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The Clean

 
Artist: The Clean
The Clean

Group Members:

Hamish Kilgour, David Kilgour, Robert Scott, Peter J. Gutteridge

Similar Artists:

Bailter Space, Able Tasmans, Enemy, The Chills, Toy Love, Swingers, Tall Dwarfs, JPS Experience, Jean-Paul Sartre Experience, Citizen Band, Look Blue Go Purple, The Verlaines, Straitjacket Fits

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Brydie Scott, Hamish Kilgour, Robert Scott

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1978
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Anthology," "Compilation," "Modern Rock"

Biography

The Clean were one of the most influential New Zealand bands of the post-punk era. The band formed in the town of Dunedin in 1978, when Hamish Kilgour (drums) and his brother David (guitar) recruited David's school friend, guitarist Peter Gutteridge. Soon afterward, they opened for New Zealand punk rockers Enemy.

The Clean were one of the first bands in the country to play original material. They carved out a distinctive noisy but melodic sound, distinguished by David's screeching, distorted guitar. When the Kilgour brothers decided in 1979 to relocate the band to Auckland, Gutteridge had already left the lineup. The Clean played with a rotating bassist before David quit the band and moved back to Dunedin. Once he was back home, he was introduced to bassist Robert Scott and the two started playing together; news of his brother's new musical relationship prompted Hamish to move back to Dunedin and begin the Clean again.

In early 1980, the group began playing around town in earnest. In early 1981, a fan named Roger Shepherd began Flying Nun Records to release a single by the Clean, "Tally Ho!" With its jagged guitar, sweet melody, and persistent organ, "Tally Ho!" reached number 19 on the charts.

As they prepared to record their first album, they discovered that the small amount of New Zealand engineers didn't care for the band's material. The Clean didn't fight -- they backed down, deciding to record on a four-track under the guidance of Chris Knox and Doug Hood. In November, the Boodle Boodle Boodle EP was released; it surprised every observer by climbing to number four on the New Zealand charts.

Boodle and the 1982 EP Great Sounds Great captured the quirky sides of the Clean's sound, since they did not have the technology to replicate the band's roaring live sound. Later in 1982, the group released their loudest single yet, "Getting Older." Soon after its release, David Kilgour exited the band, moving back to Dunedin. Robert Scott left after David's departure, forming a band of his own, the Bats. Hamish Kilgour moved to Christchurch -- where Flying Nun Records was located -- and bought his own four-track. After Hamish had begun writing and recording, David came up to Christchurch to help finish up the solo tracks, as well as to record some Clean songs. The resulting music, released under the name the Great Unwashed, was collected on the album Clean Out of Our Minds. The music was a departure from the Clean's punk-injected sound; instead, it was folkier and more acoustic.

To promote the record, the Kilgours reunited with Peter Gutteridge while still using the name the Great Unwashed. On the ensuing tour, the band concentrated on Gutteridge's backlog of material; at the beginning of 1984, they recorded an EP called Singles. Singles earned quite a bit of airplay and sales. Bassist Ross Humphries was added so David Kilgour and Gutteridge could both play guitar, yet the Great Unwashed wound up breaking up within a year. Hamish Kilgour formed Bailter Space with guitarist Alister Parker, Gutteridge began developing a new band called Snapper, and David stopped playing for a few years.

The Clean -- the lineup featuring Robert Scott -- reunited in 1988 for two concerts in London; a five-song EP culled from the shows was released a year later. The members of the band were encouraged by the results and decided to embark on a world tour. After the tour ended, the band recorded a new album, which was more straightforward and pop-oriented than their previous material. The record, Vehicle, was released in the spring of 1990 and the band supported its release with a world tour. After the tour's completion, the band split again. David Kilgour formed Stephen, Scott returned to the Bats, and Hamish Kilgour was inactive; the group reunited in 1994 to record a new album. Modern Rock was released in late 1995, followed by Unknown Country in 1996. Getaway appeared in 2001 on Merge, but went unnoticed. Two years later, the definitive Clean collection was captured on the Anthology release. In 2003 the band released the first of two new live albums, Syd's Pink Wiring System: Live in New Zealand 2000 and 2008's Mashed: Live in New Zealand 2007 followed in 2009 by the all-new studio LP Mister Pop. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Clean
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The Clean

Background information
Origin Dunedin, New Zealand
Years active 1978-the present
Label(s) Flying Nun Records
Members
Hamish Kilgour
David Kilgour
Robert Scott
Former members
Peter Gutteridge
Doug Hood

The Clean were an influential first-wave punk band that formed in Dunedin, New Zealand in 1978. Led through a number of early rotating line-ups by brothers Hamish and David Kilgour, the band settled down to the well-known line-up with bassist Robert Scott. Early incarnations of the Clean included Peter Gutteridge on bass (who wrote "Point That Thing"), Doug Hood on vocals (who later worked with Toy Love and founded the "Looney Tours" touring company). The Clean soon forged a distinctive and quirky sound that relied heavily on organ melodies and simple, Ramones-style chord progressions.

