Tim Rogers: 'They could do that big stage thing', On Michael Hutchence and INXS, ABC Arts - 2019

People say he was like Jim Morrison or something, but he wasn't moribund and a bit of a lagoob like Ol' Jimbo was. They both know how to use their hips, and they had good hair. And there's a lot more to it.
But watching performances of theirs, whether it be the US festival in '83, I remember seeing that very soon after it was happening and, "Oh, that's an Australian band playing at this massive festival." I guess as a band, as well, they just wanted it, really wanted it. And they had some real songwriting nous. They could do that big stage thing. And when that got lambasted and looked down upon when oiks like us were coming up, I thought, "But we want that. We just kind of don't know how to do that." To find that, in that pop world, someone who had what people would deem rock 'n roll is, in many ways, a really fantastic combination.
A person like him that's still a great performer at any time, from the get-go until he died... You just couldn't really keep your eyes off him. There was an ARIA Awards, maybe 1996, and INXS were performing. I think they did Elegantly Wasted at the show, I think. And I was excited to see them, I was a fan. And we were being touted as the hot young things, and so backstage I ran into Michael, and he kind of looked drawn and tired, but still very handsome. And I can't remember the exact conversation, because I get starstruck like anybody, and he said, "Oh, good to see you again." And he said also, "I guess it's your year." And I said, "I don't want it to be our year, I'm just glad to be here," or something like that.

But, yeah, the months before, though, were just absolutely pillared. INXS and Michael, if not personally, then a specter of it, was being absolutely lambasted by elements of the Australian press that now go, "Oh, wasn't he just the greatest rockstar?" He got given, and the band, after the Concert for Life, and there seemed to be this feeling that they were of another era, and it was though they were big and flash, and that wasn't what rock 'n roll was nowadays.

Now kind of knowing what went on, the skullduggerous nature of what went on around that, I just think everyone coming out and talking about Michael the way they do now, I think, "Just remember the way you behaved back then. Some of you could hang your heads in shame, really."

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Brian Eno: 'Singing: the key to a long life', NPR essay - 2008

1 November 2008, London, United Kingdom

I believe in singing. I believe in singing together.

A few years ago a friend and I realized that we both loved singing but didn't do much of it. So we started a weekly a capella group with just four members. After a year we started inviting other people to join. We didn't insist on musical experience — in fact some of our members had never sung before. Now the group has ballooned to around 15 or 20 people.

I believe that singing is the key to long life, a good figure, a stable temperament, increased intelligence, new friends, super self-confidence, heightened sexual attractiveness and a better sense of humor. A recent long-term study conducted in Scandinavia sought to discover which activities related to a healthy and happy later life. Three stood out: camping, dancing and singing.

Well, there are physiological benefits, obviously: You use your lungs in a way that you probably don't for the rest of your day, breathing deeply and openly. And there are psychological benefits, too: Singing aloud leaves you with a sense of levity and contentedness. And then there are what I would call "civilizational benefits." When you sing with a group of people, you learn how to subsume yourself into a group consciousness because a capella singing is all about the immersion of the self into the community. That's one of the great feelings — to stop being me for a little while and to become us. That way lies empathy, the great social virtue.

Well here's what we do in an evening: We get some drinks, some snacks, some sheets of lyrics and a strict starting time. We warm up a bit first.

The critical thing turns out to be the choice of songs. The songs that seem to work best are those based around the basic chords of blues and rock and country music. You want songs that are word-rich, but also vowel-rich because it's on the long vowels sounds of a song such as "Bring It On Home To Me" ("You know I'll alwaaaaays be your slaaaaave"), that's where your harmonies really express themselves. And when you get a lot of people singing harmony on a long note like that, it's beautiful.

But singing isn't only about harmonizing pitch like that. It has two other dimensions. The first one is rhythm. It's thrilling when you get the rhythm of something right and you all do a complicated rhythm together: "Oh, when them cotton balls get a-rotten, you can't pick very much cotton." So when 16 or 20 people get that dead right together at a fast tempo that's very impressive. But the other thing that you have to harmonize besides pitch and rhythm is tone. To be able to hit exactly the same vowel sound at a number of different pitches seems unsurprising in concept, but is beautiful when it happens.

So I believe in singing to such an extent that if I were asked to redesign the British educational system, I would start by insisting that group singing become a central part of the daily routine. I believe it builds character and, more than anything else, encourages a taste for co-operation with others. This seems to be about the most important thing a school could do for you.

 

Related content: Brian Eno, John Peel Lecture, 2015, 'Children learn through play, but adults play through art'.

"When I started thinking about this talk a few weeks ago, I found myself writing the strange sentence, something about 'the creative industries'. And I thought, 'industries'? That’s not really quite the right word for what I think I’m doing. And I started wondering about the genesis of that term."

Full transcript and video

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