Bluesfest Interview: Kim Churchill

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Kim Churchill on the Woodford Stage, photo and interview by KT Bell

Here at Timber and Steel, we’ve developed a bit of a crush on Kim Churchill and we’re always keen to see what’s next on his agenda. Since we caught him side of stage at Woodford, he’s flitted through the US and Europe, so we couldn’t resit the opportunity to catch up with him properly after his Bluesfest sets.

KT Bell: I’m sitting here, drinking Scotch with Kim Churchill, because that’s what you do on the last day of Bluesfest!
Kim Churchill: That is! The interview’s started well. [laughs]

KT: The last time we saw you was side of stage at Woodford and you were about to disappear off to Peats Ridge.
KC: Oh yes!
KT:You were doing that crazy 2 festivals in 2 days thing. And you’ve done 2 shows here at Bluesfest, how have they been?
KC: I guess probably what every artist would say after playing a set at Bluesfest is they’ve been amazing and that is kind of the only thing that a show at Bluesfest can be. It’s one of those festivals that has created over the course of 22 years or however long long they’ve been running, similar to Woodford, they’re the gigs you live for as a musician, they’re the ones that you play all the other shit gigs, not that there’s many shit gigs, but you work through whatever tough times we have, be them small tough times or large tough times, you work through those to get to the sets at Bluesfest and stuff like that.
KT: I’m glad you had lots of adoring fans to see you and the Mojo Stage must have been great.
KC: I don’t know if they were my adoring fans, but I stole a few off Dylan.

KT: Excellent! Now, you’re just back from touring overseas, Europe and America, how was all of that?
KC: Intense! For me, the transition between being an adolescent living out of the back of a van, busking and doing small pub gigs, the transition came a lot quicker than I thought it would. All of a sudden, we’re living out of hotel rooms and planes and the whole thing was pretty intense to be honest. I don’t look back on it with complete happiness and lovely nostalgic feelings, it was hard work. But, an amazing experience, one of the most amazing I ever had and we’ll be touring Canada and America and Europe for the rest of this year, so it’ll be a chance for me to find my comfort over there more than anything. Because, to this point, I’ve sort of, especially with no surf, it bloody hurts. Like, we got to LA and had a couple of days where the booking agent, he said we were gonna go surfing and it rained, and if it rains in LA, all the poo and crap comes out of the rivers and you can’t surf in the water because it’s too dirty. So we just had to watch these perfect waves breaking off Venice Beach boarwalk. But anyway, I mean, I’ve hardly got anything to complain about.

KT: You played South by SouthWest (SxSW), how was that?
KC: Yeah, no surf there! Kind of in general, I think ridiculously overwhelming to the point where I have very little to say about the whole experience [laughs].
KT: Lot’s of gigs in a few days?
KC: Oh yeah, the gigs, SxSW is, every gig is amazing. The whole vibe of the festival is kind of like “Who are we going to find? What are we going to stumble across?” So as an artist, who, your biggest goal is to be that person that somebody stumbles across. It’s a nice situation to be in because you’re kind of handed everything on a plate, and all you have to do is deliver and then there’s always going to be a couple of thousand people that are going to wander past your set wherever it might be and they will either stop and be intrigued or continue walking. So, in that sense, it was kind of easy, and fun for that reason. I would say playing a wedding 2 years ago was a lot harder. SxSW, at the end of the day, it was a lot of fun, I certainly wouldn’t tell anybody to go there to be ‘discovered’ because there’s 120,000 people and maybe 5,000 are good for doing something in terms of helping you break America and the odds are that they’re probably doing something terribly wrong on the 20th floor of a hotel at any given time. [laughs] But it’s a festival at the end of the day, so you see a lot of amazing bands and you have great gigs.

KT: How does the music and festival scene overseas differ or compare to Australia?
KC: It’s larger, definitely larger. It’s more intense, kind of you have to, I find with festivals in Australia, it’s quite easy to wake up early in the morning and go for a surf and have a bacon and egg roll at the surf club and there’s that kind of relaxed element that only Australia offers. Whereas, overseas, bam! 9 o’clock starts and there’s interviews and there’s breakfast and there’s coffee with this person and you’re in the middle of this city and there’s thousands of people watching shows and you’re watching shows with them. The whole thing is just more intense. At the same token, you get that kick from it, being at those kinds of festivals, you sort of get the kick out of masses of people and the animosity of the whole event. But I feel a lot less at home, naturally.

