The Byron Shire Echo – Issue 34.18 – October 9, 2019

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ALL YOUR NORTH COAST ENTERTAINMENT

LIVE MUSIC... P33 | CULTURE... P35 | ARTS... P37 | CINEMA... P38 | GIG GUIDE... P39

ISSUE# 34.18 OCTOBER 9–15, 2019

ENTERTAINMENT

Editor: Mandy Nolan Editorial/gigs: gigs@echo.net.au Copy deadline: 5pm each Friday Advertising: adcopy@echo.net.au P: 02 6684 1777 W: echo.net.au/entertainment

THE POWER OF THE GUITAR

Nathan Cavaleri was first introduced to Australia, aged just seven, when the Today Show covered his meeting with one of his guitar heroes, Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits. This came about after Nathan was diagnosed with leukaemia, aged six. A year later (while still undergoing treatment) he was granted his wish to meet Knopfler through the Starlight Foundation. That kicked off a massive career for a boy who had picked up the guitar at three, and by 12 was a veteran who’d toured the world and performed with his heroes – BBKing, Jimmy Barnes, Tommy Emmanuel and Diesel.

You first got media attention as a kid on Hey Hey It’s Saturday, and touring with Johnny Diesel and Jimmy Barnes FFS! How did you create that? Did you have the world’s best manager / entourage / guiding angel in your corner? Or was it actually just your immersive love of playing and practising guitar even so young? My entourage, my parents, my band; 2 bricklayers and a guitar tech. Some things you just can’t engineer. After the Starlight Foundation granted me the wish to meet Mark Knopfler from Dire Straits, I received a lot of media attention and from there things just naturally snow-balled. My parents have always been the opposite to stage parents and only ever supported my passion to play. I played and opportunities just seemed to arise! No doubt you have answered hundreds of questions about those early years and your experience working with Australian and American music legends (including Mark Knopfler and BB King.) Do the experiences and the lessons you learned back then still guide you today as you move through different stages of your career? Unfortunately I was just too young to ask the types of questions that I need the answers to now! However, the green eyes of youth kept me from being star struck, which had me

absorbing a tonne through observation; from stage presence, song writing and production, to how they conducted themselves as human beings. Last year I started a Q&A series on my website that features artists talking about the more human aspects of being a creative. I guess this is my way of broadcasting the types of wisdoms I need now as an adult. Following your early explosion onto the scene, there followed what seemed to be a period where you dropped out of the spotlight – but these weren’t, as some people may have thought, ‘dark years,’ were they? It wasn’t actually an unhealthy relationship with milk and cookies that took you to sugar rehab. In an interview in 2000 you are reported to have said ‘I just totally escaped music… It can be a dark time when you’re finding yourself creatively.’ Would you like to tell us more about your experiences back then? Perhaps share something that may help today’s young musicians struggling with their own creative dark times? Early 2000’s I was experimenting with various creative ideas, but the darkest times happened in the late 2000’s when I found myself dealing with what many deal with: anxiety, depression, fatigue… It has

many labels, and mostly unhelpful ones that prevented me from seeing that phase as an opportunity to learn and wake up. My lack of education on how to deal with those challenges and symptoms is how so many aspects of life shut down. I went from touring the world, with all the confidence and freedom in the world, to not being able to stand in a cafe, drive to the studio, or have a beer with a mate without feeling irrational fear and dread. Eventually it followed me on stage, which is when I turned my back on music – for over 4 years! I thought I was stuck like that forever. But thanks to a solid support network, I was able to learn and apply, until bit by bit, I found ground again! Today, it’s better than ever. It’s still a process, but I’m well-and-truly out of that dark patch! There’s always a way. ALWAYS! You are currently on your 2019 Demons tour, named after one of your three most recent singles Demons; a cover of Cold Chisel’s Rising Sun and your newest single 29 Gold Stars , what’s it like touring nowadays as a veteran of the industry, at such a young age? Is it the rock’n’roll dream many would imagine? Or is it a much more low-key affair?

INTERVIEW CONTINUED P38

coming soon 17 OCT KATCHAFIRE 18 OCT SOUTHERN RIVER BAND 19 OCT PIST IDIOTS 23 OCT THE CHATS 25 OCT MINI SKIRT 26 OCT KYLE LIONHART 27 OCT KINGSWOOD

WED 9 DAN HANNAFORD, JAZZ IN THE RESTAURANT THIS SATURDAY THUR 10 FRIEND ZONE THE BADLANDS FRI 11 RAFFLES AND JACKPOT JOKER SUNSET BURRITOS TONES & I – SOLD OUT NICOLE BROPHY SUN 13 OLE FALCOR SUNDAY LEMONADE MON 14 PHIL & TILLEY TUES 15 MARSHALL OKELL HOTEL GREAT NORTHERN • thenorthern.com.au • 6685 6454 32 The Byron Shire Echo wĈƐşćĕſ ǰǽ ǩǧǨǰ

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