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Youthful naivety can
produce flashes of rock & roll excitement, but genuine
experience and the passage of time can turn a good band into
a truly great one. Now, eight years on from when the young
Fremantle trio leapt onto the national stage, Eskimo Joe are
taking a big, bold step towards Australian music greatness
with their third album, Black Fingernails, Red Wine .
“I always think of
things in a concept-record kind of way. So I wanted to make
a record as if we were a stadium rock band,” explains songwriter
and bassist Kav Temperley. “If we were like INXS, what kind
of record would I want to write?”
Black Fingernails,
Red Wine is a brazen step forward for a band borne of
a scene that doesn't always encourage grand statements. But
Kav Temperley, Stu MacLeod and Joel Quartermain have never
been ones to ascribe to the status quo. Now more than ever
at home in their own skin, the trio raise the bar set by 2004's
double-platinum, ARIA Award-winning A Song is a City
with a new album that soars with unashamed, unguarded personality.
Oh, not to mention equally great pop songs.
“I had it in my head,
‘Right, I'm going to go away and write a total rock record.
If I'm going to do it once in my life, this is going to be
the time,'” Temperley explains. “And with the whole record,
we've tried really consciously to not be self-conscious in
our songwriting. It's really easy to want to play it cool
– and as soon as you do, the songs always suffer.”
Armed with fully realised
demos of songs written over the past two years, the trio spent
half of summer at The Grove Studios, in remote bushland on
the N.S.W. Central Coast, crafting an album from their solid
blueprints. Enlisting the talented engineer Matt Lovell (The
Mess Hall, Jebediah, Sleepy Jackson), Eskimo Joe also stepped
up to the desk and took on production duties for the first
time. “It took a bit for all three of us to come around to
that idea, because it's a bit more responsibility,” admits
Quartermain. “But in the end we backed ourselves and it worked
well.”
As such, the 12 tracks
of Black Fingernails, Red Wine not only showcase
a startling development in Temperley's songwriting, but shine
the spotlight on the entire band's expertise with arrangements.
No track is given more than it needs; while throbbing drums,
warm keyboard atmospheres and ethereal guitars offer enduring
depth without weighing down the melodies. From the memorable
and haunting keyboard hook of “Comfort You” to the closing
piano-tinged melancholy of “How Does It Feel”, it's a captivating
and complete listen.
“We've always strived
to have a cohesive thread or tone through our albums,” says
MacLeod. “The first couple of songs we wrote seemed to have
a bit of a feel to them; they were darker and had a bit of
a dramatic, almost theatrical edge. So we continued that through
the rest of the songs.”
The bold production
brushstrokes cleverly reflect material that has, thematically,
just as much personality on display. If A Song is a City
was a metaphorical study of Temperley's life and those
within it, Black Fingernails, Red Wine takes a more
universal stance, the singer confidently slipping in and out
of character. Succinct yet subtle, the songs hit you immediately
and then steadily creep into your consciousness.
“I sat down to write
a more pop-rock record, as opposed to just writing emotional
Kav stuff,” Temperley laughs. “It was time to put a bit more
smoke and mirrors back into the whole thing.”
So, after eight years
together, some lesser bands may ponder what roads are left
to travel. As Eskimo Joe prove, there's a whole world of possibilities
to explore – if you simply follow your heart, listen
to your muse and make the most of your talent. And Black
Fingernails, Red Wine is the ambitious sound of a trio
that has grown, both inside the studio and out.
“No-one in our band
is in it for their ego; it's all about the songs,” says MacLeod.
“We're very lucky to have this relationship between the three
of us; it's getting stronger and stronger, and it's much more
of a brotherhood now than it ever was.”
Black
Fingernails, Red Wine
instores
now
Tourdates
click
here
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