Showing posts with label Midnight OIl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Midnight OIl. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Australians Don't Want To Hear New Australian Music Anymore

"Australians don't want to hear new Australian music anymore" is a statement of fact, as far as streaming stats and radio plays go, but it's not the full story. 


Australia's live scene isn't totally dead yet, and new Australian bands and artists are still building their local audiences and breaking through internationally, mostly via YouTube and Spotify playlists.

But meanwhile, the biggest radio stations remain in Retro Mode, clocking up more plays for 40 year old songs from INXS, Cold Chisel and Midnight Oil than any new Australian music released in the past few years. 

Why? 

Primarily because they're all trying to play it safe now and most of their audience is 50-90 year olds, and they mostly only want to be reminded of the songs that were important to them, when they were young.

Just wanted to make that clear up front.

From The Music

"For the second year in a row, an Australian single failed to top the ARIA charts.

Indeed, just one homegrown hit reached the Top 10 – Dom Dolla’s Saving Up spent a solitary week at number 10 in February.

ARIA’s Top 100 for 2024 features five Australian singles, led by Vance Joy’s Riptide at number 24. It spent an impressive 39 weeks in the Top 40. The only problem is … it was released in 2013."

Full Story From The Music Is Here

But Australians, as always, are still listening to an enormous amount of music, generally, and still buying new CDS and vinyl:

The Australian recorded music industry posted its sixth consecutive year of growth in 2024, with wholesale sales rising 6.1% to $717 million.

New data released today by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) shows the industry growth was fuelled by both physical and digital sales, with total digital sales outpacing physical at 6.5% compared to 2.1%. The digital market now represents $656 million, or 91.5% of the total market.

Subscription services continue to be the dominant force at play, increasing their market share by another two percentage points to represent 71.0% of Australia’s total music market, or $509 million, a figure 8.9% larger than 2023. Ad supported streaming models slowed dramatically however, from a 15.3% jump in revenue in 2023 to just 1.9% growth in 2024.

And yet, for all the huge audiences and numbers here, Australian music is not topping our own charts regularly anymore, and international artists get the majority of attention from young Australian music lovers. 

We had it good, so very good it turns out, in the 1970s-1990s. 

The once reliable live music circuit of 1000s of pubs, clubs and other gigs that stretched all across Australia is mostly gone now. Radio stations like JJJ and MMMFM that once played new singles by The Baby Animals or Spiderbait 30 or times a week, now try to "break" new Australians acts with maybe 10 plays a week, or 20 if they're really lucky. That doesn't work. The songs don't get into peoples' heads and become a part of their life.

Australia had a thriving live music scene, and very healthy music sales, for decades, because bands had the enormous number of gigs to get good; they had passionate radio station support; a huge network of hype-friendly music media and many, many young people who wanted to travel 1-2 hours to a gig on a Tuesday or Wednesday night, regardless of the weather. 

I don't know what the solution is, or how Australian music gets back what it once had, but it's a subject i will return to here. 

I wrote a set of lyrics on all this and demoed a bunch of tunes from my words and thoughts with Suno and Udio.

"Australians don't want to hear
new Australian music anymore
Just 40 year old songs from INXS
Cold Chisel and Midnight Oil

Radio don't care about the new bands
Or any of their songs
This retro repeat nightmare
has been going on too long

It's been 40 fkng years long"

Version One: 




Friday, February 19, 2010

Peter Garrett Quits Politics, Rejoins Midnight Oil



Come back here in February 2011 and tell me I'm wrong.

At every gig, for years to come, there'll be at least one person in the audience shout-singing, "How can we sleep while our batts are burning!"

Miranda Devine will do it, at least once. With Tim Blair on her shoulders.

The Chaser said farewell to Peter Garrett's political career in 2008



(the above image was screengrabbed from a larger banner here)

UPDATE : Philip Coorey, in the Sydney Morning Herald, hoses down the rumours :
Mr Rudd has no intention of shifting Mr Garrett. Sources close to the Prime Minister say Mr Garrett has defended himself inside and outside the Parliament better than anybody anticipated.



Wednesday, September 16, 2009

How Can We Sleep While The Earth Is Weeping?

By Darryl Mason

I don't know about you, but this is one of the stupidest fucking things I've heard this year :

A Midnight Oil hit advocating Aboriginal land rights in the '80s is being used in the noughties to mobilise nations to combat climate change.

The band's former frontman and now Environment Minister, Peter Garrett, helped write new lyrics to Beds Are Burning, as part of the celebrity-led initiative.

Yes, Bob Geldof is involved. So is Duran Duran. Nothing in music is sacred, not even a Midnight Oil song that helped to bring the idea of Aboriginal reconciliation to a new, more open-minded, less bigoted generation. The only consolation I suppose is that Bono isn't involved.

Well, not yet anyway.

The original Beds Are Burning lyrics....

