Monday, 22 May 2023

John Farnham: Finding The Voice

This is a version of a review airing on ABC Radio across regional Victoria on May 25, 2023.

(M) ★★★★★

Director: Poppy Stockell.

"Bring forth the mollusk, cast unto me...."

No matter how popular John Farnham got - and he got about as popular as you can get in Australia in the '80s - he always seemed to retain his humility and his humour. In a country renowned for cutting down its tall poppies, the best we could muster against Whispering Jack himself was to poke fun at how many farewell tours he did. And even when his music became old-fashioned and out-of-touch, hearing You're The Voice on the radio could still send tingles up your Southern Cross. We, as a nation, love John Farnham, and this doco reminds us why that love is such a worthwhile one.

Finding Your Voice gives us the story of John Farnham the Underdog - the popstar who had it and lost it before he even realised he had it, and who then had to claw his way back. It's the story of a singer who had to wait until he was almost 40 to finally take control of his career and make the record he really wanted to make, which in turn became a smash hit beyond all other smash hits in this country. 

But it's also a beautiful love story about two mates. Farnham's tale is impossible to tell without a significant amount of the spotlight also being shone on his best friend/manager Glenn Wheatley - the man who mortgaged his house so his friend could make that long-awaited career-defining record.


These stories are told in an unassuming fashion befitting an Aussie idol who never lost his working class roots. There is no pretence here - the doco walks us through his life some start to present. We get the early highs of Sadie and Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head, followed by the crushing lows of the '70s and his stint with Little River Band.

Naturally the film peaks with You're The Voice and spends a lot of time with that song, positioning it as the triumphant comeback many people forget that it was. It means Farnham's career after that gets shorter shrift here, but that's ok - Stockell has structured Farnham's story beautifully for full dramatic impact.

We don't see present-day Farnham in the film - we only hear him - and coupled with its sad final moments makes the whole thing feel like an obituary. And that's ok - too often we don't fully appreciate our great talents until they're gone, so why not pay powerful tearful tribute while they're still around. 

For those of us who have forgotten the power, influence and place Farnham's music has had in our culture, Finding Your Voice is a timely reminder of his greatness, talent and his remarkable triumph. For everyone else, sit back and enjoy one of the great Aussie success stories, writ large on the big screen, as befits a man with a big voice.

Sunday, 21 May 2023

89 songs that could make it into triple j's Like A Version Hottest 100

 According to The Music, there have been over 850 cover songs featured on triple j's Like A Version  (LAV) segment since it began in 2004. That's plenty of fodder for the upcoming LAV Hottest 100, which airs from noon AEST on Saturday, July 15.

So which cover is going to win? I'll probably do a deeper dive on the favourites closer to the date (voting opens Tuesday, May 23, and closes Monday, July, 10) but I just wanted to share this list of all the previous LAVs to make it into the Hottest 100... and the Hottest 200.

There have been 36 LAVs that have made it into the Hottest 100 in the past, and as far as public records show, a further 53 were voted between 101-200. Could the upcoming LAV Hottest 100 list look a little something like this (original positions for where these songs came are in brackets)?