Kim Churchill on the Mojo Stage big screen at Bluesfest.
Photo Courtesy of Tao Jones

KT: So have you been writing much while you’ve been on the road, or have you just been too busy playing?
KC: No, the more busy I am, for some reason the more I write! As soon as I stop, and I have time to write songs, I can’t f*cking write one! [laughs] It’s a pain in the arse. So, say when we were touring in Europe, it was one of the most thick, dense periods of songwriting I’ve ever had. I feel like there’s so much new stuff to write and record now that I’m a bit lost as to where to go in the future with my music. I’ve been writing a lot of very heavy  stuff on electric guitar and stuff that would probably suit a band, and then lot’s of calm and pretty folk stuff that’s finger-picking on acoustic guitar, and then everything in between. So, writing a ridiculous amount of music and now just kind of trying to process how to find the best stuff from that and create an album that isn’t half a heavy metal album and half a folk album [laughs], something in between.
KT: So, Folk Metal?
KC: Folk Metal! Yeah!
KT: Kim Churchill shall master Folk Metal.
KC: [laughs] I like Folk Metal!

KT: When we spoke at Woodford, you said that you were on track for recording later this year, is that still  on the cards or is it pushed back a bit?
KC: Oh no, it’s been happening, we’re just waiting to pull the right things out. We did quite a bit of recording at Sun Records in Memphis, which was amazing! We got to record though the mike that Elvis sung through for the first time. And, that was amazing. We’ve recorded quite a bit in Byron and we recorded  in Canada as well. Just waiting to grab the songs in the right way I guess. It’s been quite a complicated process and it’s taken longer than I thought it would, to reach something that I want to release. Probably now there’s about twenty songs that we could release and we could put two albums out or two singles and an album, or two EPs and an album or something. But, it’s not right yet.  So, recording will continue until the stage where it’s right enough.

KT: At Timber and Steel, as you know, we spotlight artists who we see are coming up and we think we should support.
KC: You do an amazing job too, I’ve got the mailing list.
KT: Thank you. And we try and cover as much of the Australian scene as we can and I actually interviewed Ash Grunwald earlier this weekend and asked him one of the things we ask a lot of established artists, which is who to watch out for and who is coming through on the scene who we should follow, and he said instantly, without batting an eyelid, Kim Churchill.
KC: [laughs] He’s a legend
KT: And he did tell me that you toured with him, you supported him a few years ago
KC: Yeah man! you know what, I actually , I pushed that guy and he proved himself as an amazingly nice person. I was 18 or something and that was when I was trying to get a gig, at a wedding, busking at market, you know, whatever! And, I saw he was playing this venue about half an hour away that some acts used to tour through, and he could pull a big crowd there, sort of five or six hundred people. I begged him, I found his number personally, Ash Grunwald’s number and I called him and I said “please let me play’. And he did, and I’ve had the utmost respect for that guy since then, he’s an amazing person, so I’m quite honoured to be the person that he mentioned.
KT: He just had such great things to say about you, so I wanted to make sure you heard that one from me!
KC: Oh, good on him! Man, I saw a bunch of his music on a Hollywood movie, the other day.
KT: Yeah, he was saying, Limitless.
KC: Yeah, the amount of work that guy has done, and the element of old blues  he brings in to a very new sort of rock music style, he deserves everything he gets. He blows my mind, that guy.

KT: He’s one of the legends here this weekend, and you jumped up with Micahel Franti on Thursday, because you’ve been touring with Michael Franti, which must be amazing.
KC: It has been amazing!
KT: Jaunting back to Sydney in the middle of the weekend for gigs with him, that must have been a bit mind blowing. So with all these legends in Bluesfest, are there any musicians that you haven’t played with yet and you have an absolute burning desire to meet, play with, jam with, any of that?
KC: Oh man, there are so many names that I would want to say, and the first names I would want to say, this Bluesfest has given me the opportunity to see some of my favourite acts from previous tours and stuff, the Hussy Hicks, A French Butler Called Smith, The Mojo Bluesmen, Transvaal Diamond Syndicate, all those acts, they’re the acts you see at festivals all the time and you go “they should be playing the big festivals, they should be doing the big stages”, and that’s what Peter Noble [Bluesfest’s Creative Director] I think has nailed, as he gets everything from them to Dylan to Elvis Costello, to BB King to Wolfmother! Like, he gets it all. The act that I would most like to write, record, meet, everything with is Dylan, and it always will be, so that is my answer to the question is, Bob Dylan. Whether that will ever happen is something that we will wait to find out about and we shall see.

