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Hunters and Collectors
Hunters
And Collectors carved a unique path and place for themselves in
Australian rock culture. The group was originally formed in post-punk
1981 in Melbourne as a collective
rather than a band, an excursion into funk-rock rhythms and industrial
Kraut-rock. (They named themselves after a song by Can). They ended
up the thinking man's pub band.
Growing out
of an earlier inner-suburban Melbourne group, The Jetsonnes, Hunters
And Collectors' early performances are remembered as chaotic, with
audience members encouraged to join in on the banging of rubbish
bin lids or fire extinguishers. The extended line-up included a
massed horn section known as the Horns Of Contempt. Inside all this
was singer Mark Seymour, with an ear for a melody and a taste for
lyrical poetry. But for the moment even the lyrics were a shared
expression.
Illustrating
the dichotomy at work in July 1982 the band's first single 'Talking
To A Stranger' featured a concise edited version of the song on
one side and a full length seven minute version on the other side.
The single's theme of alienation and anguish is one the band would
return to, but for the moment the group's emphasis was the free-form
side of their work. Their sound engineer was considered an official
band member.
In a sign of
the times, Mushroom Records specifically created White Records to
house Hunters And Collectors, a new 'alternative' label for artists
determined to control their own musical destinies.
The Hunters'
first, self-titled album was produced by Tony Cohen. The Hunters'
reputation spread to Europe where a stripped-back band spent six
months in 1983, recording a second album 'The Fireman's Curse' in
Germany with producer Connie Plank (Can, Kraftwerk). Pruned back
to its essentials the band recorded another album with Plank, 'The
Jaws Of Life' and a single-only song 'Throw Your Arms Around Me'
in the 'Talking To A Stranger' mould. Hunters And Collectors was
at a crossroads.
After a live
album came 'Human Frailty' where singer Mark Seymour's themes of
alienation and sexual politics came to the fore. The band had discovered
how to tap the unique vein they had unearthed; where, in a sweat-dripping
venue packed to the rafters with a beer swilling macho rock fans
the audience would and could at the top of their voices unselfconsciously
sing along to a chorus like "you don't make me feel like a woman
any more".
A newly recorded
'Throw Your
Arms Around Me' (YouTube) became one of the undisputed classic
songs of Australian rock, and from now until their end Hunters And
Collectors would remain one of Australian rock's favourite live
attractions. The shifting line-up consolidated around the group's
evolved style, a passionately-voiced exploration into the human
condition, supported by street-credible rock and roll.
While successive
studio albums did their best to extend Mark's themes and explore
new sounds to varying degrees of success, adding to the group's
national and worldwide status, more than anything it was the live
performances fans were waiting for. With each new album it was increasingly
the older material radio wanted to play. In the end Hunters And
Collectors was strangled by its own legend.
In 1998
the band announced they were recording their final album, 'Juggernaut',
and supported it with a farewell tour. Mark Seymour released a solo
album 'King Without A Clue', continuing his relentless search for
meaning through song. When one Sunday in Melbourne sound man John
Archer auctioned off the personally-designed PA which had been carried
by the band for almost twenty years it signalled not just the end
of Hunters And Collectors but the end also of Australian music's
post punk era.
Mark Seymour
has embarked on a solo career.
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