Bruce Russell’s Time To Go

Earlier we mentioned Bruce Russell (Dead C, Xpressway Records) had contributed a column for Volcanic Tongue on the  ’Time To Go’ compilation he put together with for us. When asked the other day what started him thinking about this compilation he replied:

The whole compilation was sparked by an epiphany I had while listening to ’Russian Rug’ in 2006. I suddenly thought that the whole ‘psychedelic 60s vibe’ that was so prevalent in all those bands had never been made the guiding thread of a comp, and that to do that would be a great way to articulate something they shared in common at that time. It was a common touchstone that also defined their diversity, because they all responded to that influence in such varied ways.

Bruce also provided us with a broader piece on the motivation and history behind the compilation

Time to go – the southern psychedelic moment: 1981-86
- Bruce Russell 

Bruce Russell (right) with Alastair Galbraith (The Rip) outside David Pine (Sneaky Feelings) and Jane Dodd's (Verlaines/Able Tasmans) flat on Stuart St, Dunedin where the 'Death and the Maiden' video was filmed, 1984. That's how I looked back when I was a university lecturer, shortly after my mohawk grew out. Crazy but true. He hasn't changed that much.

Journalists looking back at the early years of Flying Nun generally make two mistakes. One is to think that the main creative impetus came from Dunedin, when in reality there was as much if not more really memorable music coming from Christchurch, the town that actually gave birth to the label. The other mistake is to think that the music being made was simply a direct response to what was hip in the post-punk music of the day.

What really marked that music and set it apart from much that was happening elsewhere was that it was in a real sense ‘out of time’ – its crucial engagement was with the psychedelic tradition of the 60s. In the South Island there was a shared insight that cut across bands as diverse as the Gordons, the Clean and the Puddle: that punk’s Year Zero was a chance to wind back the clock and pick up again in 1967, and make it bad.

While in some cases this was clearly seen at the time (witness the overt California-isms of the Chills and Sneaky Feelings), in many cases the influence was more coded. While it may have been clearly understood by the musicians, it was not so widely comprehended outside the narrow confines of what was in media terms an underground scene.

This compilation seeks to draw representative tracks from all the key outfits active in Christchurch and Dunedin during the first heyday of Flying Nun, the ‘heroic period’ of lo-tech recording, handmade covers and ‘extended play’ 45s. This is not a ‘greatest hits’ of the label. Many of these tracks and some of the bands are relatively obscure. They have been chosen to highlight some aspect or other of counter-cultural psychedelia in the Muldoon era.

This was pop music that went ‘beyond the given’ and aspired to make or say something more, something real. 1981 was a time of riots and widespread unemployment. There was a feeling that things had to change. It was – as the Clean sang – ‘time to go’.

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About Flying Nun Records

A first class nun that flies.
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2 Responses to Bruce Russell’s Time To Go

  1. Brendon Ross says:

    I’d given up long ago on Mr Russell crushing on my sexy slim arse and woohing me with mix-tapes (the lingua la lust of record nerds in love), but thank you thank you thank you Bruce for finally noticing me!
    Fantastic comp and an excellent corrective to the way Flying Nun, as a label, sound and idea has tended to be seen (well, heard) by ‘casual’ listeners.
    I liked your piece over on the Volcanic Tongue site, particularly the photo you handsome man. http://www.volcanictongue.com/columns/show/20

  2. rob says:

    Video clip for psychic discharge: http://youtu.be/6FpvxjJrXnU
    Radio with pics didn’t even consider screening this :)

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