Bodyjar
Bodyjar | |
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Also known as | Damnation, Helium |
Origin | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
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Bodyjar are an Australian pop punk band which formed in 1990. They began performing under the name Bodyjar in 1994; their previous names included Damnation (1990–91) and Helium (1992–93). The latter group released an album, You Can't Hold Me Down, in October 1992. As Bodyjar their original line-up were Cameron Baines on vocals and guitar; Ben Petterson on vocals and guitar; Grant Relf on vocals and bass guitar; and Charles Zerafa on drums. In 1995 Ross Hetherington (ex-Bastard Squad, Swamp Rats) replaced Zerafa on drums. In 1999 Tom Read replaced Petterson on guitar and in 2004 Hetherington made way for Shane Wakker on drums.
Bodyjar released five studio albums, Take a Look Inside (1994), Rimshot! (1996), No Touch Red (1998), How It Works (2000), Plastic Skies (2002) and Bodyjar (2005), before disbanding in September 2009. After a hiatus they reformed in March 2012, their next album, Role Model, appeared on 18 October 2013, together with corresponding tour dates.
History
Damnation and Helium
In 1990 future members of Bodyjar formed a rock group, Damnation, in Melbourne with Cameron Baines on guitar, Ben Petterson on guitar, Grant Relf on bass guitar and Charles Zerafa on drums.[1][2] Baines, Petterson and Relf had grown up in the same Melbourne suburb of Mitcham and attended the same primary school.[3] Damnation recorded two demos, Demo and Grow, before changing their name to Helium in 1992, as a pop punk group.[2][3][4] That group issued a demo, Bodyjar, in 1992 and followed with an album, You Can't Hold Me Down, on Shagpile Records in October that year.[3][5] It was co-produced by the band with Phil Rose (of Nursery Crimes) at Argenteuil Studios, Richmond. By 1994 Helium changed their name again, to Bodyjar, as a punk rock band.[6]
Take a Look Inside
Bodyjar line-up of Baines, Petterson, Relf and Zerafa recorded their studio album, Take a Look Inside, at Sing Sing Studios, Melbourne. It was co-produced by Bill Stevenson and Stephen Egerton (both from touring United States band, All) in March 1994.[3][7] In August 1994 they had their first gig, as Bodyjar, at the Great Britain Hotel, Richmond.[8] A five-track extended play, Time to Grow Up, was issued in that same month.[3] Take a Look Inside was released in September on Shagpile Records and distributed by Shock Records.[3][6][8] According to Howlspace website's Ed Nimmervoll "With the help of punk fanzines and all-ages gigs at pubs Bodyjar managed to build a formidable reputation despite grunge".[3]
Rimshot! and No Touch Red
Bodyjar's Zerafa was replaced, in 1995, on drums by Ross Hetherington – a former member of "hardcore punk outfits", Bastard Squad and Swamp Rats.[3] The group co-headlined a national tour with Pennywise and Blink-182 in December.[3][9] The band supported No Fun at All and Face to Face on tours of Japan (October 1995), Canada, Europe (March 1996) and then United States (April 1997).[3][6][10] On their European and US tours they promoted their next album, Rimshot! (February 1996).[3][10] It had been recorded in September 1995: the group co-produced with Kaj Dahlstrom (The Bo-Weevils, Nursery Crimes); with a US release on 3 September 1996.[11]
Bodyjar's third album, No Touch Red, was recorded the following year in Montreal over 12 days.
How it Works and Plastic Skies
Petterson left the band following the 1999 Big Day Out festival. Facing an impending breakup, the band added Read, formerly of 180 Discord, to the lineup. That year Bodyjar signed with EMI/Capitol, having completed a 33 song demo for their upcoming release. Though independent for the majority of their career, Bodyjar released two studio albums for EMI/Capitol in the early 2000s. The first album for the major label, How It Works, produced by Kalju Tonuma, reached the top 20 on the Australian ARIAnet albums chart in 2000 and achieved gold sales (35,000 copies). The album’s first single, "Not the Same", was also featured in a Pepsi ad campaign and the video games Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 and MX Superfly.
After their second major label album, Plastic Skies, and the retrospective, Jarchives, featuring new and rare material, failed to build on the success of How It Works, Bodyjar returned to their former label, Shock Records.
Self-titled album
They released a self-titled album in 2005 after Hetherington left the band in May 2004 while on tour with The Offspring. Hetherington was temporarily replaced for the remainder of the tour by Gordy Forman of Australian punk band Frenzal Rhomb. The role was then filled by Wakker, formerly of the band Channel 3, and he was named the group's permanent drummer later that year.
Despite having their commercial peak seemingly behind them, Bodyjar remained a major attraction on the all-ages circuit in Australia, and continued to tour and play festivals. Selections from their discography have also been repackaged and released for the American and Japanese markets, where they have consolidated live followings.
Despite an announcement on the official Bodyjar website, as of 10 January 2008, a new album "looks to be shaping up for late in the year". However, the band announced on 4 September 2009, they would be calling it quits after a farewell tour.[12] The band reformed for a one-off gig in April 2011 to celebrate the Royal Artillery Hotel (The Arthouse) venue's last drinks calendar.
