From New Wave to the 'NOW', experience the thrill of NEW WAVE from it's beginnings in the late '70s to the modern bands so obviously influenced by it! So, if you grew up in the '80s and still enjoy discovering new sounds as well as rediscovering old favorites, then read on!
PUNK! POWER POP! SYNTH POP! NEW WAVE! POST-PUNK!
In 2001, singer/songwriter Neil Finn (Split Enz/Crowded House) managed a feat that seemed almost unheard of in modern music: he brought together some of the biggest names in music to perform a few concerts in his native New Zealand. Apart from his brother Tim Finn (Split Enz) and his son Liam (and his band Betchadupa), there were also two members of Radiohead (Ed O’Brien and Phil Selway), Pearl Jam vocalist Eddie Vedder, Soul Coughing’s Sebastian Steinberg, solo artist and session musician Lisa Germano and guitar maestro (and former Smiths member) Johnny Marr. The resulting video and live album was entitled 7 Worlds Collide and credited to Neil Finn & Friends.
Seven years later, Finn upped the ante and not only invited the same folks back over to New Zealand for a few more live shows, he also booked three weeks of studio time with the idea of pooling their talents and recording a studio album for charity (Oxfam). While Vedder was not able to partake in the new venture, Jeff Tweedy and his Wilco mates gladly made the trek along with singer/songwriter KT Tunstall and New Zealand legends Bic Runga and Don McGlashan (The Mutton Birds). Even Neil’s wife Sharon and younger son Elroy proved to be integral pieces of the project.
Each of the musicians brought their families on this working vacation, creating a warm environment that inspired them to create some of the best music of their careers. The resulting album, The Sun Came Out, was an album filled with great songs and wonderful performances from all involved. Produced by Jim Scott and Neil, the album was an amazing labor of love. The fact that the album didn’t top the charts all over the world remains a mystery and a travesty.
But what was it like recording the album with so many great musicians giving their all for a worthy cause? How cool was it to have members of Wilco, Radiohead, The Smiths and Split Enz all pushing each other to create timeless tunes that would reach out and touch so many listeners? Where did Wilco’s Glenn Kotche put his wingnuts? Why on earth did Jeff Tweedy give Johnny Marr an autographed cucumber? Thankfully, all of those questions are answered on The Sun Came Out, a documentary on the making of the album available on DVD courtesy of Cinema Libre Studios. For fans of all the musicians involved, this is a must-have. For anyone interested in the magic of music-making, this documentary is filled with so many great moments, it’d be difficult to list them all here. This is an amazing fly-on-the-wall experience that is not to be missed.
Stephen SPAZ Schnee was able to catch up with Neil Finn at his Roundhead Studios, where the album was recorded. While an in-depth interview about his entire music career would have taken a few days out of his schedule, Neil was gracious enough to spend time talking about The Sun Came Out project….
SPAZ: The album, The Sun Came Out, was released in 2009. Was the documentary previously available?
NEIL FINN: No, it played at a couple of festivals at the time. It got limited exposure. It was always the intention to get it out in some form for people to take home. It just takes a little while for these things to come together. We had the help of some friends who were basically working for free. It just took a little while to unfold. My friend Mark Simon Brown, who directed The Sun Came Out, has done it all as a labor of love. Once the immediacy of the project had gone, it wasn’t really a case of when is the ideal time. I think the ideal situation is to get it looking as good as possible and to make it a good package.
SPAZ: In this day and age, it seems unlikely that a group of talented, well-known musicians from different parts of the world would form such a strong camaraderie. How did you manage to bring these amazing people together and feel confident that something special was bound to happen? Instinct or wonderful accident?
