Leader:
morning_view
Join Policy: Open
Created on: 21 Feb 2006
Description:
Join Policy: Open
Created on: 21 Feb 2006
Description:
A group for Trial Kennedy fans
From TK's Facebook page:
On paper, you’d have to wonder how Trial Kennedy are even still a band.
Two years ago, the Melbourne rock outfit were perched at the edge of something big. After two killer EPs (2004’s Present for a Day and 2005’s Picture Frame), their Nick DiDia-produced debut album, New Manic Art, was garnering the sort of critical acclaim every band aspires to. Songs such as Neighbours and Colour Day Tours became instant Triple J anthems. The band toured hard, earning a burgeoning Australian fan base to go with their stellar live rep, and coveted support spots with the likes of Fall Out Boy and Birds Of Tokyo. Their star was rising.
And then… well, then a whole lot of bad mojo went down.
Their original bass player, Aaron Malcolmson, left. Business arrangements were tested. Resulting in band and management parting ways. Frontman Tim Morrison had a heart operation. Then he fell off a ladder, cracked his skull open and wound up with 30 staples in his head. Meanwhile, the daily struggle of balancing day jobs and personal relationships with artistic careers ground onwards. Girlfriends became casualties to the hard slog of the road. And finally the band parted ways with their label. You name it, the band went through it.
A string of luck like that would have spelt death for lesser bands. But not Trial Kennedy. Stoic as ever, they channelled everything into the music and prepared for that all-important second album. Songs written, honed and arranged, they hired out Sing Sing and tracked ten songs in nine days for what would become the new album.
When it came to the mixing, the band sought the help of friend and engineer extraordinaire Haydn Buxton – brother of their new bassist, Richie. “Haydn did an amazing job,” says Morrison, “After all the shit we’ve been through, in the end, we came out with a rocking record!”
Rocking is putting it mildly. Just like its predecessor, Living Undesigned wields as much grunt and guts as it does gravitas. A bare-boned rock record, but one with soul and heart. And also a significant step up for the band.
Morrison’s stratospheric range, gritty power, uncanny phrasing and melodic sensibility remain the calling card of Trial Kennedy – the way he moves seamlessly from full-tilt rock scream to delicate falsetto and every velocity in between is simply jaw-dropping. Propelled by Shaun Gionis’ pumping drums, Stacey Gray’s incendiary guitar work and new recruit Richie Buxton’s muscular basswork, Living Undesigned sees a musical shift for the band.
“Richie’s brought with him a new direction – a new maturity,” enthuses Morrison. “It still sounds like us, but we’ve moved away from a rock-pop vibe into something darker, dirtier, with more edge. Richie’s a musical genius – he actually writes jingles for TV commercials, so he’s very much a songwriter. From both a technical and songwriting perspective, he’s an amazing bass player.”
But for all their musical chops, as songwriters, Trial Kennedy have that rare economy of craft, a skilled grasp of dynamic and light ’n’ shade, and never get bogged down in self-indulgence. Even the album title comes with its own ambiguities and multiplicity of meaning. Taken on its own, the phrase suggests a free-thinking, unencumbered approach to life and creativity, which any artist can relate to. But literally, “Living Undesigned refers to the chemical oxytocin that’s produced organically in the human brain when listening to music,” explains Morrison. “So we figured that’s a damn good name for a song and an album, right there.”
The band is also revelling in their newfound liberation in being independent again. “This time around, every decision – from the single, the artwork, the arrangements – has been completely ours,” says Morrison.
They say behind every great album there’s an equally compelling story. And in the case of Trial Kennedy, they’ve traversed a world of shit to come out clutching a diamond. Living Undesigned is not just the album Trial Kennedy fans have been waiting for – it’s the album that will blow anyone else away who missed them first time around. And this time, the band are doing things their way.
Living undesigned, indeed.
NICK SNELLING
On paper, you’d have to wonder how Trial Kennedy are even still a band.