1. Elephant - The Wiggles, 2021 (1)
2. Bulls on Parade - Denzel Curry, 2019 (5)
3. Believe - DMA's, 2016 (6)
4. Baby Come Back - Ocean Alley, 2018 (16)
5. I Touch Myself - Lime Cordiale, 2019 (17)
6. I Was Only 19 - The Herd, 2005 (18)
7. (Lover) You Don't Treat Me No Good - Chet Faker, 2014 (21)
8. Am I Ever Gonna See Your Face Again - Dune Rats, 2022 (23)
9. Pumped Up Kicks - Owl Eyes, 2011 (28)
10. Real Love - Regina Spektor, 2007 (29)
11. Here Comes the Sun - Spacey Jane, 2021 (30)
12. Shooting Stars - Flume ft. Toro y Moi, 2022 (30)
13. Get Lucky - San Cisco, 2013 (39)
14. Blood - Gang of Youths, 2017 (41)
15. Yellow - King Stingray, 2022 (43)
16. Dumb Things - A.B. Original ft Paul Kelly & Dan Sultan, 2016 (45)
17. Brother - Thundamentals, 2012 (49)
18. Love Yourself - Halsey, 2016 (52)
19. Do I Wanna Know? - Chvrches, 2014 (54)
20. Breathe / Comfortably Numb / Money - Ocean Alley, 2021 (54)
21. Keeping Score - Paces ft. Guy Sebastian, 2016 (56)
22. Ausmusic Month Medley - Illy, 2013 (66)
23. A Girl Like You - Tame Impala, 2021 (66)
24. Sweet Nothing - Something For Kate, 2013 (68)
25. Lonely Boy - Matt Corby, 2012 (69)
26. Such Great Heights - Ben Folds, 2006 (70)
27. What Can I Do If The Fire Goes Out? - Nothing But Thieves, 2018 (72)
28. Electric Feel - Tash Sultana, 2017 (78)
29. Lady Marmalade - G Flip, 2020 (78)
30. Big Jet Plane - Tuka, 2015 (81)
31. Welcome to the Black Parade - Alex Lahey, 2019 (83)
32. Delete - Sticky Fingers, 2015 (84)
33. Edge of Town - Paul Dempsey, 2017 (88)
34. Here Comes Your Man - Skegss, 2019 (90)
35. Bridges - Meg Mac, 2014 (91)
36. Charlie - Bugs, 2020 (91)
37. Running Up That Hill - The Wombats, 2022 (103)
38. Time After Time - Triple One, 2021 (104)
39. Why Does It Always Rain On Me? - Gang Of Youths, 2022 (105)
40. So Into You - Childish Gambino, 2015 (108)
41. Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger - Art Vs Science, 2011 (114)
42. My Happiness - Ball Park Music, 2017 (114)
43. Romeo And Juliet - Lisa Mitchell, 2009 (116)
44. Life On Mars? - Sarah Blasko, 2016 (118)
45. When The Party's Over - Cub Sport, 2019 (118)
46. How To Make Gravy - Luca Brasi, 2016 (127)
47. Big Yellow Taxi - Allday, 2019 (130)
48. Hey Ya! - Sarah Blasko, 2010 (131)
49. Two Weeks - #1 Dads ft. Tom Snowdon, 2015 (131)
50. That Don't Impress Me Much - HAIM, 2017 (131)
51. Catch My Disease - The Terrys, 2022 (132)
52. My Boo - Flume ft. Vince Staples & KUČKA, 2017 (133)
53. Let It Happen - Meg Mac, 2017 (138)
54. Sex From The Bong - Something With Numbers, 2009 (139)
55. Hearts A Mess - Missy Higgins, 2012 (139)
56. Everybody Wants To Rule The World - Andy Bull, 2011 (141)
57. Happy - The John Butler Trio, 2014 (141)
58. Crave You - Elk Road ft. Lisa Mitchell, 2016 (142)
59. Say My Name - Glass Animals, 2022 (142)
60. Under Pressure - Ben Harper & Relentless 7, 2009 (149)
61. I Will Follow You Into The Dark - Yungblud ft. Halsey, 2019 (151)
62. Hey Now - Karnivool, 2014 (152)
63. Ultralight Beam - Cub Sport, 2016 (152)
64. Girls Just Want To Have Fun - Busby Marou, 2011 (155)
65. Kids - The Kooks, 2008 (161)
66. Chains - Matt Corby, 2016 (161)
67. Forever Young - Tones & I, 2020 (164)
68. Feels Like We Only Go Backwards - Alex Turner, 2014 (165)
69. The Special Two - Dear Seattle, 2019 (165)
70. Black Fingernails, Red Wine - Polaris, 2020 (165)
71. Stolen Dance - Ásgeir, 2014 (167)
72. Not Many - One Day, 2015 (167)
73. Hey, Ma - The Vanns, 2020 (168)
74. Pony - Abbe May, 2013 (169)
75. West Coast - James Vincent McMorrow, 2014 (170)
76. It Ain't Over 'Til It's Over - Ruel, 2021 (170)
77. Seventeen Going Under - Camp Cope, 2022 (174)
78. Video Games - Bluejuice, 2012 (176)
79. Never Tear Us Apart - Allday, 2014 (176)
80. No Surprises - Regina Spektor, 2010 (178)
81. Breathe Life - Vera Blue, 2016 (179)
82. I Try - Hockey Dad ft. Hatchie, 2019 (182)
83. Changes - JK-47, 2021 (188)
84. Don't You Forget About Me - Boy & Bear, 2021 (189)
85. Better In Blak - Beddy Rays, 2021 (190)
86. Read My Mind - Catfish And The Bottlemen, 2015 (192)
87. Runaway - Plan B, 2011 (193)
88. Sunny Afternoon - The Cat Empire, 2009 (194)
89. Song 2 - Baker Boy, 2022 (200)

