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Interview With: Brad
Shepherd - Monarchs, Hoodoo Gurus
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Brad
Shepherd discusses his new band - The Monarchs, as well
as his long history - including his time with the Fun Things,
the Hitmen and of course, the Hoodoo Gurus. (Recorded October,
2001)
The interview
is in RealVideo format. You will need a 56K modem or better,
and a RealVideo player - click the icon below if you don't
have one.

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Below is an
excerpt from the interview.
EN.
When did it get serious?
BS. The
Fun Things put out an EP but it still wasn't that serious.
I'd met Ron
Peno (from Died Pretty) who'd been playing in bands in Sydney like
the Hellcats and was attached to the radio Birdman crowd. He just
appeared in Brisbane one day - a real exotic creature who looked
for all the world like Iggy Pop should look - and we struck up a
firm friendship. He had a band called the 31st with Mick Medew and
Mick Walsh. Ron coerced them into letting me join but you know,
we just wanted to hang out together and be in our own gang.
Ron and I came
down to Sydney to try and organise some shows. I was 19 at the time
and realised that I didn't want to go back to Brisbane, so I stayed.
As a kid I'd been to see Chris Masuak's band, post Radio Birdman,
when they played in Brisbane and I'd managed to ingratiate myself
with the guys - Chris blew up his amp at the Jindalee Hotel one
evening and as good fortune would have it I'd just been to a rehearsal
and had the old 100 watt amp in the back of the car. So a couple
of months later when I was down in Sydney, Frank Coxall of the Record
Plant said 'You're that guy from the Fun Things aren't you? Chris
Masuak is chasing you - the Hitmen have just lost a guitar player
and want to know if you're interested."
EN.
And were you?
BS.
I actually ummed and ahhed for a few days because Rob Younger was
getting a band together. He had a band called The Other Side post
Birdman with a guy who had just become my flatmate - Clyde Bramley.
Their guitarist was a geologist who had moved to north Queensland
to work, so they were going to put a new band together and wanted
me to join them, but I ended up with the Hitmen for a couple of
years.
EN.
And what was that like?
BS.
The Hitmen were very much a hard rock band. It was a great band
and I kind of view it as an apprenticeship. It was my dream come
true. I was a huge Radio Birdman fan as a teenager in Brisbane and
they had opened a whole new world to me. I'd never heard of bands
like Blue Oyster Cult and the Stooges and MC5 but I discovered all
those bands through Radio Birdman and then I started listening to
the stuff those bands were listening to and discovered sixties punk
- the Standells, The Leads, The Seeds and The Music Machine. Radio
Birdman was a real catalyst for my musical education, so when all
of a sudden I was in a band with these guys that had been there,
it really was a dream come true.
EN.
Did they carry any of the Radio Birdman ethic with them?
BS.
Yes and no. There was a sort of 'backs against the wall' / 'us against
them' mentality in the Hitmen, but Chris was also aware that Radio
Birdman took itself very seriously and at heart the guys in the
Hitmen were just goofballs. We related more to the Dictators than
to MC5 in spirit. There was a lot of cars and girls and beer drinking
silliness going on. We were really good mates and had a ball. I
was only in the band for 20 months but we toured a lot - it was
a good band and a lot of fun.
The reason
I left was something that came completely out of left field. We
were having problems recording our second album. We weren't really
happy with the direction the producers were taking it and were confounded
a bit in the studio. Chris's response (from my perspective) was
to take charge to the exclusion of everybody else in the band. I
found that pretty isolating considering I'd written a fair proportion
of the material with Chris. Although we were good mates - he was
like a big brother to me - all of a sudden I felt like I had no
control and was expendable.
This happened
about the time the Hoodoo Gurus had just started and I was a big
fan of theirs. I'd seen them play a couple of shows very early on
- 3 guitars, drums, no bass....
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