1 post tagged “nz”
This is the start of a wee series I'm going to do on kiwi music; at least, the kiwi music I enjoy. New Zealand has a fantastic music scene, encompassing a ton of genres, and which punches well above its weight in terms of international presence and diversity.
I think there are two main reasons for this. New Zealanders are accustomed to travelling overseas at the drop of a hat. "The big OE" - overseas experience - is a staple for middle-class kiwis, and is much more culturally significant than the UK equivalent of the "gap year". Kiwis tend to stay overseas a lot longer, while still often keeping their intention of returning home, or at least while maintaining significant ties at home. This causes a lot of cross-fertilisation in the musical sense.
The other reason that NZ has a strong indie music scene is due to the strong campus radio network (now called the b.net), which is not just a preserve of student listeners. While the majority of over-20 kiwis probably don't listen to stations like bFM or RadioActive most of the time, they undoubtedly have done so at some point, and large numbers keep listening in their 30s and beyond, especially the speciality shows (for example, bFM had 5.1% of Auckland listeners aged 18-34 in a recent survey). Their tireless promotion of kiwi music has kept it going through some significant doldrums. These days, all radio stations have a mandate to play 13% NZ music, and the fact they have such a big pool to draw on is due in large part to student radio.
This post is going to start you off nicely with some kiwi pop music. There's always been a strong "indie" flavour to kiwi pop, even before the term was invented. Everyone goes flatting in NZ, student or otherwise, and these songs to me are the soundtrack of flats full of zillions of flatmates and their hangers-on. Most of what I have here is 80s pop, since that was what I listened to when I was a teenager. We're going in rough chronological order as well.
While we're on the topic of cute love songs - and we're finally into the 90s - Chris Knox is another one of these kiwi musicians who have been around forever. He was part of a post-punk outfit called The Tall Dwarves - not my favourite music - and has done a whole pile of stuff in various other guises, which has all been recorded by Flying Nun. He's also a great cartoonist, and I tend to like his art more than his music or voice, which tends to the whiney. Not Given Lightly is his best-selling track ever, and is apparently the most-requested song at weddings in NZ. It certainly makes an excellent change from a lot of the saccharine stuff served up on those occasions. And they're sentiments I can certainly relate to: What can I say? / The words destroy all meaning / They're only cliches / To get across this feeling / But it's you that I love.... Awww. He lives in a cool house in Grey Lynn, Auckland, and I covet the sculptures he has littering his front lawn. "Littering" being an apt word for their placement.
By the way, muttonbirds are a type of sea bird traditionally harvested by Māori once a year, and preserved in kelp tubes in their own fat. A mark of how much Māori culture is further pervading yer kiwi joker's life now is the fact that you can often buy muttonbirds in Auckland fish shops, especially in the more ethnic areas. They're disgustingly greasy, but bloody yum. The traditional Māori answer to KFC, heh.