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'Cargo of nostalgia' - Review: Teenage Fanclub, Kelvingrove
'Cargo of nostalgia' - Review: Teenage Fanclub, Kelvingrove

The Herald Scotland

time01-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald Scotland

'Cargo of nostalgia' - Review: Teenage Fanclub, Kelvingrove

Kelvingrove, Glasgow Teenage Fanclub start as they mean to go on. At nine in the evening the five-piece band bounce onto the stage with an enthusiasm that's hard to fake in men largely in their fifties and sixties and launch into Foreign Land from their 2023 album Nothing Lasts Forever. Guitars snarl and spit, but you can't ignore the sweetness that underlies everything. And that is the story of the 'best band in the world' (according to Kurt Cobain, and he's no longer around to contradict himself). They may have emerged from Bellshill at the fag end of the 1980s as a slightly chaotic noise band with scuzzy tendencies, but sweetness followed. In thrall to Big Star and the Byrds, the Teenage Fanclub sound is one ultimately marked by harmony. A power pop band with three singer-songwriters (until the departure of Gerry Love in 2018), they have remained largely in tune throughout more than three decades. That was very much on show during this en plein air gig. And not just in the vocals. Incongruously squeezed between Chicago's pop queen Anastacia and noughties singer-songwriter Natasha Bedingfield in the Summer Nights programme, the Fannies brought their own cargo of fond nostalgia for an audience that had largely grown up with their records. Read more: The cynical (and I have been that soldier at times) might be prone to dismiss the Fannies as a band loved as much for their record collection as their music, but it's clear tonight that this is a minority opinion. And one that doesn't hold up to examination. What You Do To Me prompts a rush to the front of the stage. And when the band break into Neil Jung from their Grand Prix album a middle-aged moshpit kicks off. 'The second best band in the world' (according to Liam Gallagher, and you can probably guess whom he considered the first) are not natural showmen, but they are compelling to watch. Blake is the voice of the band, naming the songs, telling us he's dropped his plectrum, apologising for the bum notes he's just played (that no one noticed) or confirming that, yes, that is a can of Chappie dog food sitting on the speaker. McGinley only opens his mouth to sing, but his singing and, in particular, his guitar says plenty. He pulls and cajoles riffs out of his instrument, his whole body bending into the action. At times he strangely reminds me of one of those wibbly-wobbly air dancers you used to see outside car dealerships. His playing gives a taste of gravel and grit to the evening. Half a dozen songs in, McGinley launches into Everything Is Falling Apart, the performance of which has a metallic sharpness at odds with much of the almost bucolic atmosphere of the evening. But even that song, it should be noted, is a declaration of love. And six songs later the band are telling us The World'll Be OK. Rattling through 14 songs in just over an hour Blake admits the band have miscalculated the length of the set list and need to add a couple of songs. No one is complaining. The Concept prompts a mass singalong and the band finish where they started with their first single, Everything Flows, its sweep and drive and tidal pull as good a summary of the band's appeal as any. Tonight, they're definitely the best band in Glasgow. We never find out why the Can of Chappie is there, though.

Heartbreaking story behind famous Aussie song revealed
Heartbreaking story behind famous Aussie song revealed

Daily Mail​

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Heartbreaking story behind famous Aussie song revealed

