Dallas Crane
Factory Girls
What did Andy Warhol's mid
'60s lair on East 47th Street have in common with the Rolling
Stones' classic Beggars Banquet album of '68?
To any moderate pop culture
obsessive, the answer would be something to do with Factory Girls.
In Warhol's entourage, they were glamorous wannabe superstars
caught in a whirlwind of sex, drugs and high society. On the Stones
album, she was a salt-of-the-earth wench on her way to the pub,
a stray cat with fat knees and a headscarf sketched in gritty
acoustic blues.
These Factory Girls,
the ones comprising Dallas Crane's second album for Albert Productions,
seem to come from somewhere in between. There's no specific debt
to Keef or Andy, but you'd have to be deaf not to hear a timeless
echo of pop art and low life, style and danger, sleaze and power,
filth and beauty, lovers and sinners.
Dallas Crane have spent
a decade honing these and other mysterious elements down to the
raw essentials you hear on this record. In a very real sense,
the 12 songs on Factory Girls have been simmering over a slow
heat, till every drop of fat has fallen from their bones.
Or, in singer/ guitarist
Dave Larkin's more economical turn of phrase, "What you hear
on the record, we want to be able to play live."
"We've sort of gone
the opposite way to most bands," says the band's other singer/
guitarist, Pete Satchell. "A lot of bands start off very
minimal and get more complex. We started off really complex and
we've gradually stripped it all right back.
"When we sat down
to write again, we really tried to boil it down: What are the
elements that make a classic song a classic song?" Pete counts
off three fingers with curiously familiar names: "Melody,
groove and harmony."
Bassist Pat Bourke: "We've
also started to really understand how less is more: the bass,
guitars and drums have got to work together, bounce off each other,
but stay out of each other's way. That's the big challenge."
Hence the deceptively
demanding rules of engagement on Dallas Crane's finest 38 minutes
to date. There's barely a song that strays past 3½ minutes,
not a single chorus that fails to instantly transform your blood
chemistry, not one superfluous beat or riff that doesn't know
its precise place and purpose.
For starters, "Marsanne"
is pure, electric rock'n'roll compressed to the kind of fundamentals
that could make Lou Reed crack a smile: a pair of variously distorted
guitars, a bass-line that entwines them like bondage trousers,
a drum sound to make your spine crack, a chorus big enough to
sing the first time around and a solo that kicks in like all your
Friday nights at once.
And the partys
just begun. "Tonight (There's A Party Goin' Down)" is
a rush of gleefully malevolent intent, a burst of sheer, irresponsible
hedonism that strikes at the heart of Dallas Crane's unwritten
manifesto. The explosive sonic hurricane of "Curiosity"
the track that gives Factory Girls its title delves
deep into the forbidden fruits of desire, bloodstained stilletos
and all that surrounds it.
The sleazy metallic edges
of "Lovers & Sinners" and "Two Can Play At
This Game" contrast with the sky-bound pop harmonies of "Black
Angels"; "Teenage Superpot" and "Matter of
Time" twist rock n roll and Motown beats to their
own sinister ends; "Muddy Water" dips into some of that
classic Haight Ashbury jangle.
"Kiss It All Goodbye"
blends a straight Bo Diddley-style stomp with a lone, demented
guitar meandering round the right channel like it's in the throes
of indecision; "God Damn Pride" is a song of comfort
that extends a branch to a drowning man, then offers to break
his jaw. "Keep Your Head High Bella Mae" ends on a Faces
meets The Band high, complete with a wall of Beach Boys harmony.
In short, Factory Girls
finds Dallas Crane at the top of their game, which is hardly surprising
considering how they got this far: with little more than self
belief and an incurable passion for the sticky carpet of a live
stage.
For those who
came in late
Dave, Pete and drummer
Shan Vanderwert made their first album, Lent, eight years ago.
They hit the road hard, famously bonding with You Am I en route
to a second self-determined album, Twenty Four Seven, in late
2000, which entitled them to, well, play a whole lot more gigs.