NEIL: We had done one earlier on, which were just concerts, on a whim really. You become friends with people and there’s always a parting comment, “Let’s do something together some day”, and it normally never happens. So, we decided we’d try to make something happen in the spirit of adventure and I guess a busman’s holiday for us all. The Sun Came Out was a far more ambitious undertaking in a lot of ways. It was all based on hunches and instincts that people would get on. Having met the Wilco guys at a concert briefly backstage, I got the feeling from them that they were very much on the same wavelength as a lot of the people that had taken part the first time around. We sent an exploratory e-mail invitation and they just jumped at it. A willingness to step outside the norm and to come to an exotic destination seems to do the trick to get people motivated. Once you’re on the ground, you rely on people’s determination to do good work. We’re all just as mad for it, really, as each other. I don’t think anyone’s just going to glide through it. Everyone wants to do good work. I was amazed by all the hours and intensity that we all put in.
SPAZ: Did you work off a bigger list of friends and associates? Were there artists who were eager to get involved with The Sun Came Out but were not able to make it?
NEIL: There’s a certain amount of randomness, chance and design. I asked a few people both times that weren’t able to do it but there was just a really nice collection of people that said yes. At a certain point, you have to kind of NOT cast the net any further because there is a limit on how much you can achieve. I think there was a lot of good luck in terms of the way the whole thing unfolded and the way everybody related to each other, the groups of people that gathered to make specific songs…. It was just an amazing time, it really was.
SPAZ: Normally, writing songs is a very personal experience, yet so many of these folks bonded so well, creatively and their collaborations came out extremely well. Did it seem natural for you to break out of your comfort zone and allow other people’s ideas to dictate the direction of the songs?
NEIL: To some extent, some people more than others, everyone wanted to do their own thing but everybody allowed others to listen at early stages and to have input. I think it’s fascinating to see the way that people make music because you don’t often get a chance to step outside of your own environment. To be able to watch the main body of Wilco putting together songs, and then go on to record some rhythm tracks for the record that followed… it was pretty fascinating to watch a band at close quarters, to watch other songwriters and the way the process is. It’s reassuring in some ways because everyone’s struggling with some of the same basic dilemmas, needing a little a bit of push at times. I think that was the fascination of the whole thing for me: that I got to see the many varying ways that songs can emerge. There are no rules and a lot of it is just endurance and stamina.
SPAZ: You only had three weeks to essentially write and record the album. While you were a bit concerned about it beforehand, how long did it take you to realize that the project was coming together as you had hoped?
NEIL: I think within about three days, we knew that there was good energy in the building and everyone was pretty united in terms of what we could do. Within a week we had some really outstanding music recorded and that, in itself, was really reassuring. We were also really enjoying each other’s company. There was a lot of good humor involved in the whole thing, some of which comes through in the doco really well. By the time we got to the end and did the shows, there was a really big camaraderie and the shows reflected that. I started to think that this had been a pretty special experience. In the aftermath, I had quite a bit of finishing to do. I was left scratching my head at times, “We just had that experience but now I have to finish this!”. But you do. Nothing good without a bit of pain. There’s always a struggle involved.
SPAZ: Was recording with this motley group of musicians a completely different experience than working within the framework of a band like Split Enz or Crowded House?
NEIL: Yeah. With a band, you’re very insular anyway and you’re rehearsing and everyone’s got a long-term involvement with the songs. In a sense, we were all really having to arrive together… Actually, the business of getting things done, performances, being in the room with a bunch of musicians and you’re giving it your all, that’s no different at all.
SPAZ: While many folks are familiar with Radiohead, Wilco and The Smiths, did you realize that a project like this would bring attention to the artists who aren’t as well known, such as Big Runga and Don McGlashan?
NEIL: Well, I wasn’t really thinking in terms of that. I’d worked with Bic and Don before we put this project together and I knew they were both really good songwriters and very capable of holding their heads up in any company. I thought it would be good to have some New Zealand input. If it has drawn some attention, then I think that’s good. It’s probably fair to say that the experience of doing the project was the most intense and wonderful part of it. I think the record deserved more attention than it got.
SPAZ: I think Johnny Marr’s track, “Too Blue”, is one of the greatest Pop songs of the last 10 years.
NEIL: I appreciate your kind words. It didn’t make it on to many playlists, so the jury’s out for the commercial world, but I agree with you.
SPAZ: While you talk about its Spector-esque production in the film, I feel that it’s a perfect cross between something off of the first Crowded House album and The Smiths’ “There Is A Light That Never Goes Out”.
