 "The statements that last longest are most simply put .........."
JAMES BLUNDELL ARRIVES AT RING AROUND THE MOON It's the perspective he was able to call upon that gives Ring Around
The Moon - which he describes as "The most mature and satisfying record
I've ever made" - its conviction, its command and its sheen. Two decades, nine albums, country fame, pop hits, a national top
five album and ones that came nowhere near, nine Golden Guitars, an
ARIA Award, songs written and recorded in Nashville, New York, Los
Angeles, London and Dublin, collaborations with good earth riders and
metal muthas, years as a bona-fide Queensland cattleman, the embrace of
Vietnam vets, a highly visible Qantas ad, gold and platinum plaques,
national recognition, exultation and disillusionment, glowing reviews
and occasional indifference, a tour with Kris Kristofferson and a chin
wag with Johnny Cash, uncountable shows on the road that goes on
forever, wrong turns and right ...... all with his curiosity,
intuition, good humour and dogged determination intact. As the Grateful
Dead once sang: "What a long strange trip it's been." "Half your career is devoted to getting on your own road" James
contends, twenty years after he won the Starmaker competition,
fresh-faced and eager to conquer country. "I'm a very different person
from that young bloke - I've learned a helluva lot along the way, most
of it from making mistakes and going through tough times. Now I've
reached a personal place of comfort where I'm relaxed about pretty much
everything. I know I'm no 'man of the moment', I'm not a current
artist. If I had to describe the sort of music I'm making now I think
it would be songs of experience leading to clarity. Musically I'm a
very definite product of an evolving Australian psyche." Though he'd always kicked against the traces to some degree -
particularly when it came to his dealings with Nashville and its firmly
set notions - it was after seven albums with a major record company
that James Blundell set out to make one that would reflect more
accurately what he was listening to and aspiring to equal; that would
in effect reposition him. He even established his own indie label,
Revenge Records, to release 2005's Deluge, which broke a six year
drought of new material. Not only did it carry the stark, affecting and
admired Postcards From Saigon, it featured contributions from Kirk
Pengilly of INXS, Cold Chisel legend Ian Moss, David Leslie of the Baby
Animals, Chris Bailey of the Angels, Phil Soussan from Ozzy Osbourne's
band and, gulp, Eddie Clarke from Motorhead. It was new terrain, to be sure. "I want to get away from the
classification of a country artist," the man who was playing guitar at
4 and writing lyrics at 7 told one interviewer. "My style of music is
forever evolving and now is somewhere along the lines of Tom Petty,
Steve Earle and John Mellencamp. There was a period about two years
into the process where I thought 'I don't know if we're going
backwards, forwards or sideways'. In a way, artistically and
creatively, it was very liberating." The reviews were not unkind, even
if the sales were not overwhelming. "Deluge sits comfortably in a place
that touches on rock, country and old school R&B" wrote Polly
Coufos. To another reviewer "James Blundell is one Australian artist
who has taken his fans on a meandering musical journey throughout his
career. One thing he has always done is follow his instincts and
feelings." Instincts and feelings that have, two years on, been given full
reign, though with greater focus and a somewhat different approach.
"Had I not made that album" he reckons, "I don't think I would have
been in the headspace to have made this one." It being album nine, Ring
Around The Moon, which brings James to Compass Bros, the label that he
and many others see as his natural home. And to label head Graham
Thompson, who may well be his natural producer. "I think it has a great sense of place," says James. "It was put
together with minimum fuss and massive amount of respect for everyone
involved. There are only six players on it - it's tight and concise.
I've thrown kitchen sinks at albums in the past - I've tried to be and
do everything but I've been wide of the mark most times. The process
with Graham was the best artist-producer relationship I've ever had. I
liked him instantly; he has the most rounded view of anyone I've ever
worked with. I know now that secret of it all is to get good people
surrounding you and take your hands off the wheel. Working with people
you trust is essential. I think it's the perfect boutique label. It has
a real sense of family and in a label that's an important thing." Recording in Sydney, Graham opted for a lean and keen, somewhat Rick
Rubin sound that emphasised the heart and soul of the creative
centrepiece - the songs. "I was open to his choice of players, they're
just an amazing group of musicians," explains James. "With them I was
able to achieve a sort of earthy honesty. I didn't want to lose the
charm of the songs as they were written and with James Gillard [bass],
Mark Punch and Glenn Hannah [guitars], Terepai Richmond [drums],
Clayton Doley [keyboards] and Trent Williamson [harmonica] I didn't." It was James who located and enlisted singing twins Jesse and
Michaela Curran, from the Mildura band Harem. "I heard Jesse singing at
the Broken Hill races and she just floored me. You can find great
talent in the most unexpected spots. Graham and I spent a lot of time
on the backing vocals and apart from the girls we used James Gillard
and Mark Punch, old friends that I have recorded on and off with for
twenty odd years. They have this great blend when they sing together.
"Label mate Dianna Corcoran also joined James on Four Feet Tall...