Two years ago, the Melbourne rock outfit were perched at the edge of something big. After two killer EPs (2004’s Present for a Day and 2005’s Picture Frame), their Nick DiDia-produced debut album, New Manic Art, was garnering the sort of critical acclaim every band aspires to. Songs such as Neighbours and Colour Day Tours became instant Triple J anthems. The band toured hard, earning a burgeoning Australian fan base to go with their stellar live rep, and coveted support spots with the likes of Fall Out Boy and Birds Of Tokyo. Their star was rising.
And then… well, then a whole lot of bad mojo went down.
Their original bass player, Aaron Malcolmson, left. Business arrangements were tested. Resulting in band and management parting ways. Frontman Tim Morrison had a heart operation. Then he fell off a ladder, cracked his skull open and wound up with 30 staples in his head. Meanwhile, the daily struggle of balancing day jobs and personal relationships with artistic careers ground onwards. Girlfriends became casualties to the hard slog of the road. And finally the band parted ways with their label. You name it, the band went through it.
A string of luck like that would have spelt death for lesser bands. But not Trial Kennedy. Stoic as ever, they channelled everything into the music and prepared for that all-important second album. Songs written, honed and arranged, they hired out Sing Sing and tracked ten songs in nine days for what would become the new album.
When it came to the mixing, the band sought the help of friend and engineer extraordinaire Haydn Buxton – brother of their new bassist, Richie. “Haydn did an amazing job,” says Morrison, “After all the shit we’ve been through, in the end, we came out with a rocking record!”
Rocking is putting it mildly. Just like its predecessor, Living Undesigned wields as much grunt and guts as it does gravitas. A bare-boned rock record, but one with soul and heart. And also a significant step up for the band.
Morrison’s stratospheric range, gritty power, uncanny phrasing and melodic sensibility remain the calling card of Trial Kennedy – the way he moves seamlessly from full-tilt rock scream to delicate falsetto and every velocity in between is simply jaw-dropping. Propelled by Shaun Gionis’ pumping drums, Stacey Gray’s incendiary guitar work and new recruit Richie Buxton’s muscular basswork, Living Undesigned sees a musical shift for the band.
“Richie’s brought with him a new direction – a new maturity,” enthuses Morrison. “It still sounds like us, but we’ve moved away from a rock-pop vibe into something darker, dirtier, with more edge. Richie’s a musical genius – he actually writes jingles for TV commercials, so he’s very much a songwriter. From both a technical and songwriting perspective, he’s an amazing bass player.”
But for all their musical chops, as songwriters, Trial Kennedy have that rare economy of craft, a skilled grasp of dynamic and light ’n’ shade, and never get bogged down in self-indulgence. Even the album title comes with its own ambiguities and multiplicity of meaning. Taken on its own, the phrase suggests a free-thinking, unencumbered approach to life and creativity, which any artist can relate to. But literally, “Living Undesigned refers to the chemical oxytocin that’s produced organically in the human brain when listening to music,” explains Morrison. “So we figured that’s a damn good name for a song and an album, right there.”
The band is also revelling in their newfound liberation in being independent again. “This time around, every decision – from the single, the artwork, the arrangements – has been completely ours,” says Morrison.
They say behind every great album there’s an equally compelling story. And in the case of Trial Kennedy, they’ve traversed a world of shit to come out clutching a diamond. Living Undesigned is not just the album Trial Kennedy fans have been waiting for – it’s the album that will blow anyone else away who missed them first time around. And this time, the band are doing things their way.
Living undesigned, indeed.
NICK SNELLING
Active Discussions
|
“New Release: Living Undesigned and Tour” May 2011 |
|
“Trial Kennedy Official Forum” July 2008 |
|
“New Manic Art” June 2008 |
|
“TK XMAS Party” November 2006 |
|
“The Great Escape” (1) November 2006 |
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by plattopus |
15 Dec 2006
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