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New Zealand’s best kept secret release a new
compilation of early works. Is this news?
Thurston Moore of the world’s best loved ‘alt.rock’ combo
Sonic Youth would certainly think so. He recently told the UK’s
biggest-circulation ‘difficult music’ magazine The Wire
that one of the the most interesting bands in the world were The
Dead C.
Their fifteenth album - wittily titled DR503C - is only
the second to come out as a local release in NZ this decade. The others have all
been released in the USA or the UK, on taste-making imprints such as Siltbreeze
(Philadelphia) or Shock (London). This has enabled them to preserve their
anonymity at the local supermarket, while still trucking the units and
cyber-hobnobbing with the big boys across the globe. As a result the Dead C.
were recently touted in Melody Maker as one of the two best rock bands on
the planet (the other being Fushitsusha), and are regarded internationally as
one of the more influential of the NZ bands of the last decade.
They
have been tipped as an inspiration for outfits as diverse as Flying
Saucer Attack, Pavement, laBradford and Bardo
Pond; in addition members of the group have been lately active
in other outfits such as Gate, A Handful of Dust,
the Renderers - all the while remaining to all intents and
purposes invisible within the NZ ‘industry’.
That’s all very well, but the compilation under
consideration here collects material recorded and in varying degrees released,
during the first 18 months of the group’s life, from January 1987 onwards. The
material featured includes tracks from the Flying Nun LP DR503, as
well as XPRESSWAY single The Sun Stabbed, and sundry
cassette releases.
The release has been marked with a rare public performance
at Auckland’s King’s Arms, and a first-ever network television appearance
live on Ground Zero. This will have served to alert trainspotters
everywhere to the band’s continuing existence, as well as the imminent
appearance of their compiled early works.
As ever, rumours of their demise have been greatly
exaggerated. The Dead C, legends in their own lifetime, DR503C
an instant classic. Excellent!
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