Jump to content

The Fauves (band)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 110.174.109.220 (talk) at 10:33, 17 February 2020 (History). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Fauves
The Fauves, Asian Football Championships, July 2007
Background information
OriginMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
GenresRock
Years active1988 (1988)–present
Labels
Members
  • Andrew "Coxy" Cox
  • Philip "Doctor" Leonard
  • Adam "Doug" Newey
  • Timothy "Ted" Cleaver
Past members
  • Jack Dyer
Websitethefauves.com

The Fauves are an Australian rock band formed in 1988. The band are known for their witty lyrics, melodic pop-rock and often satirical or evocative exploration of Australian themes.

Their album Future Spa was nominated for Best Alternative Album in the 1997 ARIA awards but lost to Spiderbait's Ivy and the Big Apples. They played at the Big Day Out in both 1993 and 1997.

In 2007 they played their 1000th Show and in 2008 they celebrated their 20th Anniversary Gig at The Espy in Melbourne.

History

The Fauves were formed in 1988 by four students of Mt Eliza High School, Mornington Peninsula.[1] They were Andrew Cox on guitar and vocals; Andrew "Jack" Dyer on bass guitar; Philip Leonard on guitar, vocals and brass; and Adam Newey on drums.[1][2] According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, they "took their name from the short-lived French art movement, Fauvism, which was characterised by both its intensity and infatuation with colour."[1] Neither Cox nor Leonard had formal music lessons.[1]

Their first gig was on 23 July 1988, at a local football club, Cox later recalled "We learnt more about rock ‘n’ roll in that one night than the entire preceding 20 years. We sucked piss, made eyes at the cheap football tarts and bonded like four buckets of superglue. We also learnt how to compromise, how to sell out, and how to get fucked over. There was no rider, we were underpaid and no one got laid. It was a microcosm of an entire career."[3] McFarlane declared that the group's "early sound was an energetic distillation of garage-punk rock riffs and surreal lyrics."[1]

In March 1990 the band released their debut five-track extended play, This Mood Has Passed, on Timbertop Records.[1][2] It had been recorded in the previous year at Timbertop Studios, Ringwood, with Peter Carrodus producing.[4] McFarlane felt the EP "reflected the frantic, primal elements of early Hunters & Collectors or Moodists."[1] They followed in October with a 7" single, "Fireman 451", on Shock Records, produced by Doug Saunders.[1][2]

In 1991 they issued two singles, "When Luck Ran Out" and "Daughter Aboard".[1] In the following year two EPs, both with six-tracks, were issued on Shock Records, The Scissors Within (April) and Tight White Ballhugger (September), each was produced by Robbie Rowlands.[1][2] The EPs "kept up the experimental energy and humour."[1] In 1992 the Fauves featured on a split CD, Dress Ups (Shock Records), with other Melbourne bands The Glory Box and Pray TV with each band performing a track from the others' repertoire, as well as contributing one original track.

Nic Haygarth of The Canberra Times caught their gig in October 1992, he found "the bald heads of [Dyer] and [Leonard] give them a fiercer appearance, but nothing could be friendlier than the melody of 'Fracture in the Sky' and Leonard's trumpet on their best track 'Wilding'. The Fauves played strong material from The Scissors Within and quirky new stuff from latest EP Tight White Ballhugger, including mandolin tempered 'Archimedes' Crown'. Doomy distorted guitars powered their set, but the Fauves nearly lost their audience with a couple of extended thrash routines which not even the Brady Bunch theme could redeem."[5]

During a gig at Sydney's Annandale Hotel late in 1992 "they detoured into a freeform noise epic during which Cox washed Newey's hair with Vegemite and shampoo."[6] The Age's Craig Mathieson described their support slot on the Church's national tour, "They rehearsed extensively, mindful of the opportunity they had been given. The result? Church fans ignored them."[6]