NEIL: That’s a nice comparison. Johnny was on a mission with that one and he really pulled it together. It was a very enjoyable song to actually do the rhythm track for with two drummers and a huge band in the room.
SPAZ: As a musician and music fan, do you think that a documentary like this might take away the mystique of the musician and the magic of music making? Or do you prefer to focus on the more human side of being a musician?
NEIL: There’s always a trade off in a way. Some people would choose not to reveal any part of the process and preserve the mystique. That’s when the process is really tedious and uninteresting anyway. The moments of inspiration and exploration come every now and again in the process, but there’s a lot of just sticking at it and not particularly interesting to watch. But I think in this case, there was so much extraordinary activity going on in a short period of time that it was an interesting process and it’s worthy to show people what went down. It’s also good to explain what it is because it’s hard for people to understand, I think.
SPAZ: While you have worked in front of the cameras before throughout your career, was it daunting to have them around during the actual creative process?
NEIL: You get used to it. There’s an art to the cameraman being invisible, virtually. There were moments where people chose not to have cameras going and they got annoyed by them here and there, but very little. Actually, if you are having a difficult moment trying to solve a problem, you don’t necessarily want a camera stuck in your face. There’s an art to it and most of the time they got it right. The cameramen found good angles, stayed out of the way and we got used to them and stopped worrying about it.
SPAZ: The album has a warm and comforting feel to it. Do you think it would have been a completely different album if the musicians didn’t bring their families to live with them during this experience?
NEIL: I don’t really know. It’s unanswerable, isn’t it? I think we would have come up with a great record still, but I don’t know if it would have been the same. It was just a really nice opportunity for people to be able to be really pull themselves into something without feeling like they were conflicted.
SPAZ: When the project came to a close and everyone had gone home, what emotion was more overwhelming: the relief that it had come together so successfully or the sadness that it was over?
NEIL: I’d say it was a bit of both. I think that that period of time was a good and I needed to take a break at that point. It was still summer for me so I was able to go to the beach and debrief. Getting back into finishing the record off and get the loose ends caught up was initially a bit burdensome because it was such an intensely good time with everybody contributing and for it to be left to me… but I totally rolled up my sleeves and got into it after awhile.
SPAZ: Are you planning to do something similar in the future?
NEIL: I think it’s likely that something else will happen but there’s no actual plan for it. It seems these things take time to gestate. With the last one, we had a seven or eight year gap between them. It might be the same… or something might come up. There was a great feeling in everybody for this kind of thing and I think that if the call went out, most people would answer again.
SPAZ: Even if you didn’t call me, I’d answer and just show up for three weeks and watch.
NEIL: Great. Well, I’ll let you know. (laughs)
SPAZ: How did you get involved with Oxfam?
NEIL: We wanted to find a charity that everybody liked. Wilco had done some work for Oxfam. Ed and Phil, being Oxford boys, are very familiar with the organization and had done stuff for them as well. It seemed to be a generally supported charity, doing good stuff all around the world.
SPAZ: What’s next for Neil Finn?
NEIL: I’m currently trying to write as many great songs as I can so I can make the best record I’ve ever made. Had a ball doing Pajama Club with my wife and we’ll probably do a bit more of that at some point.
SPAZ: What is currently playing on your CD, DVD and record players?
NEIL: The last record that got spun on the record player was one of those Atlantic Records Rhythm & Blues compilations, which has some incredibly good stuff on it. That was on my turntable last night that we were listening to. DVD-wise, we watched a really rubbish film with Ryan Gosling the other night called Drive. (laughs) I’ve never seen somebody who does so little acting get so much credit!
Thanks to Neil Finn
Special thanks to Rick Rieger, Lauren Watt, Kimberly McCoy and Julia Connolly
CHRISTMAS is almost here! My elves are busy building toys, reading your e-mails and keeping busy. A few of them spend far too much time on Facebook these days, but we're still on schedule so I won't complain.
Have you written out your Christmas wish list yet? No? Well, you better get busy. There's only a little time left before I load my sleigh up with gifts and make my journey around the world on Christmas night!
