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THE BASICS: THIS COULD BE THE LAST TIME By Neil Walker GOTYE has gone back to The Basics and the band is dropping in on Mornington as part of their national tour in support of their latest The Age of Entitlement album. Guitarist Tim Heath says The Basics drummer Wally De Backer, known as the solo artist Gotye, is heading back to Australia from the US where he is recording the follow-up to his commercially successful Making Mirrors album which spawned the global smash Somebody That I Used To Know. Heath says Novemberâs Mornington gig, the last in the tour, will be âpretty energetic and perhaps emotionalâ amid hints The Basics may call it a day. Although if the band does break up permanently it will not be due to any jealousy or bitchiness over De Backerâs success as Gotye. Far from being somebody that Gotyeâs longterm bandmates used to know, Heath joked De Backerâs modesty and ability to remain unfazed by commercial success means The Basics, who have been together since 2004, are able to work together again without any egomania dominating proceedings. Heath admits though that he, De Backer and bassist Kris Schroeder now play shorter tours when they hit the road. âI think we really enjoy playing together and in the last few years weâve sort of done it sporadically and the tours have been shorter because the older you get the harder it is to go on the road. You get tired and grumpy more easily so weâve sort of made them shorter so our tempers donât flare as much.â Gotyeâs global success hasnât put a downer on The Basics. Heath admits it was âsurrealâ but âfantasticâ to see and hear Somebody That I Used To Know, featuring Kimbra, suddenly take off across the world. âWe had a three-year hiatus and in that time
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Frankston Times 26 October 2015
I was in France, Spain and Portugal and that was when the song really went big. Iâd hear it on every radio station in those countries. âWally never really talks himself up and I donât think he sees certain achievements that others would so highly. When he got nominated for a Grammy I was on the phone to him that day and having a regular chat. I didnât know about it and he didnât even mention it.â As for The Basics the latest tour comes in the wake of the release of the bandâs eighth album called The Age of Entitlement, a phrase used by the now departed Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey who described the country as âa nation of lifters, not leanersâ when he delivered his controversial 2014 budget which many regarded as unfair on poorer Australians. Itâs a departure from The Basicsâ indie-pop rock roots and sees the band addressing the state and shame of the nation as they see it. Schroeder wrote most of the songs for The Age of Entitlement album before The Basics headed off to the UK to record the tracks at the Abbey Road Studios in London, made famous by The Beatles who often recorded there and named their 1969 Abbey Road album in its honour. âKris came back with some songs that were political and Wally and I looked at each other and went âthis is a bit differentâ but I think we all agreed that the sentiment was something we all shared and agreed on,â Heath said. âThe songs seemed to me not so much political but more social. A comment about culture and a part of the Australian psyche that was becoming complacent, complaining about things but not doing a lot about it.â The opening lines from album opener Whatever Happened to the Working Class? leaves listeners in no doubt about who The Basics
mostly blame for Australiaâs cultural malaise: âWhatever happened to the working class?/ Weâve got politicians sitting on their arse/ Whittling away at the few rights that weâve got left/I was listening to the radio and how big business stole the show and I wonder âwhoâs there to stop them now?ââ. The not so great Australian public are also condemned for their indifference to politics in the albumâs lyrics. Heath notes: âI think most Australians are very lucky to be able to live relatively comfortably and itâs quite easy to forget weâre quite safe in our houses compared to most people in the world and that things like big-screen televisions and swimming pools start to take up most of whatâs been discussed or thought about by a certain section of the community.â The Basics themselves decided to âhave a goâ at politics to show complacency enables politicians to often fail to represent their communityâs best interests. The Basics RockânâRoll Party registered to contest an Upper House seat at last yearâs Victorian election. Heath says winning a seat was always a long shot but the partyâs formation âwas a way to show people could go out and become a politician and try to change things rather than just sit on the couch and complain about itâ. âIt started off as an idea to show people who are generally pissed off with the state of Australian politics who feel disempowered somewhat that anyone can start a political party. All you need is members and then youâre on the ballot paper. We hoped that people would see that and think they may give it a go next time. So itâll be interesting to see if it had any effect.â Recording The Age of Entitlement was a dream come true for The Basics since the trio
are big fans of The Beatles, Heath said. âThe first time we walked in it was pretty amazing. I was pretty speechless because everything is quite original but itâs also a working studio. âYouâre walking down the corridors and thereâs old tape machines that have been used since the â40s and â50s and of course Studio Two where The Beatles recorded still looks the same so you look at photos of them and then you walk in there and itâs amazing. âAll the microphones are still there. For one take we did the engineer called for âthe John Lennon microphoneâ. Itâs really cool and neat they havenât sold it or auctioned it off to a museum or something.â âI recorded a couple of tracks on a piano they recorded A Day in the Life on ... just to sit there ... is kind of surreal.â As hinted earlier, The Basics future days in the life are clouded but, if the Mornington gig is the end of the road forever for the band, Heath reckons The Age of Entitlement is as good a way as any to go out raging against the dying of the light (on the hill). Not many bands speak out about how politics shapes culture now after protest music peaked in the 1970s and early 1980s. âIt may be one of the last records we make, Iâm not sure,â Heath said. âMaybe we thought it is time to maybe make a comment on Australian society. I think sometimes it is important for artists to make people think politically and socially ... and show a different perspective on the world.â The Basics play The Grand Hotel, 124 Main Street Mornington on Sunday 1 November, doors open 7pm. Tickets $25. See moshtix. com.au or call The Grand Hotel on 03 5975 2001.