Saturday, December 3, 2022

1982@40: WORLD OF STONE - HUNTERS AND COLLECTORS

A quietly menacing bass drone on a synth. Crisp woodblocks clack a steady 4/4. Eventually a clean and spiky funk riff on a guitar appears. Strange warbles and clashes bring a bass in but it's not a normal rock bass. It's notes feel like hammer blows. They're forged from steel. Soon we're pounding through a breathlessly hot jungle as a tortured voice calls out about loping walks, monkeys and caretaker's home. It might be a zoo. It might be an imperial expedition through a great screeching morass. Whatever it is there's danger there and the bare protection from it. "Semi-detached in a world of stone" and suddenly the track breaks into a searing grind with clanking bass below and screaming organ overhead. The pattern holds. No guitar solos or middle eights, just the big machine of song slashing through the foliage.

Flip it and you get Watcher, a much busier groove with more plinky funk riffs. More strained vocals. An aging surburbanite growling at his tv. The backing vocals invite you to come and see him in his display case of a home. There's a vague preacher vibe like Once in a Lifetime but, despite the funk that might unite them, this has an anguished energy and none of the designer weirdness of David Byrne and co. Thump thump thump. Come and see the watcher.

Lastly there's the one that would really dig in when the band was mentioned. Loinclothing has a brighter riff that can recall the Andrea True Connection's More More More disco smash from the previous decade. There's no shame or self-consciousness to it, probably more than a little defiance. There's also a ton of Krautrock in the ancestry. Mostly, though, this is the sound of a band breaking through influence and sounding like themselves. The bass takes the gloves off and pounds with its knuckles. The big modal calls of the verse sing ropes of imagery: cowboys toe tapping, howls of distant pleasure, worms feeding, hay, rag and bone man before the big chanting chorus breaks out with a massed cry of ... Loincloth? Plastic? Placemats? 

This is one I only had as a cassette from someone else's record. While some of the lyrics are clear, I have not one sausagey notion of what they are calling in the chorus. It sounds essential to the song but the song is imagery rather than narrative or confession. In the end I liked not knowing. It could have been Latin or Old Sumerian but it sounded like they meant it. The combination of obscure meaning and earnestness or even ceremonial joy had a shiver of horror. Jungle holocausts from Deep River. Like the best nightmares, especially those known to soft little city dwellers like me, it was not knowing that kept us looking over our shoulders.

January 1982 and I'd just come back from my two months of Uni holidays up in the tropics. First term of second year wouldn't be starting for a couple of weeks. I lugged my baggage back up to my room, cleared out the miasma of baby clothes and other detritus that my brother and his wife would use my room for in my absence, and unpacked to a much needed dose of 4ZZZ. World of Stone came on. In the stinky humid air of a late Brisbane summer, the sounds of the jungles of horror movies rose and got right into me. I turned it up and listened. Who the hell was this?

I listened to the end of the bracket for the back announcement. Hunters and Collectors. From Melbourne. Playing at the New York on Sunday night. It was Friday. I finished unpacking, making mental notes. Melbourne. Like The Birthday Party and Models. Wow. It didn't surprise me once I knew. That big clangy bass and the non-rock spread of the funk were a fit for place. I was about to call around to see who was going when my brother in law Roger came by to invite me to it. Perfect.

The New York in Queen St was a depression era building with a deco name plate built in to the façade as well the the name York. The semi circle portico bore the renaming to New York. I can't remember when it became a venue but had already been there a few times (possibly The Birthday Party and the Laughing Clowns). It was the place for interstate bands from the alternative margin or international acts that got played on ZZZ. It was the best venue in town. The sound was always big and clear and the bands played on an elevated stage so far above any of our heads that you had to be standing right behind a giant not to see them. There was a mezzanine with table service.

Hunters and Collectors emerged, looking like the roadies, all singlets and jeans ripped by lifting and days and nights on the rig. There were about twenty-seven of them; a rock band core plus a workshop of percussion on bin lids, gas cylinders and hub caps. They made a big noise but it was cleanly defined and deliberate, turning the venue into a great big sweaty pagan church. No cacophony, no mess, just a solid mass of orchestrated rage and wonder. I caught up with a lot of people I'd been missing but we didn't so a lot of talking.

Hunters and Collectors felt new and of the moment and for the moment seemed incapable of buying into the top ten with a cute chorus and a riff. That would change but it would take years. Getting to the crafted hard pop numbers that Mark Seymour at the helm started to churn out was a lengthy process that involved a painful untangling of ties to the dark night time bonfires they'd started with. But for a band whose sense of purpose ensured them the ears of any passer by with hooks that took forever to happen after a lot of scary declamation, they were matchless. Most of the dearly years stand solid now but that first long fast spinner with the uncomfortably off cover art will please now as uncompromisingly as it did then. Classic in the best sense.

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