If you are having a hard time deciding what you want, may I suggest this?
Arising from the ashes of Australian legends Split Enz, Crowded House was led by the enormously talented Neil Finn. With drummer Paul Hester and bassist Nick Seymour at his side, they had a huge hit right out of the box with "Don't Dream It's Over". For the next few years, the band was unstoppable. Their career highpoint was when Neil's big brother Tim joined the band for their Woodface album and a slew of hit singles that made them superstars in Europe, Australia and elsewhere. The band managed to squeak only one album out after Tim left and they broke up in the mid '90s. Thankfully, they've reunited and are creating music today, 25 years after originally forming. This collection contains their most memorable hits and longtime favorites and is the perfect introduction to a band that really deserves more attention than you've given them in the past. They are one of the most consistently magical bands on the planet and this is a release that should be stuffed in every stocking this year. I must get going now. Mrs. Claus needs some help in eating those cinnamon rolls and I don't want to miss out! They are fresh out of the oven, you know! Yum Yum!
Following up on their 2007 release, Time On Earth – their first studio recording in fourteen years – New Zealand dream-pop auteurs Crowded House deliver Intriguer, scheduled for release on July 13th, 2010, on Fantasy Records, a division of Concord Music Group. The internationally acclaimed group begins a nationwide tour of the U.S. and Canada in support of the new album on Monday, July 12th. Also available that day will be the 2-disc Intriguer Deluxe Edition, featuring a special bonus live DVD.
Produced by Jim Scott (Wilco), Intriguer once again brings together singer/guitarist and chief songwriter Neil Finn with original Crowded House bassist Nick Seymour and keyboardist/guitarist Mark Hart, who’d been with the band from 1989 until its last days. Also on board is drummer Mark Sherrod, the relative newcomer to the family, having joined the band for the making of the aforementioned Time On Earth. Recorded at Roundhead Studios in Auckland, New Zealand, in the spring and summer of 2009, the album includes songs that “have been worked over on the road and transformed a few times, some all the way back to square one,” says Finn. “It’s a good place to return to from time to time.”
Intriguer opens with “Saturday Sun,” a track whose straightforward backbeat calls to mind the best elements of ‘60s pop. The follow-up track, “Archer’s Arrows,” takes a more ominous turn with the help of some carefully layered vocals and the violin work of Lisa Germano (who later reappears on the pensive “Even If”).
“Falling Dove” is both melancholy and defiant, while “Isolation” derives its dreamlike sensibility from a heavy dose of guitar tremolo and the dreamlike vocals of Finn’s wife, Sharon Dawn Johnson. Both of these tracks, positioned back-to-back in the sequence, benefit from the psychedelic guitar work of Liam Finn, Neil’s son and longtime collaborator in the studio and onstage.
“Twice If You’re Lucky” is a prime example of the aforementioned evolutionary process that left its mark on most of the songs on Intriguer. “We played an alternative version, more complex and mysterious on tour, then deconstructed back to the original, simple form in the last week of recording,” Finn explains. “I am inclined to circle songs, looking for any bit of advantage I can find – a verse, a chord or a word to change.”
“Elephants” is the wistful closer, driven by lush piano harmonies that seek to linger a while and take in the fleeting moment before the story comes to close.
“Intriguer is exotic in parts, traditional in origin,” says Finn. “Through many a twist and turn we fashioned some drama and intrigue. You will find some threads that go back through all that history and some new discoveries as well that will need to be followed up. Its part of the continuum and it may just be the best thing we’ve done…until the next one.”
2007’s Time On Earth, turned the band on to what Finn calls “the scent of something new.” Thankfully, for the rest of us, Intriguer proves the Crowded House story in many ways, is just beginning.
Don’t miss Crowded House on tour!
