Havilah | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 20 September 2008 | |||
Recorded | April 2008 | |||
Studio | Running Creek, Myrtleford (Victoria) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 53:23 | |||
Label | ATP/MGM | |||
Producer |
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The Drones chronology | ||||
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Singles from Havilah | ||||
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Havilah is the fourth studio album by Australian alternative rockers, the Drones, which was released by ATP Recordings/MGM Distribution in September 2008. It was co-produced by the group with Burke Reid and issued in February 2009 for the United Kingdom and United States markets. The title refers to a biblical town of the same name – "a Shangri-La-esque place with an abundance of gold" – and is the valley 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Myrtleford, where they recorded.
At the J Awards of 2008, the album was nominated for Australian Album of the Year. [1] In 2011, it would be voted by the band's contemporaries & "industry experts" as the 38th best Australian album of all time.
Havilah was recorded in April 2008 by the Drones at the mud-brick home of their bass guitarist, Fiona Kitschin, and lead singer, Gareth Liddiard. [2] [3] It is located 20 km (12 mi) east of Myrtleford at the base of Victoria's Mount Buffalo. [2] Liddiard reflected:
It's like a little world unto itself in the forest. It's a beautiful place. You can't always find a good spot to record, but if you can find a house like this that's a bonus. [4] It was a great place to write and record. We were literally in the middle of a sub-alpine forest. We had no electricity, just diesel generators. It'd be just about the only record made on a diesel budget. [3]
Dan Luscombe, the lead guitarist, explained its title, "Havilah is the name of the town where we recorded the album… our nearest neighbour was 4 km away. In fact, this Victorian town was once a gold rush town populated with thousands of people just before the turn of the 20th century. It is now fitted out with about 30 people, and on this note, touches of Australian history are filling this album before we have even heard it."
The album was produced and engineered by Burke Reid (The Mess Hall, Gerling) who set up his portable ProTools studio, the Running Creek Studios, in their home, powered by a diesel engine. [2] [3]
The music on the album has been described as being influenced by "30 years of left-field rock heroics (the Birthday Party, Sonic Youth, the noisiest bits of Neil Young)" [5] as well as "fellow Aussies Nick Cave and The Triffids' late David McComb" [6]
To shake up his lyric writing, Liddiard was reading four books at once, and using internet packages to jumble words and create unimaginable phrases – similar to the labour intensive "cut up" techniques employed by writer William S. Burroughs and singer David Bowie in the pre-Internet era, where they cut up words on paper and jumbled them up: [7]
I made a conscious effort to put my head in the sand. You start working, you have a coffee in the morning, and any self-doubt falls away.
According to The Guardian , the lyrics on the album consist of "allegorical tales of Minotaurs, cargo cults and slow-creep apocalypse" [5] with many tracks dealing with topics such as "marital woes" ("The Drifting Housewife" [8] ) and "emptiness" ("Careful As You Go") [9]
The first single from the album, "The Minotaur", was released ahead of the album in July 2008. [10] Havilah debuted at No. 47 on the ARIA Albums Chart. [11]
Aggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AnyDecentMusic? | 7.4/10 [12] |
Metacritic | 77/100 [13] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [14] |
The Guardian | [5] |
Mojo | [15] |
Mondosonoro | 8/10 [16] |
NME | [17] |
Ox-Fanzine | [18] |
Pitchfork | 7.7/10 [8] |
PopMatters | [9] |
Q | [6] |
Tiny Mix Tapes | [19] |
The Age 's Patrick Donovan observed, "the band's angry cacophony has partly given way to a cleaner, more upbeat sound with more melody and narrative-based songs... Elsewhere, the band's country influences come to the fore, as well as the cleaner playing of new guitarist Dan Luscombe... [they] may have mellowed a bit, but they're no less engaging."