''Out where the river broke/The blood wood and the desert oak/Holden wrecks and boiling diesels/Steam in 45 degrees''.

....have become :

''Down at the river bed/The earth is cracked and dry instead/Farms a failing, cities baking/Steam in 45 degrees.''

This :

"The time has come/A fact's a fact/It belongs to them/Let's give it back."

Has become this :

''The time has come/A fact's a fact/The heat is on/No turning back.''

"The Heat Is On"? Someone call Glenn Frey!

Garrett won't be singing on the rebake, and it will be given away online.

In a few years time, if global warming doesn't turn out to be the "clear, catastrophic threat" that Rupert Murdoch predicted, and the Earth turns more icy than melty, Midnight Oil could always rewrite the lyrics to Cold Cold Change.



Great fucking song. By the way, Cold Cold Change is now 30 years old.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

I Stand By The Lyrics That I Don't Believe In Anymore

Last weekend, Peter Garrett went some way towards repairing the damage he wrought upon die-hard Midnight Oil fans, when he entered Parliament and gave the impression that he didn't stand by the songs he'd sung and recorded with the Oils, and that he saw himself in the band as just a performer, nothing more.

During a press conference before the Sound Relief gig, the Minister for the Environment announced this disclaimer :

“I think that you can look at lyrics out of any songs and clearly, there are going to be lines there that pertain to any human situation. But the songs stand in their own right and in their own time.”

Wait a minute, he's still saying he doesn't believe in the lyrics he put his voice and his name to. Not anymore, anyway.

The Sound Relief gigs held in Sydney and Melbourne, which also saw performances by Jet, Kylie Minogue, Hoodoo Gurus, The Presets and WolfMother, amongst the dozens of acts, raised more than $5 million for the victims of the Victorian Fires.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

I Stand By The Lyrics That I Don't Believe In Anymore

Last weekend, Peter Garrett went some way towards repairing the damage he wrought upon die-hard Midnight Oil fans, when he entered Parliament and gave the impression that he didn't stand by the songs he'd sung and recorded with the Oils, and that he saw himself in the band as just a performer, nothing more.

During a press conference before the Sound Relief gig, the Minister for the Environment announced this disclaimer :

“I think that you can look at lyrics out of any songs and clearly, there are going to be lines there that pertain to any human situation. But the songs stand in their own right and in their own time.”

Wait a minute, he's still saying he doesn't believe in the lyrics he put his voice and his name to. Not anymore, anyway.

The Sound Relief gigs held in Sydney and Melbourne, which also saw performances by Jet, Kylie Minogue, Hoodoo Gurus, The Presets and WolfMother, amongst the dozens of acts, raised more than $5 million for the victims of the Victorian Fires.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Maybe He Could Mime The Words Instead?

Pundits and oppo-pols are having lots of fun imagining what songs are going to fill up the 20 minute set that Midnight Oil will play at the Bushfire Relief gig in March. Any Midnight Oil fan will know that there are dozens of songs, and some of their most famous, that the current Environment Minister won't want to be seen singing now he's a professional politician, and no longer apparently believes that nuclear energy, logging and the 'US' are evil incarnate.

Of course, The Chaser anticipated exactly this kind of quandry for Peter Garrett back in mid-2007.



But Midnight Oil will only be playing a 20 minute set, and the following Oils classic will cause Garrett no political headaches, plus it will fill a good chunk of the running time :



Even though Garrett's jerking-electric shock dance moves are seared into the national consciousness, it's still going to be a little strange to see a senior minister in the federal government rocking out onstage like that. It's a good cause, though, and it's pretty obvious Peter Garrett is hugely missing the addictive buzz of performing for an audience, in front of such a truly great band as the Oils.

My pick for the list, jokes about doing only instrumentals aside, will be some of the blasting, mostly politics-free songs off 1979's raucous Head Injuries album (Bus To Bondi for example), and the soaring anthem 'One Country', the lyrics of which follows :
Who'd like to change the world, who wants to shoot the curl
Who gets to work for bread, who wants to get ahead
Who hands out equal rights, who starts and ends that fight
And not not rant and rave, or end up a slave
Who can make hard won gains, fall like the summer rain
Now every man must be, what his life can be

So dont call, me, the tune, I will walk away

Who wants to please everyone, who says it all can be done
Still sit up on that fence, no-one Ive heard of yet
Dont call me baby, dont talk in maybes
Dont talk like has-beens, sing it like it should be
Who laughs at the nagging doubt, lying on a neon shroud
Just gotta touch someone, I want to be

Who wants to sit around, turn it up turn it down
Only a man can be, what his life can be
One vision, one people, one landmass, we are defenceless, we have a lifeline
One ocean, one policy, seabed lies, one passion, one movement, one instant
One difference, one lifetime, one understanding
Transgression, redemption, one island, our placemat, one firmament
One element, one moment, one fusion, yes and one time




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