Mon Jul 12 Toronto, ON Massey Hall
Tue Jul 13 Montreal, QC Metropolis
Thu Jul 15 Ottawa, ON Lebreton Flats Park
Fri Jul 16 Buffalo, NY Erie Canal Harbor
Sat Jul 17 Boston, MA House of Blues
Mon Jul 19 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom
Tue Jul 20 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom
Wed Jul 21 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom
Fri Jul 23 Montclair, NJ Wellmont Theatre
Sat Jul 24 Atlantic City, NJ House of Blues
Mon Jul 26 Vienna, VA Wolftrap
Wed Jul 28 Clearwater, FL Ruth Eckerd Hall
Thu Jul 29 Miami, FL Fillmore Miami Beach
Fri Jul 30 Orlando, FL Hard Rock Live
Sun Aug 1 Atlanta, GA Tabernacle
Mon Aug 2 Nashville, TN Ryman Auditorium
Wed Aug 4 Austin, TX Stubb’s Walker Creek
Thu Aug 5 Dallas, TX House of Blues
Fri Aug 20 Los Angeles, CA Club Nokia
Sun Aug 22 San Diego, CA Humphrey’s Concerts by the Bay
Mon Aug 23 San Francisco, CA Warfield
Tue Aug 24 Saratoga, CA Mountain Winery
Thu Aug 26 Troutdale, OR Edgefield Amphitheater
Sat Aug 28 Seattle, WA Chateau Ste. Michelle Winery
Sun Aug 29 Vancouver, BC Queen Elizabeth Theatre
Mon Aug 30 Victoria, BC Royal Theatre
Wed Sep 1 Edmonton, AB Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium
Thu Sep 2 Calgary, AB Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium
While we all anxiously await a new FINN BROTHERS album or a SPLIT ENZ reunion tour outside of Australia and New Zealand, we'll have to make do with some other fine FINN releases in the form of TIM FINN's excellent two CD Anthology: North South East West and NEIL FINN's project, 7 WORLDS COLLIDE!
For those of you who have yet to experience the Finn magic, just let me tell you that these two are ordinary men with extraordinary talents! Tim's been on the music scene for nearly 40 years while Neil trails just behind him with just under 35 years in his back pocket.
Tim started Split Enz in 1972, inviting young Neil to join the band in 1977. They achieved astounding success in the early '80s before disbanding halfway through the decade.
Neil formed Crowded House and, returning the favor, invited big brother Tim into the band for the Woodface album. Tim then left and went back to a solo career while Neil carried Crowded House onwards for a few more years.
In the meantime, they've managed to release two Finn Brothers albums while juggling their own separate careers, some Split Enz reunion shows and a whole lot more.
Towards the end of 2009, the Finns graciously gave us two separate, unrelated releases that will cool the flames until the next Crowded House album and Tim Finn solo release comes along...
Although I thought it could never be done, Tim Finn's North South East West two CD anthology brings together the best of his solo recordings, Split Enz hits, Finn Brothers tracks and some new recordings all in one package.
This collection starts out with seven classic Split Enz songs like "Dirty Creature", "I See Red", "Poor Boy" and "Six Months In A Leaky Boat". An eighth Enz tune, "Stuff And Nonsense", is represented here by a newly recorded version by Tim and Missy Higgins.
Though there are no Crowded House songs included, there are new versions of "Weather With You (by Tim, Neil and Neil's son Liam Finn), "How Will You Go" and "It's Only Natural" (by Tim and Bic Runga).
The rest of the collection features tracks spanning Tim's entire solo career including cuts from his '83 debut solo album, Escapade up through 2008's The Conversation. The album Big Canoe is represented by a newly rearranged version of "So Deep".
Apart from the re-recordings listed above, there are also some great previously unreleased tunes including "Into The Water", "Nothing Unusual" and "Light Years Away".
If you don't have any of Tim's recordings, this is the perfect place to start. If you are already a fan, there are enough gems to make this an absolutely essential purchase!
The first 7 Worlds Collide album, released under Neil Finn's name, was a unique live performance experience, fusing the varied talents of a stellar cast across a range of cover versions to create a series of shows that culminated in the live album of the same name.