Contents

History

In 1981, a fan of the Clean founded the Flying Nun label to release their first single, "Tally Ho." A follow-up track off one of their early EPs, "Beatnik", also achieved success, as did the second single, "Getting Older".

The Flying Nun label went on to be New Zealand's biggest independent record company, championing the Dunedin Sound, a loosely-connected style of music largely produced by bands from this southern city. Others artists on the label included The Chills, The Verlaines, The Bats, and Sneaky Feelings. The line-ups of these bands were often interrelated, with Peter Gutteridge being a founding member of the Chills, David Kilgour briefly in the Chills off-shoot band Time Flies, and Robert Scott being the founder of The Bats.

During much of the 1980s, the Clean disbanded, and during this time the Kilgour brothers worked together on an experimental album and ep using the deliberately punning titles "The Great Unwashed" and "Clean Out Of Our Minds". Reforming in the late 1980s, the band explored a slightly poppier vein of music while still retaining their experimental edge.

Although they released several chart-topping singles in their native country, the Clean are a little-known cult band outside of New Zealand, although their influence is surprisingly far-reaching. They became a staple of college radio in the 1980s, Stephen Malkmus of Pavement cites them as a major influence, and the band's droney 80s output is a direct forerunner of bands such as Yo La Tengo and Camper Van Beethoven.

The Clean continue to produce music, with Flying Nun recently issuing a comprehensive collection of their previously hard-to-find singles. Output from the band has been sporadic over the years, with members involved in other projects and Hamish Kilgour living in New York. Other projects involving members of the band include The Bats and The Magick Heads (Scott), Stephen, The Heavy Eights (David Kilgour), and The Mad Scene (Hamish Kilgour).

In early 2007, the Clean toured New Zealand on the 'Bangers and Mash' tour, during which they celebrated Hamish Kilgour's 50th birthday while playing at 'The Studio' in Auckland on Saturday 17 March 2007. Later that same year, the band's best-known incarnation (Kilgour/Scott/Kilgour) reunited for a short East Coast tour of the United States. The tour began in Manhattan, NYC with four shows: an in-store performance at Other Music and a three night stand at the Cake Shop on the Lower East Side. Although the tour officially concluded with a performance at Johnny Brenda's in Philadelphia, the following week the band played an extra show at Maxwell's in Hoboken NJ, opening for Yo la Tengo at one of the group's annual Hannukah concerts.

In June 2008 a live album recorded during the 2007 New Zealand tour, was released in New Zealand on Arch Hill Records, entitled 'Mashed'. According to a message by David Kilgour on The Clean's MySpace page, the band is putting the finishing touches on a new studio album, which was tentatively scheduled for release in late 2008 on Arch Hill; it is now titled Mister Pop and scheduled for a September 8, 2009 release on the Merge label.

Discography

Date Title Label Charted Country Catalog Number
Albums
1982 Oddities Flying Nun Records - - FNMC ODD1
1987 Compilation Flying Nun Records - - FNCD154
1990 Vehicle Flying Nun Records - - FNCD147
1994 Modern Rock Flying Nun Records - - FNCD292
1996 Unknown Country Flying Nun Records - - FNCD349
2001 Getaway Flying Nun Records/Merge Records - - FNCD459/MRG188
2001 Slush Fund Arc - NZ Arc Cafe #1
2002 Anthology Flying Nun Records/Merge Records - - FNCD468/MRG220
2003 Syd's Pink Wiring System: Live in New Zealand 2000 Cleano - NZ Cleano 0001
2008 Mashed (live in New Zealand 2007) Arch Hill - - AHR033
2008 Compilation Mississippi Records/ Little Axe Records - US MR027, Little Axe 002
2009 Mister Pop Merge/ Arch Hill - US/ NZ MRG325/ AHR042
EPs
1981 Boodle Boodle Boodle Flying Nun Records 4 NZ FN003
1982 Great Sounds Great, Good Sounds Good, So-so Sounds So-so, Bad Sounds Bad, Rotten Sounds Rotten Flying Nun Records - NZ FNGOOD001
1986 Live Dead Clean Flying Nun Records - NZ FNLDC01
1990 In a Live Flying Nun Records - NZ/Europe FN145/FNE29
7"s
1981 Tally Ho/Platypus Flying Nun Records 19 NZ FN002
1982 Getting Older/Whatever I do/Scrape Music Flying Nun Records - NZ FNLAST1
1994 Late Last Night/Psychedelic Clown Dark Beloved Cloud - US dbc020

Filmography

  • 1999: Scarfies, in which they are seen performing the song Tally Ho! in a performance at the Empire Tavern, Dunedin (the line-up for this performance was David Kilgour, Robert Scott, Robbie Yates, and Thomas Bell).

External links


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