On Metacritic, the album has a "metascore" of 77 based on 15 reviews, implying a "generally favorable" critical reception, [13] whilst it has a score of 7.4 out of 10 on the review aggregator AnyDecentMusic? based on 11 reviews. [12]
Tom Hughes of The Guardian called it an "outstanding record, and one with endless pleasures and pains to be wrung out of it" calling Liddiard "one of the few rock lyricists worth paying real attention to" adding that "he's a vocalist like no other, [...] his melodic ear never better than here". [5] Tiny Mix Tapes called the album "more humblingly [sic] good music at a time when rock music is more about being it’s-all-been-done humble", bemoaning their lack of popularity and adding that theirs "is the sound you need to get for right now, and it’s built to last well past that.". [19] Dan Draper of PopMatters wrote that the album finds the band "older, more bitter, and better than ever" calling Liddiard "one of those lyricists whose words have the weight of poetry" [9] Ned Raggett of AllMusic rated it at four-out-of-five stars and explained, "[they] have grown a touch more polished and focused with time, it's not at the expense of creating compelling music – if anything, [this album] even more clearly places the band as one of Australia's best rock bands ever." [14] Joe Colly of Pitchfork writes that "They're traditional in the way Black Lips are-- straightforward instrumentation, a healthy nod to the past-- but manage to dodge the pitfalls of revisionism with an unusual mixture of brute force, bleak lyrical content, and singer Gareth Liddiard's distinctive caterwaul. (Dude can impressively shift from a bark to a shriek to a roar in one solitary breath.) [...Listening to the album] is like making it through a powerful-but-disturbing film". [8]
More mixed reviews came from Q who said it was a "little too heavily indebted to fellow Aussies Nick Cave and The Triffids' late David McComb, even if that's not a bad place to be coming form." [6] Prefix magazine described it as "thickset blues rock" that "makes for opaque and impenetrable listening" decrying their perceived lack of innovation (in comparison to acts such as Women and Abe Vigoda) and their inability to "wallow in the same gloriously gloomy lows as, say, Come’s Eleven:Eleven or Neil Young's On the Beach " comparing the music to the "mid level depress-o-rock that The Smashing Pumpkins have been peddling on-and-off for the best part of two decades" and criticizing Liddiard's lyrics as "too often uninspired, and seemingly torn from a notebook full of juvenilia that should have been stuffed in the back of a firmly locked closet" despite being "witty" at parts [20]
Havilah was one of 12 nominees at the J Awards of 2008 for Album of the Year. [21] It was also nominated for the Australian Music Prize of 2008 (losing out to Primary Colours by Eddy Current Suppression Ring), making it the band's third nomination for the prize since its inauguration in 2005.
Publication | Country | Year | Accolade | Rank |
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The Age | Australia | 2008 | The year that was (Craig Mathieson) | 1 [22] |
Inpress | Australia | 2008 | Top 10 Albums of 2008 | 4[ citation needed ] |
The Guardian | UK | 2009 | Critics' poll 2009 | 42 [23] |
Triple J | Australia | 2011 | Hottest 100 Australian Albums of all Time | 38 [24] |
All tracks are written by Gareth Liddiard, Mike Noga, Dan Luscombe and Fiona Kitschin, [25] unless otherwise noted
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Nail It Down" | 6:53 |
2. | "The Minotaur" | 3:25 |
3. | "The Drifting Housewife" | 4:01 |
4. | "I Am the Supercargo" (Liddiard, Luscombe) | 6:20 |
5. | "Careful as You Go" (Liddiard, Luscombe, Kitschin) | 5:02 |
6. | "Oh My" | 4:43 |
7. | "Cold and Sober" (Liddiard) | 5:05 |
8. | "Luck in Odd Numbers" | 8:36 |
9. | "Penumbra" (Liddiard) | 3:53 |
10. | "Your Acting's Like the End of the World" | 5:21 |
Chart (2008) | Peak position |
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ARIA Albums Chart [26] | 47 |
The Drones were an Australian rock band, formed in Perth by mainstay lead vocalist and guitarist Gareth Liddiard in 1997. Fiona Kitschin, his domestic partner, joined on bass guitar and vocals in 2002. Other long-term members include Rui Pereira on bass guitar and then lead guitar; Mike Noga on drums, vocals, harmonica and percussion; and Dan Luscombe on lead guitar, vocals and keyboards. Their second album, Wait Long by the River and the Bodies of Your Enemies Will Float By, won the inaugural Australian Music Prize. In October 2010 their third studio album, Gala Mill was listed at No. 21 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums. Two of their albums have reached the top 20 on the ARIA Albums Chart, I See Seaweed and Feelin Kinda Free. The group went on hiatus in December 2016 with Kitschin and Liddiard forming a new group, Tropical Fuck Storm, in the following year.