"that voice comes straight from god" enthuses James....as did Chris E
Thomas on Let's All Get Together. Ring Around The Moon is a collection of new and (in at least one
case, the driving title track, which was penned in 1999) old originals
- with the exception of two contributions from Cold Chisel's Don Walker
(This Is The Truth and Let's Have A Party Anyway) and Johnny Cash's
bare'n'spare tale of vet's alienation, Drive On. The latter's inclusion
inspired by the memory of an unexpected interaction when James was
presenting at the CMA Awards in 1993. He was assigned a dressing room
with a couple of other performers - Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins. "It
was real comfortable" James recalls. "We discussed a lot of stuff, we
laughed a lot. Drive On just seemed so right for this record - it's
dry, laconic, edgy and has an attitude that I share. It's a song I'm
proud to be associated with." Just as he's proud to sing the Walker offerings. "I love Don's
songs. He's laconic and honest in the way he writes. This Is The Truth
came to us as a basic demo with a gravelly modal type vocal that
sounded very 2AM. When I first recorded it I thought 'this is too
pretty' so I did it again keeping in mind James Gillard's good advice,
'Don't sing this too much'. I made Let's Have A Party Anyway kind of
swampy, I felt it that way. It's a song that will be readily understood
by any hard living man ... or woman. It's the party everyone has been
to at some point." One of James' favourite cuts is the album's mood-setting opener
Learning To Roll, which was inspired by a line proffered by the
ever-beaming James Gillard. "He once said to me 'Anyone can rock but
rolling, that takes a lot of practice'. Well it's taken a while but I
think I've learned to roll." Perhaps that self-evolution accounts for
the effectiveness of Higher Than Heaven, which takes the tunesmith back
to his rural realm at Stanthorpe. "The time spent there is not enough,
particularly now that Dad's over 70. There's two properties, Mount
Malakoff and Wobur, which is Aboriginal for crest of a hill, and the
river Severn that hums with life, and in that incredible environment I
considered my life and found myself thinking, "How did I let it all get
so complicated? The last visit there was a cathartic experience. I woke
up one morning with that chorus in my head and that doesn't happen very
often, let me tell you. You hang out for fertile writing seasons and
you can't ever take it for granted. Something I always tell young acts
is: write everything down." There is a distinct personal connection to every one of his songs.
Nature's Gentleman is about a man he thinks of as "a surrogate father",
one Ernie Collins who worked on the family property for 27 years.
Moderation is "about a very dear friend by the name of Robert Bryett,
one of a pair of twins who I met on a Toowoomba football field when we
were both ten. I introduced him to my boys a few years ago with the
words 'I've never met a more honest man and I've never met a wilder
one' and he just smiled and said 'Nowdays I'm a man of moderation
except for my extremes'. I told him I'd use that in a song one day and
give him a credit." James sees Four Feet Tall as "Autobiographical, about running from
the best parts of my life for so long. It's a simple set of values that
wound up in a song." The Poet and The Queen is "about Lidia, the lady I
married in 1997, a very colourful relationship. Believe me, during
periods in the creative process you put love well and truly to the
test." So much so that, as he explained in 2005, "One of the reasons I
spent years not writing love songs is that I got so sick of the 'I love
you, why don't you love me?' thing. So I wrote more about social issues
and other things for a long time, then people told me 'don't avoid the
issue just look at it a different way' and so I began to write about
relationships again." We have that shift to thank for the tender The
Sound Of Your Smile which, James admits, "just fell out. I made up the
bridge while I was playing it for Graham. It was the last song selected
for the album." Perhaps as a counterpoint Ring Around The Moon tackles
change, drought and the challenges facing the hardy species who make
their living from the land. About the gently self-deprecating Too Old To Die Young James just
says, "To have an untarnished reputation you've got to get off the
planet pretty quickly. Otherwise all you can do is live with the most
honest intent and accept that you'll make mistakes." And perhaps endure
them. Beautiful Day In New York came out of getting some unsettling
news in the Big Apple, looking at that skyline and being grateful for
what you have and accepting of what you can't. There is a summation he offered in 2005, about some of his earlier
work, that applies just as accurately to Ring Around The Moon. "I guess
what ties the songs together is that they are all thought-provoking in
one way or another. And if I can make people think a bit harder and
look a little deeper into themselves I've succeeded as a songwriter." As he told Country Music Capital News' Sue Jarvis a couple of years
ago, "I've always loved music but was never very good at the politics
of the industry, and that meant that I trod on quite a few toes along
the way. It was all totally upside down - I had so much success and
fame and adulation at the beginning and was given so much say in the
creative process when I really wasn't ready for it. By the time I knew
what I needed to do, that had all virtually disappeared." Now it has returned and James is ready, willing and able to go with
whatever flow comes his way. "This is a period in my life where I want
to address music in any form" he insists. "Once you know who you are
and what you are then you can use that to interact with the planet. Now
I'm taking a longer view of things. I don't worry a lot about what
other people think of me. I've gone way past the stage of being
bothered by that attitude of because you come from the sticks you're a
dumb arse hillbilly. "I have half the next album ready to go. I'm committed to being an
artist again and I want to stay here for a long time." Indeed, there is
something he said way back in 1995 about his ambitious double Earth and
Sea CD set, that seems to apply here, "If your instincts are all
driving you in one direction, I think it's a disaster if you fight it.
I've always been a musical junkie; I'm comfortable in a lot of grooves.
In Australia you can do what you want and that sort of creative freedom
is such an adventure. One of the freedoms of making an album is that,
if you use your brains, you can put out whatever you want." And what James Blundell wants and what he puts into his music is
never going to be ill-considered. He has high expectations of the craft
of music-making. "I think it's the last apolitical, non-denominational
platform of speech left to free thinkers and, as such, should be
treated with absolute respect. It crosses barriers that other
communications can't. The meaning will make itself clear to anyone who
understands the language in which a song is written."
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