard No Van Gogh, described then as “bright and happy Rembrandts Closer To Free”.

9.       The Shakedown (Colley) 3:19
Glen’s ultimate contribution to this collection retains the banjo to emote some Spaghetti Western/Roland (The Stand) Walker folk-rock feeling, with vultures circling at one time while he waits for an outcome that is likely not to happen any time soon, as Roland found as he walked, and walked, and walked…

10.   My Fidelity (Spence) 4:26
A song of the sea by those who are lucky enough to live by it closes the effort with the jangly-twang we were promised in the opening bars of Leaving It Behind returning to intro this one. Rob delivers once again. 

I’m just ticked that my ISP wouldn’t let me stream it uninterrupted. Spoiled the vibe somewhat, taking a good three hours to stream through a couple of sittings. My favourites: Leaving It Behind, Shire Ska, and Recense, with an honourable mention to That’s What and Long Line.  

I could think of no better to spend a tenner: if ever you were looking for an unsigned act to support in an altruistic way, this is the one to seek out. Many bands expect you to pay this much for a single or EP. So you really know you want to!

My heartiest congratulations go to Alan, Glen, Rob, Sean, and Syd for a job very well done!
100 Fallen Stars from Salty: Four Rising Stars!


See also Jeff Apter’s recent review in the Sydney Morning Herald