Daniel O Kelly, known as Dan Kelly, is an Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist. He has released music as part of Dan Kelly and the Alpha Males.
Gala Mill is the third studio album by Australian band the Drones, which was released in September 2006. Recorded in an abandoned mill in Tasmania, it was their last album to feature founding member Rui Pereira and the first to feature Mike Noga on drums. The music, which makes "an epic leap beyond garage rock", adds influences from folk rock and contemporary folk music to their usual punk blues style. Gareth Liddiard's lyrics for the album are centered more on Australia's colonial and recent history, evident in tracks such as "Jezebel", "Words From The Executioner To Alexander Pearce" and "Sixteen Straws".
Wait Long by the River and the Bodies of Your Enemies Will Float By is the second album released by the Drones. Recorded "100% live", the album draws influence from the likes of Neil Young and Rowland S. Howard, though it has been described by lead singer/guitarist Gareth Liddiard himself as a punk rock album. The lyrics, penned by Liddiard deal with issues such as death, depression and alcoholism in its depiction of Australian working class life.
Gareth Liddiard is an Australian musician, best known as a founding member of both The Drones and Tropical Fuck Storm. Musically active since 1997, he also released a solo album titled Strange Tourist in 2010.
The Miller's Daughter is a compilation album released by Perth band The Drones. The album compiles outtakes from the band's first two full-length releases and their first few non-album singles.
Here Come the Lies is the debut album released by Perth band The Drones.
The Drones performed for two nights at the Annandale Hotel in Sydney, Australia in October 2007. Both nights were recorded with the intention of releasing a limited live album. Live at the Annandale Hotel 18th, 19th October 2007 is the first in a series of live albums produced by the Annandale Hotel music venue. This vinyl-exclusive release was limited to 250 hand-numbered, autographed copies.
Robert Francis Cranny is a musician, songwriter and record producer based in Sydney, Australia.
Paul Kelly is an Australian rock musician. He started his career in 1974 in Hobart, Tasmania, and has performed as a solo artist, in bands as a member or has led bands named after himself. Some backing bands recorded their own material under alternate names, Professor Ratbaggy and Stardust Five, with Kelly as an individual member. As of September 2017, Paul Kelly's current band members are Cameron Bruce on keyboards and piano, Vika and Linda Bull on backing vocals and lead vocals, his nephew Dan Kelly on lead guitar and backing vocals, Peter Luscombe on drums and Bill McDonald on bass guitar.
Burke Reid is an Australian record producer and musician.
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Feelin Kinda Free is the sixth studio album from Australian band The Drones, and their final one before going on hiatus. Having grown tired with the more rock-oriented sound of the band up until that point, frontman Gareth Liddiard became fascinated with both vintage and modern electronic equipment - ranging from drum machines and samplers to the Teenage Engineering OP-1 synthesizer - in conceiving the album's sound. Its genre-defying musical style has been described as visceral and ominous, featuring a relative absence of guitars and a prominent use of electronic textures. Its sessions also marked the first appearance of drummer Christian Strybosch since 2005's Wait Long by the River and the Bodies of Your Enemies Will Float By.
Daniel Francis Luscombe is an Australian guitarist, producer, and composer. He has collaborated with many musicians, been a member of several bands, including The Blackeyed Susans, The Drones, and Dan Kelly and the Alpha Males, and has composed music for films and TV.
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