KT: Like I said, we ask who to listen too and people have said you, so I’m asking you who to listen to, who we should check out.
KC: Alright, at this festival, everybody should go check out Mavis Staples, she is brilliant, she blew my mind, Trombone Shorty, in the Australian scene, the Hussy Hicks, A French Butler Called Smith and the busking comp winner Minnie Marks, she plays guitar like nothing I’ve ever seen before, she sings like Janis Joplin, she’s 17 and she’s going to blow the world apart.

KT: Thank you so much for your time Kim, pleasure again, see you again soon. Thanks for the Scotch!
KC: Thank you, cheers. Oh, you’re welcome!

Bluesfest Interview: Transvaal Diamond Syndicate

Photo and interview by KT Bell

Social networking is a marvellous thing. As Timber and Steel were preparing to head to Bluesfest, a fan by the name of Tim left a comment on our Facebook page telling us to catch Transvaal Diamond Syndicate. Not only did we see their stellar set, we managed to sit down with Tim Price and Christian Tryhorn for a chat.

KT Bell: For everyone who doesn’t know you guys, tell us a little about yourselves.
Christian: Well, originally we’re a two piece from Brisbane, in the hard, blues-rock, footstomping style, sort of the southern blues style. Recently we’ve picked up a saxophonist/ keyboard player (Matthew Barker) and bass player for our Bluesfest gig. We’ve been around Brisbane for about 18 months to 2 years now. Our first gig was a support with Ash Grunwald in Rockhampton after about 3 hours of practice. We made our way through that and we’ve been working hard ever since, touring around Brisbane, and all of NSW and QLD, and got the call up this year for Bluesfest.
Tim: Yeah definitely a view to be extending the tour roots because we’re heading down to Melbourne and Sydney later in the year, we’re going to put out another EP this year and probably tour it a bit more extensively than we did the last one, we gave the last one a pretty good run, but we probably need to get it a little bit further.

KT: When can we expect the next EP?
C: I’d say July/ August.

KT: Any inside goss on what it’s going to be called?
T: Not on what it’s going to be called, but we’ve got the track listing all sorted out, the one’s we’re going to be putting down, the one’s that we’re really exited about.
C: All the tracks from our Bluesfest set will be on there. As for title, that’s sort of something at the end, once we’ve got the sum of all its parts, you can find something to match it.

KT: Now I noticed in your set a leading towards that train going around in the audience during ‘Train a Comin'”, was that just for Bluesfest?
T: We’ve had it happen before.
C: The first time it happened was at an event for a girl who had cancer and it was a fundraiser. She was about 10 years old and she had all of her 10, 9 and 8 year old mates around, and there was a big group of about 20 of them and to get them fired up they all started doing a sort of train dance
T: So we were like, pissed people are like children, so I’m sure they’ll enjoy it as well.
C: Made the song sort of fun, a bit of something extra that people get in to.
T: It’s funny, we played at the Gold Coast, at The Loft, and I don’t know why but there was a massive group of Asian people there and they started a train and there was a big set of stairs and they went upstairs and came back downstairs and around the venue.
C: Yeah, it’s just a cool of a fun way to finish off the night for us

KT: You don’t want to call it a gimmick, but it could be your ‘signature’?
C: To get some points of difference, we’ve got a few things. Did you see ‘Old Carolina’? We’ve got a bit of call and response in there. We just try and infuse two or three themes every gig just to try and get some of the audience participation.
T: Crowd engagement is probably one of the big things we’d like to make sure that we are actually getting that. It’s hard to do at a bigger festival like this coz you’re actually so much further away from everyone. Normally we’re in venues where the crowd might only be two to three metres away, maybe not even that, and this one [at Bluesfest] you’ve got about five and a bunch of height as well, so actually connecting on that one to one basis is really hard. But we do that by energy.
KT: You have a lot of it!
C: We give it to ourselves every set, but I think, it’s ok to have great songs, but if you don’t have the energy to put out there as well, I don’t think you quite connect with as many people.
T: You can let your fans down so much too, especially if you love a song on CD and you see it live and it’s a dud, you’re like ‘oh well, that was a bit of a shame’. That’s just coming from my perspective as being a punter as well, going to see bands that I love. Most of the time, bands deliver, which is great, but it’s such a let down if you don’t give it.
C: We like to be sweaty; we’ve got a little tag line, that we’re “The Sweatiest Band in Brisbane.” And that’s only the two of us! Not a nine piece funk outfit or something.
T: It’s nice having the extra players too and they really lifted to the occasion as well. The saxophonist and keyboarder, I mean, did you see him jumping around? He’s got his curly hair and he raised the roof, he really lifted to the occasion which is great to see. We played with The Beards at The Joint in Brisbane 2 weeks ago. That was his first gig with us where he was playing the keyboard, and he was so excited that he just went crazy. I don’t think that he’ll come back down from now, that will be the standard now I think