The band came to wider attention when they appeared on the bill of the first Big Day Out tour in January 1993.[3] They signed to Polydor Records and, in October of that year, they released their debut long player, Drive Through Charisma.[1][3] It was produced by Rowlands, who had them "recorded in a mud-brick house in Daylesford."[1] The original version included a 22-track bonus disc featuring early demos and some live songs, which Mathieson felt were "often horrendous early recordings."[6] It was accompanied by a separate booklet, "22 Reasons Why a Band Shouldn't Put an Album Out in Its First Few Years", written by Newey who provided critical analysis for each track: Mathieson noticed he "ridiculed every song."[6]

The 1994 computer game Quarantine featured the band's song "The Driver Is You" on its soundtrack. Their second album The Young Need Discipline was released in 1994. In 1995 the band released a non-album single "Everybody's Getting a 3 Piece Together". The song was later included on the band's next album as a secret track.

The Fauves's most successful album to date Future Spa was released in July 1996. The album yielded considerable radio success with singles "Dogs Are The Best People" and "Self Abuser" coming in at No. 20 and No. 30 respectively in the Triple J Hottest 100, 1996. Between the release of Future Spa and their album Lazy Highways, the band were filmed for Vanessa Stuart's one-hour documentary, The Fauves: 15 Minutes to Rock, which has since aired on SBS and was also screened at the Document Film Festival in October 2004.[7]

By the end of 1999 however the band was dropped from Polydor after the label's merger with Universal. Following their departure from the major label, the band wrote two songs, "Bigger Than Tina" and "Bigger Than Tina II", for the Australian movie Bigger Than Tina which were released as a single on Festival. Since then the group has released seven albums independently. They had further success on the Triple J Hottest 100 with "Bigger Than Tina" at No. 50 in 1999, and "Give Up Your Day Job" at No. 58 in 2000.

Andrew Cox contributed a humorous agony aunt segment on Jay and the Doctor's Triple J breakfast show from 2005 until the show ended in 2009 and has also contributed opinion pieces to The Age newspaper. Andrew also wrote and distributed the band's Rabelaisian fanzine 'Shred' which commented satirically and often savagely on the music industry and pop culture more generally.

The Fauves released their ninth studio album, When Good Times Go Good, on 6 September 2008. It was recorded with longtime collaborator Wayne Connolly, who has worked on five of the band's nine albums, and co-produced by Jim Moginie from Midnight Oil. A video-clip was made of the "Underwhelmed".

After a three-year break the band debuted tracks from their tenth album Japanese Engines on 10 November 2011 in Geelong. The album was followed only five months later by an eight-track EP German Engines launched at The Toff in Town. Andrew Cox announced on stage: "Japanese Engines was kind of the poppier record. German Engines has a much darker soul, it's a bit heavier, it's a bit rougher."

The Fauves played The Workers Club in Fitzroy on Saturday 7 June 2014.[citation needed]

A double album, titled Driveway Heart Attack, was released in 2019. [8]

Discography

Albums

Compilations

"Get Fucked", from The Fauves, was included on the Rock Against Howard compilation in 2004.

Extended plays

Singles

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m McFarlane, Ian (1999). "Encyclopedia entry for 'The Fauves'". Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. p. 214. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. {{cite book}}: |archive-url= requires |url= (help); External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ a b c d Holmgren, Magnus. "The Fauves". Australian Rock Database. Archived from the original on 7 November 2003. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Artists :: The Fauves". Australian Music Online. Archived from the original on 22 November 2007. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
  4. ^ This Mood Has Passed (booklet). The Fauves. Ringwood, Victoria: Timbertop Records. 1990. TT006, TT008.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  5. ^ Haygarth, Nic (22 October 1992). "Good Times: Chilis spice 'Sydney Beans'". The Canberra Times. Vol. 67, no. 21, 011. p. 19. Retrieved 6 October 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ a b c d Mathieson, Craig (16 August 2002). "Almost-famous four". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
  7. ^ Kates, Megan (October 2004). "The Fauves: 15 Minutes to Rock". Time Off. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
  8. ^ https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/the-fauves-album-launch-at-northern-republic-euroa-tickets-56391251752