Monday, 8 May 2023

Guardians Of The Galaxy: Volume 3 (no spoilers)

This is a version of a review airing on ABC Radio across regional Victoria on May 11, 2023.

(M) ★★★★

Director: James Gunn.

Cast: Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Karen Gillan, Pom Klementieff, Vin Diesel, Bradley Cooper, Sean Gunn, Chukwudi Iwuji, Will Poulter, Elizabeth Debicki, Maria Bakalova, Sylvester Stallone.

The Wiggles In Space was surprisingly trippy.

Characters. Get them right, and you're more than halfway towards making a great movie. When we understand who they are, what they want, and what they stand for, it raises the stakes, and, to quote a legendary Faith No More song used in Guardians Of The Galaxy: Volume 3, we care a lot. When we see them grow, learn, fall down, and get back up again, we care even more.

It's why Ant-Man & The Wasp: Quantumania misfired - no character arcs or development or depth. But it's why the first Guardians Of The Galaxy film worked so well. We cared about the weird tree with the three-word vocabulary, the trigger-happy space raccoon, and the rest of the motley crew of intergalactic heroes, because we got to know them and understand them and watch them grow. We came to care about them.

This is thanks to James Gunn, who bows out of the Marvel Cinematic Universe in style with Guardians Of The Galaxy: Volume 3. The same level of attention and affection he put into the ragtag band of weirdos in the first two Guardians films (and the superb Holiday Special) is here again in Volume 3. It's full of everything that made the first one great - heart, humour, spectacle, and characters to care about.

This trilogy wrap-up centres on Rocket Raccoon (voiced to perfection by Cooper), exploring where he came from via a series of flashbacks interspersed The Godfather Part 2-style between his friends' quest to save his life. Meanwhile Star Lord AKA erstwhile Earthling Peter Quill (Pratt) is torn up over Rocket's condition and the fact his former girlfriend Gamora (Saldana) no longer knows who he is because she's a different version from an alternate timeline (quick, go and watch Endgame).



Volume 3 is a great response to the all-to-real phenomenon of "superhero fatigue". It's a quality story based around quality characters. It's script is by turns heartfelt and ridiculous. There are great visuals and some epic sequences, including a single-take fight in a corridor that is pretty mindblowing. It's soundtrack is out-of-this-world. Superheroes or no, it's just a damned good film. How can you be fatigued about superhero movies when they're this good?

The cast is mostly returning favourites, slipping back into their old roles like a pair of slippers. Pratt is ever-reliable, Bautista has made Drax one of the funniest characters in the MCU, Gillan has helped transform Nebula from C-villain to fan favourite, Klementieff perfectly fits the vibe of the film as Mantis, and Saldana gets to really cut loose for the first time as Gamora.

The newcomer is Iwuji, who is fantastic as villain High Evolutionary. Taking every opportunity to rage-spit when required, he makes the role memorable and entertaining. He's a great mix of cerebral and evil, with credit again to Gunn for making such a strange villain work in this universe. 

Gunn is firing on all cylinders again here. He's made a trilogy that ends as it starts - with great characters telling a great story, all with a song in its heart.