Seven years after that project, instigator Neil Finn has upped the ante with the new 7 Worlds Collide project, The Sun Came Out, a double album of original songs created and recorded by many of the original cast alongside notable new additions in an intense three weeks in his native New Zealand. This time the beneficiaries of this album will be Oxfam, as well as music
Familiar faces from the original album abound, Johnny Marr, Ed O’Brien and Phil Selway of Radiohead but this album, first and foremost presents the listener with new songs rather than interpretations of old favorites. The Sun Came Out also features a whole host of new guest talents such as KT Tunstall and Wilco and heart stopping firsts, including Phil Selway's songwriting and vocal debut as well as dream collaborations such as those between Johnny Marr and Wilco's Jeff Tweedy; and KT Tunstall and Neil Finn .
At the heart of the record is Neil Finn. His enthusiasm and drive persuaded the likes of celebrated producer Jim Scott, Lisa Germano, Johnny Marr and Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy, Pat Sansone, John Stirratt and Glenn Kotche (amongst others) to spend their Christmas holiday in New Zealand and even interrupted KT Tunstall’s honeymoon in the process.
The album's high point, for me anyway, is "Too Blue", by Johnny Marr and Neil Finn. This glorious pop tune is the younger, happier brother of "There Is A Light That Never Goes Out", a song written a few decades back by Marr and his Smiths mate Morrissey. The previous 7 Worlds Collide album contained a live version of that Smiths track with Neil singing lead and it remains the second best version of that song. "Too Blue" is just as strong. Did I already say it was glorious?
The worst thing about a Finn album being released is that you have to wait until the next one comes.... and I'm not a very patient guy. So, come on Tim and Neil... I'm waiting!
For nearly 30 years, Tim Finn has been my second favorite vocalist of all time...just a few notches down from Elvis Presley. Hell, I skipped my high school senior prom in '82 just to go see Tim's old band, Split Enz, perform at the Hollywood Palladium (ah, the memories!). So, for me, a new Tim Finn album is always a call for celebration. While I've loved most of his solo work, it's really hard to compare it to the collaborative essence of Split Enz, so I never do. I don't even bother judging it against his other projects like Crowded House, the Finn Brothers or ALT. I look at each album as it's own entity and accept it for what it is: a Tim Finn solo album.
So, with that being said, I was floored by his 2006 effort, Imaginary Kingdom. I felt that IK was even better than his solo debut, Escapade, which I didn't think he'd ever top. This is not to say that his other solo releases haven't been good. I think that a listener attaches themselves to a certain record like an old barnacle and hangs on for dear life. When I heard Imaginary Kingdom, I felt that he had released his best solo work to date and I had found a new home to lay my weary head.
The Conversation, his 2008 release, has found me packing my bags and moving to a new resting spot: Finn has taken the best elements of his songwriting skills, scaled back the production and presented an album so rich with melody that no economic crisis could penetrate this wealthy platter of song. This is by far the best album of the year...and that's no easy feat since 2008 has had some really great releases. It's also the best album in his 25 year solo journey.
The album is warm, comforting and personal but while Tim sings of HIS life, it can often mirror the feelings and thoughts of the listener, creating a virtual 'conversation' between the performer and the audience. While the album's title refers to the interaction of the different musicians playing together, it becomes much more than that when experienced in the comfort of your own home. Former Enz members Miles Golding (violin) and Eddie Rayner (piano) join Tim on this journey and their familiarity with Tim's music allows them to add a personal flavor to this rich stew of haunting melodies. Tim's voice is superb throughout, sounding like a man who has found peace in who he is and is comfortable in his own skin. While 'Out Of This World' is the lead single, there are many other inviting moments that will reach out to anyone looking for a singer/songwriter who offers more than just a new face in an overcrowded market: 'Rear View Mirror', 'The Saw And The Tree', 'Forever Thursday' (which could be a distant cousin of his classic 'Through The Years'), 'Straw To Gold' and more. On the first spin of the album, you'll find some magical moments but the album truly reveals itself with each additional listen and you'll soon find yourself joining in on this Conversation.
So, after 30 years, I'm still a dedicated fan with much respect for the man and his abilities. Tim Finn may be an ordinary man but he has extraordinary talents.