KT: Now, I noticed you went a little bit tribal there for a while, that was a little bit different to the rest of your set, where did that come from?
C: Yeah, that was another thing, I play a fair bit of Djembe and stuff, so originally when it was just the two of us, we’d have a bit of a tribal, just a percussion jam, and we’d get members of the audience, we’d have spare djembes and tambourines and cow bells side of stage. We had one gig in Bundaberg where we had a whole ladies soccer team, it was their grand final. Them and all their supporters, we had a tiny stage and there was about twenty-five people, all jammed in playing instruments. We weren’t going to do it at Bluesfest, because sometimes it’s hit and miss, but we found out we had an hour set not a forty-five set, so we chucked it on the end of it, and it usually works well. It would have been cooler if we could have got members of the audience up, but, they didn’t allow that.
T: We get a lot of comments on our Facebook “Hey, are you going to be doing the jam at the end of your set this time, I wanna get up and shake a tambo”
C: I think it’s the difference between seeing a band play a gig or seeing a band put on a show. That’s where we sort of like to position ourselves, more of people will leave with a few things in their head, three or four things they remember as opposed to all the songs that they heard. We’ve got a bit of a story about coming from the Transvaal and that sort of visual idea about diamond smugglers from the Transvaal, that ties in a little bit with the African, tribal theme, so it fits well.

KT: So, we’re expecting an EP and a tour, and you boys look schmick when you’re on stage, is there anything else we should know about for this year?
C: Shooting for a new single, just on April 1st we brought that out, that will be the first single from the album, “Devil on my Shoulder”.  That’s going pretty well at the moment, charting pretty well on Triple J Unearthed and stuff.
KT: So we should all go and vote for it and request it?
T: Absolutely! We got some on air play on Home and Hosed the other night.
C: Yeah, it was on our way here! We had the best day, we got new merch, our first film clip rocked up and we’re in the car on the way here and we heard our song on Triple J for the first time ever, and then to Bluesfest!

KT: Thank you very much for your time and we’ll see you again!
C: Thank you!
T: Please do!

Country of Origin: Australia (Brisbane)
Sounds Like: The love children of Wagons and The Snowdroppers stripped back to a three piece
File Under: Bluesey Southern Rock
Official: www.transvaaldiamondsyndicate.com
Myspace: myspace.com/transvaaldiamondsyndicate

Check out KT’s photos of their Bluesfest set

Final Final FINAL Bluesfest Artists

Bobby Long
Image Courtesy of Bobby Long

The good folks at Bluesfest have just released the schedule for this year’s festival (so everyone can start their planning). But releasing a program just isn’t enough for these guys. No siree. They’ve also gone and added a bunch of new artists to the lineup. They’re saying these are the final additions but they said that last time. And the time before. So I guess we’ll just have to see if they’re telling the truth.

The new artists added to the Bluesfest lineup are:

Warren Haynes, Clare Bowditch, Dale Watson & His Lonestars, Neil Murray, Shane Nicholson, Frank Yamma, Buddy Knox, Lisa Miller, Louis King and the Liars Klub, Hat Fitz and Cara Robinson, Grace Barbe Afro Kreol, Ajak Kwai, The Blackwater Fever, Bobby Long (above), Nga Tae, Collard Greens and Gravy, Old Spice Boys, The Secret Sisters, Victor Valdes & the Marin Brothers, Raghu Dixit, Jackson Firebird, Hank Green’s Blues, A French Butler Called Smith, U Blues Band, Microwave Jenny, Kingfisha, Mojo Bluesmen, Bob Abbot & the Fabulous Green Machine, Joewah, Transvaal Diamond Syndicate and The Incredible Sky Pilots Plasticiens Volants.

For more information and tickets visit the official Bluefest site.