|
LATEST
News
Media
New Additions
General Articles
Interviews
Release Reviews
Live Reviews
Daylight Press Kit
Nation Press Kit
Fan Club
LEGEND
Art
Band
Charts
Linked
MUSIC
Albums
Singles
Songs
Sounds
Tabs
FANS
Community
Credits
FAQ
Guestbook
Links

Human Frailty Pty Ltd
2001 - 2006
|
TSUnAMI EMBEDDED ARTICLE
Summary
Article Text
Comments
Summary Information:
Positive Embedded era article from an interview with Mark in the Tsunami
Brisbane magazine.
Author: [Not credited] Date: May 2004, Issue 52. Original URL: http://www.tsunamimag.com/pages/interviews.html Article Text “I’m extremely leathery and quite cynical about the music industry to be honest…
(but) I still have a deep and enduring love of the sport.”
MARK SEYMOUR
Mark Seymour has recently completed and his third solo album Embedded. Having
just released his third solo album, Mark admits, “It’s early days yet, but we’re
getting some good feedback”.
Having fronted the Hunters And Collectors for almost twenty years, Mark Seymour
decided to leave one of the most enduring Australian rock bands of the 1980’s to
pursue a solo career in 1998. It would be a logical to assume that it was a
challenge for Seymour to remove himself from the success of Hunters And
Collectors. However, he explains that his choice to pursue a solo career was
quite simple. “I was actually just doing some acoustic shows in Melbourne
roughly around that time and I got a taste for it, so I just kept doing it
really.”
Hunters And Collectors seminal pop rock captured the hearts of many a pub
patron, so it follows that the band’s tunes feature strongly in many a pub rock
cover band’s repertoire. Mark openly admits, “I’m not really aware of it to be
honest. I do what I do and if they want to do cover versions of Hunters And
Collectors’ tunes, then all power to them. As long as they pay me royalties,
which isn’t guaranteed of course, given the nature of this business. I don’t
really have any feeling about it to be honest.”
Discussing the progression of the writing and recording of his latest solo
record Embedded, Mark explains, “I noticed a few people who were moving into my
street who were fairly eccentric and indulging in odd activities at times. So I
decided to try and document things in a fairly perverse and ironic way and they
ended up in song form. I recorded the album at a friend’s house in a little
place called Carnegie. I tried to keep the recording process as relaxed as
possible. Normally, you know, traditionally there’s a fat record company
executive looming over your shoulder questioning the commercial validity of the
material. But I’ve reached a point in my life where, if I am going to continue
to keep writing and recording material, I just won’t work under those conditions
anymore. I’ve tried to work with people I like in a congenial environment as
much as possible,” he affirms rather scornfully.
“There are a lot of co-writes on this record, which is new territory for me,”
admits Mark. Despite being a new approach for Seymour, he is far from being
apprehensive about the songwriting process. “I’m extremely leathery and quite
cynical about the music industry to be honest. So having said that, I am fully
cognitive of what to expect and it never goes the way you plan you know. I still
have a deep and enduring love of the sport. I love to perform and write songs
and I try to make them as intelligent and exciting as possible. Hopefully there
will be people out there in the market place who are interested in music that
actually has something to say.”
Mark Seymour will be performing tunes from his new record Embedded, at Downtown
Gilhooleys, Brisbane (May 27), Four Mile Creek Hotel, Strathpine (May 28), The
Mooloolaba Surf Club (May 29) and Gilhooleys, Gold Coast (May 30).
Comments A reputable
source indicates that the unnamed author had not heard "Embedded" and was given
the story "at the last minute".
|
|