Eskimo Joe's lead singer Kav Temperly has revealed that one of the band's most famous songs was inspired by the tragic death of Australian actor Heath Ledger. The 46-year-old musician took fans on a trip down memory lane on Monday as he sat in a garage studio to explain how he wrote Foreign Land. The hit song peaked at number 13 on the ARIA charts in 2009, and the following year won Most Played Australian Work and Rock Work of the Year at the APRAs. In a video shared to TikTok, Temperly said he'd been inspired by a CD called The Sounds of Turkey, purchased from a local music shop. 'I found this little sample in the middle of one of these big long 10-minute instrumental jams,' he began. 'And I put it onto my computer and I made a little loop and put the microphone onto my drums and did my best Led Zeppelin impression. 'I had this cool little idea but then we had to go away to New York to do this amazing gala performance at Lincoln Memorial Centre. It was big deal because we were going to be performing in front of a whole lot of dignitaries and we were on the red carpet when a very official-looking came up to me and said, "Just to let you know, Heath Ledger has just died." The news of the Hollywood star's death left the entire band grief stricken. 'We were pretty taken aback because he was this young, very talented guy from Perth, Western Australia where we were from,' Temperly said. 'It turned out he'd died streets away from where I was walking that day [in New York]. We were pretty affected by it - as was everyone at the ceremony.' When he and the band returned to Perth, Temperly was still thinking about Ledger in the recording studio and changed his mind about the song they originally had planned. 'We were going to write this big rock'n'roll record and I pressed play on my little tune with Turkish drum beat and my little loop and they said, "cool idea but that's not really a song." 'I just started to sing this very sad A-minor, C, F progression over the top of this sample and lo-and-behond it worked. 'This idea of Heath Ledger was going around in our heads, so I stood in front of the microphone and Joel said, "Just go for it, just sing anything that comes into your head." 'And this is what came into my head, "I smell the blood of an Australian. Try to understand me if you can",' he sung. Ledger died from an accidental overdose of prescription medications on 22 January, 2008, in the New York neighbourhood of SoHo. Specifically, he died from a combination of painkillers, anti-anxiety drugs, and sleeping pills.

Heartbreaking Heath Ledger connection to hit Aussie song
Heartbreaking Heath Ledger connection to hit Aussie song

Perth Now

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Perth Now

Heartbreaking Heath Ledger connection to hit Aussie song

More than 15 years after Eskimo Joe's hit song Foreign Land was released, band member Kav Temperley has revealed how the tragic death of acting legend and fellow West Aussie Heath Ledger inspired the single. The 46-year-old recalled the moment he found out about Ledger's passing in 2008, saying he was just streets away from the movie star's house in America on the day he died. 'We had to go away to New York to do this amazing gala performance at the Lincoln Memorial Center,' Tamperley said. 'And you know, it was a big deal because we were going to be performing in front of a whole lot of dignitaries and we were just walking the red carpet on our way into this show when this very official looking man came up to me and said, 'Just to let you know that Heath Ledger has just died'. The band — Temperley, Stuart MacLeod and Joel Quartermain — were left shocked. 'We were pretty taken aback because he was this very young, very talented guy from Perth, Western Australia, where we were from,' Temperley said. 'And it turned out he died streets away from where I was walking that day ... we were pretty affected by his death, as was everyone at the ceremony.' The next day, Temperley was sitting in a hotel room trying to write a song when details of Ledger's life and death started being discussed on TV. He said hearing about Ledger's life prompted him to think about the impacts of fame and when he returned to Perth, he shared his thoughts with MacLeod and Quartermain. 'You know, when you get pushed through this fame shaped hole, you kind of come out a little bit sideways and you're grasping at something that's real,' he said. When the band couldn't come up with lyrics for the bridge of the new song, Temperley was encouraged by Quartermain to just sing whatever was in his head. Australian band Eskimo Joe. Credit: Supplied / RegionalHUB 'This idea of Heath Ledger was going around in our heads, so I stood in front of the microphone and Joel said, 'Just go for it, just sing anything that comes into your head'. 'And this is what came into my head, 'I smell the blood of an Australian. Try to understand me if you can'.' Fans of the band were surprised to hear the story behind the song, with many thanking Temperley for sharing details. 'Means more to me now. Thanks Kav,' one said. Another commented: 'Great song with such a sad subject. Every time I hear it, I think of Heath Ledger.' A third added: 'Omg Kav ! I'm crying x thank you for sharing this, such an amazing song now is so much more poignant.'

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