In '02 the band signed
a rare deal with Albert Productions, the legendary Australian
label thats handled AC/DCs world-conquering catalogue
for 30-odd years. Their self-titled album was the first to properly
reflect Dallas Crane's official status, as bestowed by the Australian
Live Music Awards, as the country's Best Live Band. At the 2004
ARIA Awards it was nominated for three awards, including Best
Rock Album.
Factory Girls began to
take shape late last year with producers Jonathan Burnside (Sleepy
Jackson, Eskimo Joe) and Wayne Connolly (The Vines, You Am I)
at Eastern Bloc Studios in Melbourne. Connolly joined them for
additional sessions at Alberts in 2006 before Jonathan and the
band reconvened to mix in Melbourne.
The result is an album
that brings long-held perceptions of Dallas Crane in line with
reality at last, and yet again raises the stakes for Australia's
most consistent and committed rock'n'roll band.
As Pat Bourke puts it,
"we haven't taken a backward step, ever. We've always progressed,
every step of the way, and were still climbing."
Track by Track
With Dave Larkin and
Pete Satchell
Tonight (There's A Party
Goin' Down)
"It's a soundtrack
to getting excited about what might be about to happen in the
night ahead, possibly with a pocket full of illicit substances."
Marsanne
"That's a girl's
name. Inspired by the wine she used to drink."
Lovers &
Sinners
"That's about being
a Gemini. Neither left nor right."
God Damn Pride
"You know when you
need to say something to someone but it's kind of uncomfortable
doing it to their face? It's about venting your state of mind
about a certain situation."
Kiss It All
Goodbye
The verse is the grievance
and the chorus is the solution."
Curiosity
"It's about having
fun with the deep, dark recesses of the human soul. "
Black Angels
"Not so far off
the vein of Unlucky Star. Bad luck attracts certain people."
Teenage Superpot
"That stems from
a 60 Minutes report we saw, freaking out about a certain kind
of marijuana. It was basically a sensationalist scare campaign
so we thought we'd pick up the theme and run with."
Matter of Time
"It's a bit of an
anthem for hedonism. Get on with it, don't waste too much time
thinking about it, just do it."
Two Can Play at This
Game
"It's kind of taking
the sentiment of a revenge anthem and turning it into something
more loving, like, two can play at making love to each other rather
than tearing each other's life apart."
Muddy Water
This came together in
Vietnam, sitting on a beach and feeling pretty good. It was just
after the rain so hence the metaphor of muddy water.
Keep Your Head High Bella
Mae
Pete had a verse progression,
Dave had a chorus and they sounded so up when we put 'em together
we knew we had a positive song on our hands. We know a girl called
Mae and Dave's sister is Bella, so we stuck 'em together."
Dallas Crane: The Factory
Girls Tour
FREE GIG ON FACTORY GIRLS DAY
So, Dallas Crane's new album Factory Girls will
be landing on September 16 and word is just in that the guys will
be marking the occasion with an instore signing and performance
at JB HiFi in Bourke St, Melbourne on the big day. The good times
kick off at 2pm but try get there early because apparently numbers
will be limited. The new album AND a free gig - it doesn't get
much better than that! See you there.
GET READY TO RUMBLE:
DC TAKE THE NEW LADIES ON THE ROAD
To celebrate the release of Factory Girls, Dallas Crane are hitting
the road throughout September and October to play their sexy new
musical ladies, classics and fan faves for all you rock n' roll
luvahs out there!!! Support will be from The Exploders and Devil
Rock Four. Tix on sale Friday, September 1.
Thursday, September 28 - Bar on the
Hill, Newcastle
Friday, September 29 - The Metro, Sydney
Saturday, September 30 - The Zoo, Brisbane
Thursday, October 5 - The Governor Hindmarsh,
Adelaide
Friday, October 6 - Hi-Fi Bar, Melbourne
Saturday, October 7 - Peninsula Lounge,
Melbourne