
Australian Made
King Brown
Sound Planet Records
www.reverbnation.com/kingbrown1
When far-right extremist Anders Behring Breivik went on a mass killing spree in Norway on July 22, he was listening on his headphones to "Lux Aeterna", a mournful piece of music by British film soundtrack composer Clint Mansell.
A more appropriate Mansell composition might have been 鈥淚ch Bin Ein Auslander鈥, written by the musician when he was fronting cartoonish electronic indie rockers Pop Will Eat Itself in the 1990s.
Translating from the German as 鈥淚 Am An Outsider鈥 it was, ironically, an anti-Nazi song.
The song also resonates deeply with a certain extreme outsider here in Australia.
鈥淚鈥檝e always been an 鈥楢uslander',鈥 says Aboriginal noise terrorist King Brown, also known as Damion Hunter. 鈥淣o one seems to like the shit I like to the degree I like it at.鈥
Like Mansell, Hunter does not seem to fit neatly inside any category. Raised in the far north-west mining town of Karratha, the Pop Will Eat Itself fanatic has played in thrash metal bands in Perth, acted in everything from staged Shakespeare to BBC dramas, written numerous film scripts and says he has a killer idea for an album built around his banjo.
Yet he has just released a very different album from his new home in Sydney鈥檚 Blue Mountains that is characteristically indefinable. Falling somewhere between brutal heavy metal, pop parody and block-rocking hip hop, Australian Made is an album that would make sense to the genre-bending Mansell.
Equally, Breivik's decision to choose Mansell鈥檚 music to commit murder to holds a twisted logic for Hunter.
鈥淚 guess it kind of makes sense,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e writes some really ambient stuff that really gets into your head and under your skin 鈥 I think [Nine Inch Nails frontman] Trent Reznor鈥檚 soundtrack to Quake would have been a better choice. But hey鈥︹
That same dark humour is abundant on Hunter鈥檚 album. Going for laughs is a brave choice, considering humour rarely works in music. It鈥檚 a problem that even prompted one of its most successful exponents, Frank Zappa, to release an album titled 鈥淒oes Humour Belong in Music?鈥
So, does it?
鈥淎bsolutely,鈥 says Hunter. 鈥淢usic is supposed to affect people. Otherwise we wouldn鈥檛 listen to it. We are stupid to act like humour isn鈥檛 an emotion that affects us all the time. It does.
鈥淎nd I enjoy humour. I get my drama and hurt and stress and love and heartbreak and anger from life. I escape to music for all the other stuff to help forget about it all.
鈥淚鈥檓 here on Earth to enjoy life. Music helps me do that.鈥
King Brown鈥檚 comedy is at its strongest on the super-stoned 鈥淟et's Go Smoke Some Hooch鈥. He and fellow rapper KILLMONKEY carry off a nuttily narcotic call-and-answer routine that sounds totally improvised yet is so well-written it can't have been adlibbed.
鈥淲e did it in a day,鈥 he says. 鈥淜ILLMONKEY and I laid down our vocals in about three takes. We had a lot of fun and laughter that we decided to keep in there just because it made us laugh. We found a lot of new things in the song.
鈥淲e ended up, on the day, trying to entertain each other and make each other laugh, so hopefully it makes the listeners laugh also.鈥
But there is a serious side to Australian Made. On the hard-hitting 鈥淗unter鈥, King Brown spits venom, sinking his fangs into 鈥減oliticians, crackers, fool players鈥 and 鈥減layer haters鈥.
鈥淵eah, that was just an adlib rant while I was recording,鈥 he says. 鈥淭o paraphrase it, it could also read 鈥榌far-right politician] Pauline Hanson, bigots/rednecks, tryhards/posers, people who hate [Aboriginal champion boxer] Anthony Mundine鈥.
鈥淕enerally, [they were] the first things that popped into my head at the time. It could have just as easily been other people or things. But who doesn鈥檛 hate those guys?鈥
The album also has seriously heavy moments, not least in the down and dirty 鈥淐ross For Ya鈥.
鈥淲ell, I used to spend a lot of time in [Sydney鈥檚] Kings Cross,鈥 says Hunter. 鈥淲ell ... not a lot of time, but certainly enough time.