Bodyjar reunited in March 2012 to perform No Touch Red in its entirety at Melbourne's Corner Hotel, together with former tour mates One Dollar Short, Antiskeptic & Game Over. Regarding the show, bassist Relf remarked, "When a good friend of Bodyjar’s says they want to start a label and release one of your old albums on vinyl, you don’t have to think too long or too hard about the response. No Touch Red kicked some arse back in the day and still holds its head up high all these years later, so I say let there be vinyl and a show to boot."[13]
Role Model
As of February 2013, Bodyjar has performed as a support act for various touring bands in Australia, such as The Descendents. Read explained in an October 2013 interview that, following the Descendants tour, the band had "a little bit of money in the bank" and decided to write and record for a new album: "we just thought let's write some songs and if they are good enough we can record them and if they're not then we can spend the money on beer I guess. But they turned out really well."[14]
Satisfied with their new songs, the band announced the release of a new record, Role Model, which is the first collection of new material in eight years. The first single, "Fairytales", premiered on 12 September 2013.[15] Prior to the release of Role Model, Read explained the motivation that underpinned the album:
... we had just finished the No Touch Red tour and I had a conversation with Grant about writing a fast kind of album like that, doing what we are good at and stop fucking around with slower songs and big rock riffs. Just do what comes natural and write for ourselves again. There is a lot of emphasis on having fun this time around, I think that has come through on the record. “Stop enjoying yourself and have some fun”.[16]
Read also explained that Tom Larkin of New Zealand band Shihad produced the album at his own studios in Brunswick, Melbourne, Australia, and that the band referenced the sound production of the bands Refused, Foo Fighters and Starmarket for the recording process. Joey Cape, of Lagwagon, and Ahren Stringer, of The Amity Affliction, contributed vocals to the album, while a guitar solo was recorded by Stephen Egerton of Descendents.[16]
Bodyjar enlisted Australian independent music label UNFD to release Role Model on 18 October 2013, and bundle packages that included a skateboard deck, a T-shirt and a stubby holder were released. Baines hired Dutch design company ATTAK to create the artwork for the album.[16]
Side projects
At the beginning of 2007, Baines and Wakker launched a side project called Cola Wars, a moniker that Baines has used for various projects since 1999—Mark Brunott (Automan, The Volume10, and Steelbirds) and Mikey Juler (ex-For Amusement Only) completed the lineup. The band have played under other pseudonyms, such as "Daughters of the Rich" and "William Shatner's Dacks".
Read's and Relf's side project is called Burn The City, which also involves a former member of Australian band One Dollar Short on drums.[14]
Personal lives
Wakker is from the Victorian town of Moe, and Baines's wedding to partner Regan occurred in late April 2012.[17]
Discography
Albums
Studio albums
- You Can't Hold Me Down (released by Helium) Shagpile Records (SHAG CD 2016) 1993
- Take a Look Inside, Shagpile Records/Shock Records (SHAG CD 2029) September 1994
- Rimshot!, Shagpile Records/Shock Records (SHAG CD 2028) February 1996
- No Touch Red, 1998
- How It Works, 2000
- Plastic Skies, 2002
- Bodyjar, 2005
- Role Model, 2013
Live albums
- Is It Alive, 2007
- The End Is Now, 2009 (part of The Hi-Fi Official Bootleg series)
Compilation albums
- Singles and Stuff, 1999
- Jarchives: 10 Years of Bodyjar, 2003
- Time to Grow Up, 2004
Extended plays
- Time to Grow Up, Shagpile Records/Shock Records (SHAG CD 7010) August 1994
- Strange Harvest (limited edition), August 1997
- You Got Me a Girls Bike You Idiot!, 2001
- You'll Never Kill All The Ants, 2006
References
- ↑ Tauschke, Steve (7 November 2003). "From the Jarchives". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- 1 2 Dillon, Charlotte. "Bodyjar – Music Biography". Allmusic. All Media Guide. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Nimmervoll, Ed. "Bodyjar". Howlspace – The Living History of Our Music. White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd (Ed Nimmervoll). Archived from the original on 15 April 2002. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ↑ "Feature Band: Bodyjar". Temerity. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ↑ Robinson, Brooke (2003). "An interview with Bodyjar". Australian Music Resource and Webzine. Oz Music Project. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- 1 2 3 McFarlane, Ian (1999). "Encyclopedia entry for 'Bodyjar'". Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. Archived from the original on 29 August 2002. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ↑ "Take a Look Inside – Bodyjar | Credits". AllMusic. All Media Guide. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- 1 2 Newstead, Al (28 May 2014). "Bodyjar Are Offering the Greatest VIP Ticket Bundle Ever". Tone Deaf. Nicholas Jones. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ↑ "Looking Back on Pennywise's 1995 Australian Tour". Rest Assured. Rest Assured Zine. 27 March 2013. Archived from the original on 11 March 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- 1 2 "Bodyjar – Guest programmers". rage. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). 9 September 2000. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ↑ "Rimshot! – Bodyjar | Credits". AllMusic. All Media Guide. Retrieved 11 July 2015. Note: producer's last name is given as "Dahlstrol".
- ↑ Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑
- 1 2 Cassie Walker (23 October 2013). "Tom Read - Bodyjar (23/10/2013)". The 59th Sound. The 59th Sound. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
- ↑ "BODYJAR - Fairytales [Official Music Video]". YouTube. 2013-09-11. Retrieved 2013-10-12.
- 1 2 3 Bomber (13 October 2013). "On The Record – Bodyjar". Bombshellzine.com. Bombshellzine.com. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
- ↑ "It's a Cola Wars wedding! Congrats Cam + Regan!! — with Cameron Baines, Mikey Juler, Mark Brunott and Shane Wakker.". Cola Wars on Facebook. Facebook. 28 April 2012. Retrieved 24 October 2013.