鈥淎 good friend of mine [Morgan O鈥橬eil] was making a movie [the contract-killing film noir, Solo] and he wanted to get some of my tracks on the soundtrack. This song was born out of this process, so I thank Morgs very much, it鈥檚 actually one of my favourite songs.鈥
鈥淐ross For Ya鈥 has been getting plenty of radio play, along with another infectious head-nodder, 鈥淔ive Minutes From Now鈥. The song鈥檚 wailing, drowning guitars are punctuated by an insistent, nagging question: 鈥淲here ya gonna be five minutes from now? Five months from now? Five years from now? How ya gonna get there? How? How?鈥
鈥淚 wanted to show a bit more depth on this one,鈥 says Hunter. 鈥淚 wanted to tell my story how I saw it at that time and how I see it now still, I guess. It is what it is.
鈥淚鈥檓 trying to make my way in life out of creativity and I鈥檓 hungry to make it happen, I鈥檓 sick of living hand-to-mouth and I鈥檓 sick of being depressed.鈥
Yet is hardly anything to be depressed about. When asked about his acting, he replies in a similarly gloomy manner: 鈥淚 have been known to tread the boards, but that ain鈥檛 solid, it comes and goes, ebbs and flows.鈥
However, when pushed, he reveals he has just fulfilled one of his dreams by playing Aboriginal freedom fighter Jandamarra in a . The play was even staged in Bandilngan 鈥 Windjana Gorge, where Jandamarra fought a legendary pitched battle with police and pastoralists in 1894.
Talking about it seems to awaken a strength in Hunter.
鈥淭his role was on my bucket list to portray for many, many years now,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o I was very proud to be asked to do this job, playing Jandamarra himself.
鈥淗is was the most successful campaign to defend Aboriginal land in Australia鈥檚 history. He was eventually shot dead at the age of 24.
鈥淭he show was incredible. The reviews were great. Not a dry eye in the house. I was very proud to be such a big part of such a heroic success. Hopefully we can do it again on a national level.
鈥淚鈥檓 very thankful to be part of telling his story. His story is slowly coming to the surface. He really was a hero and a warrior.鈥
The tour also came across some modern-day heroes and warriors in Broome, where protesters were railing against Woodside Petroleum鈥檚 proposed gas hub at James Price Point.
鈥淭hese are decisions that affect this environment and therefore the likelihoods of a lot of Indigenous and non-indigenous people to the area,鈥 says Hunter. 鈥淭hese are the people that would have more understanding of the value of the land and should be deciding themselves where these projects should go.
鈥淚鈥檓 no expert on the subject, but I鈥檝e seen what industry has done to my home town, Karratha. So fight the power.鈥
As for his latest acting project, it seems he is again venturing into Pop Will Eat Itself territory by juggling art, crime and sport. The Poppies released the single 鈥淭ouched By The Hand Of Cicciolina鈥 in a campaign to get Italian sex actress and politician Ia Cicciolina to present the 1990 FIFA World Cup to the winning team. Hunter is playing 1980s Aussie rules star Jimmy Krakouer in the Killing Time.
鈥淗e was a famous footballer who got done for a massive haul of drug trafficking, the biggest of the time in the early-mid nineties,鈥 says Hunter. 鈥淭rue story. So I got to work with [Lord of the Rings actor] David Wenham. That was really cool.鈥
Appropriately, Hunter also closes his album by covering Pop Will Eat Itself鈥檚 鈥淔uses" 鈥 yet, cryptically, the song does not appear on the album鈥檚 tracklisting.
鈥淚 do have kind permission to reproduce it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 asked the band if I could cover it 鈥 but not the record company, so I don鈥檛 know where I stand on the copyright issue.
鈥淚 wanna do a punk version for live shows. The track I鈥檝e done is good for listening, but that鈥檚 not what live shows are about. Live shows are for moving.鈥
[To win a copy of Australian Made, just email your details to聽ward.mat@gmail.com before the next issue of 麻豆传媒 Weekly comes out. Winner picked at random. Download free King Brown tracks at: http://www.triplejunearthed.com/KingBrown1.]
Video:聽Cross for Ya.聽.
Video:聽King Brown: Five Minutes From Now.聽.